Geography Doctor of Philosophy Program
Department of Geography | Faculty of Environment
間眅埶AV Calendar 2012 Spring
Applicants must have a master of arts (MA) or a master of science (MSc) degree. Those admitted without an appropriate background may have to make up specified courses.
Incoming doctor of philosophy (PhD) students will complete the doctoral component of GEOG 600, a seminar on geography graduate studies, offered each fall term.
Supervisory Committee
The student works under the faculty advisors guidance, pending formation of a supervisory committee that normally consists of three faculty, one of whom may be from outside the department, and is chosen by the beginning of the second term.
Program Requirements
The advisor, and subsequently the supervisory committee, and the student determine a study program to suit background and research objectives. After committee consultation, students can elect, or may be required to complete courses to acquire relevant knowledge and skills, including language.
Qualifying Examination
Written and oral qualifying exams establish competence to proceed with doctoral thesis research and are completed at the end of the second residence term and no later than the end of the third. Students who fail the written or oral exam may retake each once, after a one term lapse.
Both parts of the qualifying examination must be successfully completed by the end of the fourth residence term. The qualifying examination committee consists of supervisory committee members (the senior supervisor acts as chair), and an examiner external to the supervisory committee.
Written exams comprise four papers jointly agreed by the qualifying examination committee. The oral exam must be held within three weeks of completion of the written examination. The student is examined primarily in topics covered by the written exams, but questions may range over the entire discipline.
Thesis
Candidates who successfully complete qualifying exams will present a thesis proposal at a department colloquium no later than the end of the fifth residence term. The supervisory committee must approve the written proposal prior to substantive research. The completed thesis is judged by the examining committee at an oral defence. If the defence fails, the candidate is ineligible for further degree candidacy. See Graduate General Regulations on page 219.
Students prepare their thesis by completing
- GEOG 699-6 PhD Thesis
Academic Requirements within the Graduate General Regulations
All graduate students must satisfy the academic requirements that are specified in the Graduate General Regulations (residence, course work, academic progress, supervision, research competence requirement, completion time, and degree completion), as well as the specific requirements for the program in which they are enrolled, as shown above.