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Graduate
Information

The History
Faculty collaborates with the Program
in Science, Technology and Society and the Anthropology
Program in the Doctoral Program in
History, Anthropology, and Science, Technology and Society (HASTS).
Coursework
Students entering the doctoral program take at least ten
subjects in the doctoral program prior to taking general
exams in their third year. There are three required courses:
a seminar in historical methods, a seminar in social
theory and analysis, and an introduction to science, technology, and society. Students are also strongly recommended to take a two-semester methodology/writing sequence in their second year.
Five elective seminars complete the Programs ten-subject
requirement.
Requirements
Languages: All students must demonstrate a reading
knowledge in one language other than English.
For international students this language may be English.
Research papers: At the end of their first and second
years of graduate study, students demonstrate scholarly
competence by the submission of research papers. The second-year
paper should be a research paper of publishable quality.
General Examinations: Students take general qualifying
exams when they have completed coursework, usually at the
end of the second year or beginning of the third year. The
exam consists of three parts:
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1. A general area of concentration. Each student selects one
of the following three areas: social and cultural perspectives on science and
technology; history of science; history of technology.
2. A field of history (e.g., Imperial Russia and Soviet history) or a field of one of the social sciences (e.g., theory and method in the study of culture).
3. This part, tailored to each student, examines the range and depth of understanding of the history or social study of a particular science or field of engineering (e.g. the history of modern biology, the social study of information technologies). |
Dissertation:
Upon a students satisfactory completion of the general
exams, s/he selects a dissertation committee of three professors,
who help direct the students dissertation and evaluate
it on completion. |