Graduate Program
PhD students choose between two tracks, the "Traditional Track"
and the "Philosophy and the Science" track. Each track has
its own set of degree requirements. In the traditional track, the first
two years are devoted to course work, and the third year is devoted
to writing a conference paper, preparing for qualifying exams and preparing
a dissertation proposal. In the philosophy and the sciences track, two
and a half years are devoted to course work, including four graduate
courses in some empirical science, and the qualifying exams and dissertation
proposal are postponed to the beginning of the fourth year. The final
year or two of residency are devoted to actually writing the dissertation.
Most students enrolled in the PhD program receive full tuition remission
and earn a living stipend by working as teaching assistants for regular
faculty. Current stipends are at least $14,000 per year. Graduate students
assist in the grading and advising of undergraduates and often lead
their own recitation sections. Advanced graduate students may be offered
the opportunity to teach their own undergraduate courses. Some of these
courses take place during the regular academic year, but most take place
during the summer. Many students who have completed the first three
years in good standing and have begun work on an approved dissertation
will receive a predoctoral Taft fellowship, which likewise carries tuition
remission and a living stipend without teaching obligations. Taft fellowships
are awarded in competition with students from ten different departments.
For more information on the graduate program, please click on links
in the second row above. For still more information, please fill out
the Graduate
Information Request Form, or contact:
Prof. Robert Skipper
Director of Graduate Studies
Department of Philosophy
University of Cincinnati
P. O. Box 210374
Cincinnati, OH 45221-0374
email: robert.skipper@uc.edu
telephone: 513-556-6340