Theater and Performance Studies

Postgraduate

In Los Angeles (USA)

higher than £ 9000

Description

  • Type

    Postgraduate

  • Location

    Los angeles (USA)

The Department of Theater offers the Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) in Theater and the Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degree in Theater and Performance Studies.

Facilities

Location

Start date

Los Angeles (USA)
See map
90095

Start date

On request

Questions & Answers

Add your question

Our advisors and other users will be able to reply to you

Who would you like to address this question to?

Fill in your details to get a reply

We will only publish your name and question

Reviews

Subjects

  • University
  • Philosophy
  • Teaching

Course programme

During the first six quarters (two academic years), students must complete 13 courses, including Theater 220, 216AS, 216B, and 216C, as well as nine elective seminars or tutorials (200 or 500-level). Students are regularly enrolled in one seminar within the department and one outside the department. No more than two electives may be tutorials. Electives must augment the required courses so as to constitute a definable area of study associated with the dissertation topic. The dissertation is a historical, critical, analytical, or experimental study of a theater or performance studies topic.

All courses applied toward the doctoral degree must be taken for a letter grade, with the exception of those that only have an ‘S/U’ grading option.

First-Year Examination
During the winter quarter, a committee of PhD faculty administers a screening examination based on the course work the student has completed to date. Depending on the results of this examination, a student may be required to complete additional background courses, or the student may be recommended for academic disqualification. The exam may be retaken once.

Teaching Experience

Most students will acquire teaching experience over the course of their studies. Teaching is not required for the degree.

Written and Oral Qualifying Examinations

Academic Senate regulations require all doctoral students to complete and pass university written and oral qualifying examinations prior to doctoral advancement to candidacy. Also, under Senate regulations, the University Oral Qualifying Examination is open only to the student and appointed members of the doctoral committee. In addition to university requirements, some graduate programs have other pre-candidacy examination requirements. What follows in this section is how students are required to fulfill all of these requirements for this doctoral program.

All committee nominations and reconstitutions adhere to the Minimum Standards for Doctoral Committee Constitution.

After completion of course requirements, students are required to pass a written qualifying examination scheduled for three days followed by one oral examination. Students first constitute an examination committee, which may also serve as the doctoral committee, including the potential dissertation adviser and three other faculty members. Students submit a short description of the dissertation project to the Ph.D. faculty for review. Typically, the majority of the committee members will be from the student's home department, and one member with complementary research interests will come from beyond the department.

The written examination concentrates on three subject areas that will inform the dissertation and constitute the main foci of the student's specialization. These areas may be chosen from: a field of critical theory; a historical period; the performance of a genre, or of social or cultural traditions of a given geographical region. The student, together with the examination committee, prepares an exam list in each of the three fields, covering the leading concepts, methodologies and examples seminal to the field. Along with the three exam lists, the student also composes a dissertation prospectus of approximately 25-30 pages. The prospectus argues for the topic of the dissertation and for the pertinence of the three fields to the dissertation, and concludes in a brief description of the proposed chapters. Both the prospectus and the three exam lists must be approved by the examination committee at least one quarter prior to the date scheduled for the examinations. The written examination questions are derived from these materials. The written examination date is chosen jointly by the student and the committee members.

The written examination is a take-home exam consisting of three questions, one pertaining to each exam list. The writing period will consist of three days. The three essays combined should not exceed 30 pages. The completed examination will be distributed to and evaluated by the committee. Students who pass the written examinations submit a departmentally approved nomination of doctoral committee to the Graduate Division for approval. Upon approval, the University Oral Qualifying Examination is officially scheduled.

The University Oral Qualifying examination focuses on both the written examination and the materials in the prospectus. If the student fails the doctoral examinations, there is one opportunity to retake them.

Advancement to Candidacy

Students are advanced to candidacy and awarded the Candidate in Philosophy (C.Phil.) degree upon successful completion of the written and oral qualifying examinations.

Doctoral Dissertation

Every doctoral degree program requires the completion of an approved dissertation that demonstrates the student's ability to perform original, independent research and constitutes a distinct contribution to knowledge in the principal field of study.

The dissertation committee may contain the same members as the examination committee, or a student may choose to alter the membership.

Final Oral Examination (Defense of Dissertation)

Not required for all students in the program. The decision as to whether a defense is required is made by the doctoral committee.

Time-to-Degree

The maximum time for completion of degree requirements is 21 quarters, with the following timelines:

From graduate admission to the approval of the dissertation prospectus: six to nine quarters.

From graduate admission to the written and oral qualifying examination: six to nine quarters.

From approval of the dissertation prospectus to the oral qualifying examination: one quarter.

From graduate admission to the award of the degree: 15 quarters.

MAXIMUM TTD

Termination of Graduate Study and Appeal of Termination

University Policy

A student who fails to meet the above requirements may be recommended for termination of graduate study. A graduate student may be disqualified from continuing in the graduate program for a variety of reasons. The most common is failure to maintain the minimum cumulative grade point average (3.00) required by the Academic Senate to remain in good standing (some programs require a higher grade point average). Other examples include failure of examinations, lack of timely progress toward the degree and poor performance in core courses. Probationary students (those with cumulative grade point averages below 3.00) are subject to immediate dismissal upon the recommendation of their department. University guidelines governing termination of graduate students, including the appeal procedure, are outlined in Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.

Special Departmental or Program Policy

Departmental Probation

In addition to the standard reasons outlined above, a student may be recommended for probation/academic disqualification whose various creative projects or work in courses in research methodology and history seminars are indicative of insufficient talent, development, imagination or motivation.

If a student's work in this area is found to be insufficient, by recommendation of the appropriate committee, the student will be placed on probation by the department.

The student will receive notification of probation in writing, which will outline:

Appeal of Recommendation for Academic Disqualification

A student may appeal a recommendation for academic disqualification through the following steps:

UCLA is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges and by numerous special agencies. Information regarding the University's accreditation may be obtained from the Office of Academic Planning and Budget, 2107 Murphy Hall.

Theater and Performance Studies

higher than £ 9000