Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

Work with your Faculty Advisor to decide which courses you need to take

The PhD is granted in recognition of high attainment in a specified field of knowledge. It is a research degree and is not conferred solely upon the earning of credit or the completion of courses. It is granted after the student has shown proficiency and distinctive achievement in a specific field, has demonstrated the ability to do original, independent investigation, and has presented these findings with a high degree of literary skill in a dissertation.

PhD Advisors and Committees

Throughout your PhD, you will rely on the advice and expertise of your advisors, mentors, and committee members.

 

Expand
titleFaculty Advisor

Your Faculty Advisor is your main advisor throughout your PhD experience. Profiles of each faculty member and their research and practice interests can be found on the COPH website. Look under Faculty and Staff on each department's home pageYou can find the areas of specialization, and if you click on individual faculty, you will find more detailed information.

To change advisors see the Archivum Change Of Advisor process.

Expand
titleMajor Professor

The Major Professor serves as the student's advisor and mentor. Students should confer with the department to confirm the internal process and timeline for the selection and appointment of the Major Professor. The student must identify a major professor and receive that person's agreement to serve as major professor. The selection of the Major Professor must be approved and appointed by the department as soon as possible, but no later than the time the student has completed 50% of the program. Students must have a major professor in order to maintain Satisfactory Academic Progress. If a Major Professor cannot be identified or in the event a Major Professor is unable or unwilling to continue serving on the student's committee, the student is responsible for finding another Major Professor. Students who are unable to find a replacement Major Professor should confer with the Program Director for available options. If no other options exist the student may be requested to voluntarily withdraw from the program or may be honorably withdrawn in good academic standing. The student and Major Professor should plan a program of study which, when completed, will satisfy the degree requirements specified. A copy of this program, signed by the student and professor, should be maintained in the student's department file.

Major Professors must meet the following requirements:

  • Be active in scholarly pursuits as evidenced by at least one refereed publication in the last three years.
  • Be graduate faculty, as defined by the University, from the student's academic area. Faculty who do not meet this definition may serve as Co-Major Professor with faculty who do.
  • Be graduate faculty, as defined by the University, from the student’s academic area. Faculty who do not meet this definition may serve as Co-Major Professor.
  • Have been approved by the Department Chair (or equivalent) to serve as a Major Professor or Co-Major Professor.

The membership of graduate faculty will be based upon criteria developed within the appropriate program or department and approved at the college level. These criteria must be forwarded to the Dean of the Office of Graduate Studies.

In the event a Major Professor leaves the University (i.e. for an appointment at another university, due to retirement, etc.) and the Major Professor is willing to continue serving on the student's committee, the Major Professor then becomes a Co-Major Professor on the committee and another faculty is appointed as the other Co-Major Professor. It is important that one of the Co-Major Professors be accessible on the university campus for the student to make satisfactory progress on the thesis/dissertation. In the event a Major Professor is on temporary leave (e.g. sabbatical, research, etc.); the Major Professor shall coordinate with the Program Director to facilitate the needs of the student. In some instances a student may choose to have two professors serve as Major Professor. In this situation the faculty are approved as “Co-Major Professors” and jointly serve in that role. Consequently both faculty must sign approval on paperwork pertaining to the student's processing (i.e. committee form, change of committee form, admission to candidacy, etc.)

...

titleDissertation Committee

Some Colleges have a Program Committee comprised of graduate faculty, who advise the student from admission up to doctoral candidacy, when the formal Docotral Dissertation Committee is formed.  As soon as an area of research is determined and a major professor is selected, a Doctoral Dissertation Committee will be appointed and approved for the student. The Department will request approval of the Doctoral Committee from the Dean of the College and, as needed, the Dean of the Office of Graduate Studies. The Doctoral Committee will approve the student's course of study and plan for research, supervise the research, grade the written comprehensive qualifying examination, read and approve the dissertation for content and format, and conduct the dissertation defense.

DISSERTATION COMMITTEE FORM:

To get your committee approved, you must submit the form located here: http://health.usf.edu/publichealth/pdf/PhD_Committee_Form_2006.doc

If you change your committee after this form is submitted, you need to do that on this form: http://health.usf.edu/publichealth/pdf/PhD_Change_of_Committee_Form_2006.doc

 

PhD Program of Study and Courses

Students must develop a program of study to meet the requirements of the PhD program in the USF graduate catalog of their choice, beginning with the catalog published in the year of their admission. The program of study should be prepared with the student’s Faculty Advisor, and completed by the end of the first year of enrollment.

 

Expand
titleUSF and College Catalogs

The requirements for your degree program are contained in the USF catalog for the year you start your degree. When a new catalog is released subsequently, you have the choice of following the new catalog or the one you started with. The USF Graduate School has current and archived catalogs for all USF degrees and programs, available at this link: http://www.grad.usf.edu/catalog.php.

There is also a College catalog, although the USF Catalog has precedence. Current and archived College catalogs are available here: College of Public Health Catalog

Expand
titleProgram of Study (POS) Form

You can find your PhD program of study form on this page: Program of Study Index. Select your admission year (or a later year) and use that form. You will document which courses you are taking or substituting while admitted to the PhD program, which courses you are transferring from another degree program, and which courses you can waive because of prior learning or experience. For the processes to document these different categories, please see the section on Prior Learning below.

 

Expand
titleSummary Section of POS

Fill out your student information, and look at the degree requirements summary. This part shows how you intend to meet the graduation requirements for the degree. You will have to show how you completed the pre-req courses, core courses, focus area courses, other elective courses, and culminating requirements. You will total the credits you have taken, transferred, or waived, based on your entries on the subsequent pages.

Please read the notes on this page carefully. You have to determine how you will meet the 72 credit minimum while not exceeding the transfer limit.

Expand
titlePre-requisite Courses on POS

Students must have taken the public health master's level core courses (or an equivalent curriculum), with a B or better grade. Show where you took the courses and what grade you received. If you haven't taken these courses yet, please look whether your experience in public health might allow you to waive that course. Please see the Prior Learning section below for information on how to document that.

If you need to take these courses, you can do it at USF or you can do it at another accredited university in your home state. We will need to see your transcripts to verify this.

 Please note that these courses are not counted as part of the 72-credit PhD program of study.

Expand
titleCore Courses on POS

The core courses are divided into three clusters. You need to keep track of whether you are taking the course during your admission to the DrPH program, whether you have taken courses you can transfer in to the degree, or whether you can waive any of these because of your prior learning and experience. There are three separate columns for keeping track of this. If you are transferring in a course, you must have received a B or better.

Expand
titleElective Courses on POS

 

Expand
titleCulminating Requirements on POS
 
Expand
titleSignatures Required

You will first complete the POS form with just your Faculty Advisor. Once you and your advisor agree on this plan, please submit a copy to the program director. After you form a dissertation committee, your committee members will need to also approve this plan and sign the form.

Expand
titlePhD Courses
Expand
titleCOPH Course Syllabi

The syllabi for all COPH courses can be found at this link: Course Listing. You can look to see what content, competencies, learning objectives, and assessments are offered in each course.

Expand
titleCore Course Schedule and Availability

We will provide you with updated course availability schedules. Please check your USF health email account regularly, particularly when we are approaching the registration period each semester. Here are the current recommendations by cohort.

Expand
title2014 Cohort

 

Expand
title2015 Cohort

 

Expand
title2016 Cohort

 

Expand
titleOnline Courses

Information about our online programs can be found here: http://health.usf.edu/publichealth/onlineprograms/. Select the program you are interested in, and click on the link in that description that takes you to the degree requirements and/or curriculum. Click on the most recent program of study, and you will find a list of courses there. If you want more information about specific courses, you can look them up in the Course Listing.

 

PhD Competencies and Prior Learning

Each student must present a portfolio of documentation and evidence for any course substitutions, transfers, or waivers requested. This is the supporting evidence to the Program of Study form that the student must complete by the end of the first year. The documentation needs to make the case for achievement of PhD competencies and course learning objectives, as appropriate to the request. 

 

Expand
titleCourses and Competencies
Expand
titleDomains and Competencies
 
Expand
titleTable of Competencies and Courses

 

Expand
titlePhD Course Syllabi

The syllabi for all PhD courses can be found at this link: Course Listing. You can look to see what content, competencies, learning objectives, and assessments are offered in each course.

Expand
titlePrior Learning Documentation

Marcia Conner: "In what is known as the 70/20/10 learning concept, 70% of learning and development takes place from real-life and on-the-job experiences, tasks, and problem solving, 20% of the time development comes from other people through informal or formal feedback, mentoring, or coaching, and10% of learning and development comes from formal training.”  

 Our philosophy in the DrPH program is consistent with this quote. We know that you bring a myriad of knowledge, skills, and experience with you to our program. If you are fully prepared in an area, there is no need for you to take a course covering what you already know and do. However, you must establish this by providing convincing documentation substantiating your knowledge, skills, and experience. Any transfers, substitutions, or waivers must be approved by your Faculty Advisor.

 

Expand
titleCourse Transfers

You can transfer up to 40% of the DrPH degree program from courses taken in other degree programs, or as a non-degree student. If you took those courses at USF prior to the DrPH degree, they still must be transferred in. First, you must follow a college-internal process for course transfer approval, and once approved, you must follow a USF process to get credit for those courses towards your degree.

Any transferred courses have to be completed with a B grade, and the pre-requisite core courses cannot be transferred into the program.

Expand
titleCOPH Transfer Process

The process for getting your transfer courses approved is explained on the DrPH Course Transfer form: http://health.usf.edu/publichealth/pdf/DrPH-Course-Transfer-Form.docx. If your advisor approves, you can transfer courses to meet the core requirements, or you can transfer courses into the focus area. You have to fill out this form for each course you desire to transfer, and attach supporting documentation if required:

  • If you are transferring in the focus area, they will be approved if your Faculty Advisor agrees, but no justification of competencies or learning outcomes is required.
  • If you are transferring into the core requirements, you must follow the process for showing that the courses you took included similar competencies and learning objectives as the required course.

Note: You can transfer in more than one course to meet the requirements of one course if needed.

Expand
titleUSF Transfer Process

All courses approved for transfer to USF must be submitted to USF on the following form: http://www.grad.usf.edu/inc/linked-files/transfer_course.pdf. You have to submit official transcripts to USF in order to have transfer courses processed by them, unless the courses were taken at USF.

Expand
titleCourse Substitutions

The process for documenting that you are substituting a different course at USF for one of the required courses is explained on the DrPH Course Substitution form: http://health.usf.edu/publichealth/pdf/DrPH-Course-Substitution-Form.docx. You can substitute another course for a required course if your advisor approves, and the course meets the broad competencies outlined on the Table of Competencies and Courses found here: http://health.usf.edu/publichealth/pdf/DrPH-Table-of-Competencies-&-Courses.docx.

Expand
titleCourse Waivers

The process for waiving a required course is explained on the DrPH Prior Learning form: http://health.usf.edu/publichealth/pdf/DrPH-Prior-Learning-Waiver-Form.docx. You can waive a course if your advisor approves, and you can document, with evidence, that you have any combination of experience or learning that meets all of the competencies and learning outcomes of the required course you want to waive.

 

The Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) is granted in recognition of high attainment in a specified field of knowledge. It is a research degree and is not conferred solely upon the earning of credit or the completion of courses. It is granted after the student has shown proficiency and distinctive achievement in a specific field, has demonstrated the ability to do original, independent investigation, and has presented these findings with a high degree of literary skill in a dissertation. This degree requires a minimum of 90 credits beyond the baccalaureate degree.

Mission

The mission of the program of studies for the Doctor of Philosophy degree is to prepare public health professionals to make substantive contributions to public health inquiry and practice.

(also see the USF Graduate School Catalog at http://www.grad.usf.edu/catalog.php)

 

 

A Doctor of Philosophy graduate will be able to:

 Scientific Knowledge and Theory

  1. Critically evaluate and use scientific theories and frameworks relevant to public health.
  2. Synthesize knowledge from a broad range of disciplines in public health.

Research

  1. Critically analyze research literature.
  2. Develop testable hypotheses for independent research.
  3. Design and carry out original research that contributes to the knowledge base in public health.
  4. Demonstrate mastery of methods of data collection and analysis.
  5. Apply a set of ethical standards in the conduct and dissemination of research.
  6. Work as an effective research team member.
  7. Prepare scholarly publications and deliver oral presentations.
  8. Be cognizant of appropriate funding sources for research.
  9. Develop grant writing skills.

Teaching

  1. Demonstrate ability to teach a university level course using current pedagogical techniques.
  2. Demonstrate communication skills that facilitate learning by others in formal and informal settings.

 Image Added

Info

Also see the PhD Guidebook Homepage for important information on this degree, and the USF Graduate Catalog, Public Health PhD section

The PHD in Public Health offers the following concentrations:

.


Insert excerpt
PhD Guidebook
PhD Guidebook
nopaneltrue