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Head of the Department: Constance H. Shapiro
274 Bevier Hall
905 South Goodwin Avenue,
Urbana, IL 61801
(217) 333-0628
Fax: (217) 244-7887
Degree ProgramsThe Department of Human and Community Development offers
graduate programs leading to the master of science and doctor of philosophy
degrees. Students may choose an option in community and rural studies
or in human development and family studies. The community and rural
studies concentration focuses on methods of community study, frameworks
for analyzing and understanding community systems, and the study of
forces that transform the structure and functioning of communities.
It addresses issues pertaining to community viability and sustainability
from both economic and human resource development perspectives, as
well as the use of effective educational strategies to strengthen
the capacity and leadership potential of individuals and groups. The
human development and family studies concentration focuses on the
psychological and social development of individuals across the life
span and the structure and well-being of families, with an emphasis
on understanding children, youth, and families in their natural settings.
The concentration takes an interdisciplinary approach, with training
including psychological, sociological, anthropological, and educational
approaches to understanding human development and families in the
U.S. and in other cultures. Admission Admission into all programs is
based on a combination of criteria, including undergraduate grade
point average, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores, letters of
recommendation, and a personal statement. International applicants
from non-English-speaking countries must have an official paper-based
Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of at least 575
(233 on the computer-based test). The minimum grade point average
for admission is 3.0 (A = 4.0). All applicants are required to take
the GRE and to have previous coursework in an area of behavioral or
social sciences. A student without prior coursework in advanced-level
statistics may be admitted to a graduate program, but will be required
to make up deficiencies during the first year of the program. Applications
will generally be considered only for fall enrollment. Graduate Teaching
ExperienceAlthough teaching is not a general Graduate College requirement,
experience in teaching is considered an important part of the graduate
experience in this program. Master of Science
The M.S. degree program is designed to prepare students as practitioners
in business, education, and human service settings or for progress
toward the doctor of philosophy degree. Students select either community
and rural studies or human development and family studies as an area
of concentration. Within community and rural studies, students may
select specializations in community studies, rural and community development,
or agricultural and outreach education. Within human development and
family studies, students may select emphases in human development
(early childhood, middle childhood, adolescence) or family studies
(relationships between family members, the family in cross-cultural
settings, relationships between families and other social institutions).
All students must complete a minimum of 32 graduate hours, including
three required core courses, an advanced methods or statistics course,
and 8 graduate hours of thesis (or 36 graduate hours if a thesis is
not submitted). At least four courses must be at the 500 level.
Master of Science and Master of Social Work
A joint master’s degree program offered in conjunction with
the School of Social Work is designed to prepare students for careers
aimed at providing services to couples and families within a human
service agency or as independent practitioners, teachers, or clinical
researchers. For admission to the M.S./M.S.W. joint degree program,
students must apply to both the Department of Human and Community
Development and the School of Social Work and must meet the standards
for admission and be approved by both. Completion of the program may
meet the requirements for associate membership in the American Association
for Marriage and Family Therapy. Students in the human and community
development phase of the program take coursework in family studies,
human development, and family systems to fulfill the requirements
for the M.S. They then fulfill requirements for the M.S.W., which
include an intensive fieldwork internship. Students who hold B.S.W.
degrees must complete a minimum of 80 graduate hours of coursework
to satisfy requirements for the M.S.W. and M.S. degrees. Students
with baccalaureate degrees in other disciplines may need to complete
up to 88 graduate hours if they lack certain social work credits as
undergraduates.
Doctor of
Philosophy
The doctoral program is designed to prepare students to be researchers,
educators, policy developers, or professionals who develop, evaluate,
and implement programs for children, families, and communities. Students
select concentrations in either community and rural studies or human
development and family studies as described in the requirements for
the M.S. degree. Students in the human development and family studies
doctoral concentration can also choose a specialization in applied
human development and family studies, which is intended to prepare
students to enter careers in administration, human services, social
policy, international aid agencies, and government, as well as traditional
careers in teaching and research. Requirements for the Ph.D. include
64 graduate hours beyond the M.S. degree, completion of the written
qualifying examination, defense of the written dissertation proposal,
and a final thesis defense upon completion of the dissertation. Coursework
must include two required core courses, 8 graduate hours in advanced
research methodology and/or statistics, and 32 graduate hours of thesis
credit. Students in the applied human development specialty are required
to complete 16 additional graduate hours, which includes a course
in program development or policy studies, a course in program evaluation,
and two practical in more applied settings that focus on direct services,
policy development, planning, administration, supervision, research,
or consultation.
Financial AidUniversity fellowships and fellowships
in the College of Agricultural, Consumer, and Environmental Sciences,
tuition and service fee waivers, research assistantships, and teaching
assistantships are available on a competitive basis. |
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