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Director of the Institute: Peter Feuille
504 East Armory Avenue, Champaign, IL 61820
(217) 333-1482
E-mail: e-barker@uiuc.edu
Graduate Degree Programs
The Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations (ILIR) offers graduate
work leading to both a master’s and a doctoral degree. Graduate
study at ILIR is based on a multidisciplinary approach to human resources/industrial
relations problems and a flexible curriculum. To achieve this, the
institute has joint faculty appointments or course cross-listings
with economics, psychology, law, business administration, history,
finance, political science, sociology, and social work.
Admission
Students must meet the general admission requirements of the Graduate
College, as well as the specific requirements of ILIR. Admission to
the master’s program in either the fall Journalism or spring
semester is based on an applicant’s undergraduate record, letters
of reference, Graduate Record Examination (GRE) or Graduate Management
Aptitude Test (GMAT) scores, and a statement of interest and career
goals. The minimum requirements for admission are a course in statistics
and an average grade of B in the last 60 hours of undergraduate work.
A deficiency in statistics may be made up by taking the required course
without graduate credit during the first semester of graduate study.
International applicants must provide Test of English as Foreign Language
(TOEFL) test results with a recommended minimum score of 590 on the
paper-based test (243 on the computer-based test).
Students with outstanding academic credentials, with or without a
master’s degree, are encouraged to apply to the Ph.D. program.
Applicants to the doctoral program must submit evidence of research
ability, such as a master’s thesis, an undergraduate thesis,
special reports, or published articles. This is in addition to the
other required application materials as indicated for the master’s
program. Admission to the doctoral program is made for the fall semester
only. An exception is made for ILIR master’s degree students,
who may submit an internal application.
Graduate Teaching Experience
Although ILIR has no teaching requirement, doctoral students are encouraged
to gain teaching experience in this program.
Master of Human Resources and Industrial Relations
The master’s program can lead to a professional, terminal master’s
degree, or it can prepare students to continue their graduate study
toward a Ph.D. or other doctoral degrees in law and other professional
areas. The fields of concentration are human resource management;
labor markets and employment; and unions, management, and labor relations
policy.
The master’s degree requires 48 graduate hours of courses and
usually takes three semesters to complete. The master’s degree
program has core requirements in human resources/industrial relations
systems, quantitative methods, and research methods, and a subject
distribution requirement.
Doctor of Philosophy
The Ph.D. is an interdisciplinary degree which typically leads to
a career in teaching and research, especially at business schools
or industrial relations schools. Research-oriented careers outside
the academic world are also available. The program can be completed
in four years beyond the baccalaureate degree or three years beyond
the master’s degree. Doctoral students are required to complete
96 graduate hours of credit beyond the baccalaureate degree. Coursework
is usually completed in two years. There are two written qualifying
examinations; the first focuses on industrial relations theory and
human resource management theory, and the second focuses on the candidate’s
selected area of specialization. Examples of areas of specialization
include the effects of technological change on the human resource
function; motivation, morale, and job satisfaction; labor-management
relations in the public sector; labor markets and employment; and
international comparative labor problems. Each student’s program
of study is chosen in consultation with the Ph.D. Advisory Committee
at ILIR.
Joint J.D./Master of Human Resources and Industrial
RelationsThis joint degree program with the College of Law is usually
completed in three-and-one-half years. Students must apply to both
the College of Law and the Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations,
and must be accepted by both units. The degrees are awarded simultaneously
upon successful completion of all joint degree requirements.Joint
M.B.A./Master of Human Resources and Industrial RelationsStudents
interested in pursuing this "custom-designed" joint degree
make separate applications to each program. Independent admission
decisions are made by each unit, and the student must be accepted
by both. The authorization for this program has expired, but it may
be renewed. Financial AidThe institute offers research assistantships
and fellowships to high-ranking graduate students with superior academic
credentials. An institute research/teaching assistant receives a stipend
plus exemption from resident or non-resident tuition and the service
fee. The Graduate College also awards minority fellowships that carry
stipends plus tuition and service fee waivers. The institute seeks
reimbursement from appointing units of the value of the tuition waivers
associated with assistantship appointments made to ILIR master’s
students in other campus units. However, this restriction does not
apply to students in the doctoral program. |
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