Rehabilitation Sciences, PhD Curriculum

Course of Study

Curriculum is 42 credits.

33 core credits required. 9 credits of elective are required and can be fulfilled by taking RS-990 (Independent Study) or by approval of transfer credit. Dissertation will also be completed after passing a Qualifying Examination.

Fall - Term 1

RS-910Intro to Conc & Res in Rs

3

RS-930Hlth & Rs Statistics 1

3

HP-712Foundations of Tch & Lrn

3

HRS-960Interdis Sem in Rehab Sci

1

Spring – Term 2

RS-932Hlth & RS Statistics 2

3

RS-990IND Study - Rehab Sciences

1-6

HP-714Teaching Practicum

3

HRS-960Interdis Sem in Rehab Sci

1

Summer – Term 3

RS-970Mentored Exp in Research

3

HRS-960Interdis Sem in Rehab Sci

1

Fall – Term 4

RS-940Adv Meas in Hlth & RS

3

RS-990IND Study - Rehab Sciences

1-6

HRS-960Interdis Sem in Rehab Sci

1

Spring – Term 5

RS-920Res Design in Health and Rs

3

RS-990IND Study - Rehab Sciences

1-6

HRS-960Interdis Sem in Rehab Sci

1

Summer – Term 6

RS-970Mentored Exp in Research

3

HRS-960Interdis Sem in Rehab Sci

1

Qualifying Examination

After completing the coursework in the core curriculum and elective coursework, each student must pass a qualifying examination before being considered a candidate for the doctoral degree and being permitted to move on to the dissertation phase of the program. This examination is designed to assess the student’s readiness to formulate and carryout a high-quality dissertation project.

The qualifying examination entails writing an NIH-style grant application for a project that the student plans to pursue for a dissertation (including the entire research plan and detailed budget with justification). The proposal is evaluated by a committee of faculty members (Examining Committee) both in terms of the written document and via questioning that takes place during the student’s oral presentation of the project to the Examining Committee.

The Examining Committee decides whether the student passes, passes with qualifications (recommendations for additional coursework, etc.) or fails the qualifying examination at the end of the oral presentation/examination.

Dissertation

The dissertation comprises a series of papers formatted for submission to peer-reviewed journals for publication along with an introduction chapter and an overall conclusions chapter.

This approach is modeled after the format that has been used successfully for some time in several European and Scandinavian countries and is being increasingly adopted by academic departments in the United States as a way to facilitate the publication of dissertation research.

The final product must be successfully presented and defended orally before a Dissertation Committee comprising faculty with expertise in areas related to the dissertation topic.

Student performance in the didactic courses in the core curriculum and elective coursework will be primarily evaluated using traditional approaches including formal testing, projects/problem sets, and/or written assignments/term papers. Students must maintain a B (80%) average in these courses to continue in the PhD program. Mentored experiences in teaching and research will be assessed on a pass-fail basis.