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2024-2025 Graduate Catalog
Human Development and Family Science Major, PhD
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Return to: College of Education, Health, and Human Sciences
Our Human Development and Family Science doctoral program is based on the model of the empirically-based professional or social scientist. Graduate students learn to conduct research on human development and family science in accordance with established standards of scientific inquiry and evaluation. The Human Development and Family Science doctoral program seeks to produce researchers, scholars, and educators who are capable of independent investigation of family and developmental processes. Students also receive training in how to conduct scientifically-based assessments of prevention and intervention. Many opportunities exist in Counseling, Human Development, and Family Science for graduate students to become involved in research on children, youth, and families. The central premise of the HDFS doctoral program is the idea that scientific inquiry provides the most effective means to improve the wellbeing of children, youth and families.
A cornerstone idea for this graduate program is development in context, or the perspective that human development is best understood in terms of interconnections among families, neighborhoods, schools, communities, cultures, and international environments. A more specific focus within this development in context perspective is an emphasis on children, youth, and families at risk. Together, these two themes, development in context and children, youth, and families at risk, are the foundations upon which our graduate curriculum is structured.
The HDFS doctoral program features the integration of human development and family science, which focuses specifically on the themes of development and learning in context, cross-cultural/contextual issues, and children and families at risk. It prepares students for teaching and research positions as well as those in policy, practice, and community outreach, recognizing that a rigorous research background is required for each. The program is flexible, allowing students to develop individualized programs in which they can focus on a selected area of study.
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Campus Code
Knoxville Campus
Admissions Standards/Procedures
- Complete and submit formal online application to the Graduate Admissions Office, along with the application fee.
- For the department, a completed file for review includes
- A departmental application
- Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores for the general section
- Completion of three Graduate Rating Forms by individuals who can attest to the applicant’s potential for graduate education
- Admission to the graduate program is contingent upon
- Faculty evaluation of GRE scores
- Not Applicable for Teacher Licensure (PreK-3) concentration
- Undergraduate/graduate GPA
- Rating forms
- Work experience
- The match between student’s goals and department’s foci
- Prerequisites to the doctoral program are a master’s degree from a regionally accredited institution or equivalent, completion of the 12 credit hour foundation core in the child and family studies master’s program, 3 credit hours of computationally-based, graduate-level statistics, and completion of a thesis as part of the master’s degree.
- Exceptional applicants with only an undergraduate degree may be considered by the CFS Graduate Committee for direct admittance to the Ph.D. program if they wish. Such applicants must have undergraduate research experience relevant to Child and Family Studies, focused research interests, and a strong academic record.
- Students who are admitted without a master’s degree will complete requirements for the thesis-based MS degree as part of their program of study. If in good standing after completing the MS program requirements, and under the recommendation of their MS committee, these students will proceed directly into the PhD program.
Credit Hours Required
A minimum 73 graduate credit hours beyond the baccalaureate degree.
Non-Course Requirements
- Doctoral candidates work closely with their dissertation chair to complete a dissertation proposal, conduct the research, prepare the dissertation, and defend the work. See the Graduate Student Handbook for more detailed information.
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Return to: College of Education, Health, and Human Sciences
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