Applications for graduate studies must be submitted
through the NDSU
Graduate School.
For information concerning
the actual requirements for graduate studies in the Department
of sociology, please refer to the Departmental
graduate handbook. It is a draft but can be used as a guideline.
Sociology Masters
The focus of
graduate education in Sociology, Anthropology, and Emergency Management
at North Dakota State University is directed toward research and
the application of research skills. Emphasis is placed on providing
master's degree candidates and doctoral degree candidates in Emergency
Management with the opportunity to expand their theoretical and methodological
perspectives and to cultivate their interest in substantive areas.
Graduate students are encouraged to augment their educational training
by engaging in professional activities (i.e., attending professional
meetings, participating in research, engaging in public service,
and teaching).
Master's Degree with an Emphasis
in Anthropology
Specific course
requirements for a master's degree with an emphasis in anthropology
include a graduate level methods course and a graduate level theory
course. Students who have taken either Anth. 650 or 680 as an undergraduate
at NDSU (Anth. 450 and 480) may be able to take Anth. 793 for one
credit to cover the additional graduate requirement. However, that
credit will not count as a didactic credit.
Emergency Management Master's
The requirements for a master's in emergency management can be found here.
PH.D.
Students pursuing the emergency management Ph.D.
must complete a minimum of 90 credits and a dissertation. The Ph.D. is awarded
in recognition of significant depth of understanding and scholarly achievement
in emergency management. The recipient must complete all of the required course
work; pass both written and oral comprehensive exams; complete a novel and significant
research project for the dissertation; and successfully defend this research
in an oral examination.
The student's
progress will be evaluated by a supervisory committee that is responsible
for reviewing the student' s plan of study, written and oral comprehensive
examinations, dissertation proposal, and dissertation defense.
A student entering the program without a master' s degree may pursue
the doctorate without first satisfying our master' s degree requirements.
However, the structure of the Ph.D. course requirements parallel
the requirements for a master' s degree, so careful planning and
the completion of a thesis (thesis option) or a research paper
(comprehensive study option) would enable a student to complete
the master' s degree in pursuit of the doctorate without backtracking.
For more information please refer to the Departmental
graduate handbook.
Copyright 2004 ©, NDSU Department of Sociology / Anthropology