- Graduates will be able to demonstrate a broad knowledge of literary histories, aesthetics, cultures and emerging areas of inquiry, including an awareness of cultural diversity within literary traditions.
- Graduates will be able to demonstrate proficiency in formulating written and spoken arguments situated within a historical or methodological field of study, as defined in the sections of the department’s graduate handbook covering Ph.D. exams.
- Graduates will be able to demonstrate the ability to write and present papers or their equivalent within professional contexts.
- Graduates will be able to demonstrate the ability to conceptualize, develop and bring to successful completion an original, sustained, and coherent independent research project (e.g., the dissertation) that contributes to one’s field of specialization.
- Graduates will be able to demonstrate the skills necessary for teaching at the undergraduate level.
- Graduates will be able to demonstrate an ability to generate degree-appropriate job search materials.
Students are required to take a minimum of 24 credits in English course work beyond the M.A. Six credits may be taken at the 4000-level. ENGL 5000 Methods of Literary Research (3 cr), ENGL 5010 Teaching Writing (3 cr), and ENGL 5110 Literary Theory (3 cr) are required of all students who have not taken equivalent courses in another program as part of their prior training.
Distributive Requirements
Beyond these courses, Ph.D. candidates who have taken course work in four of the five following fields as master’s students need only take 9 of 24 required credits in three of the five fields as part of their doctoral course work. Doctoral students who have not met the threshold master’s level criterion must take 12 credits in four of the following five fields:
- Medieval Literature
- Early-Modern Literature (ca. 1500-1800)
- Literature of the Long 19th Century (ca. 1789-1914): British, American, African American, or Transatlantic
- Modern and/or Contemporary Literature: British, Irish, American, African American, Transatlantic, or Postcolonial
- Rhetoric and/or Composition exclusive of ENGL 5010 Teaching Writing (3 cr)
In addition, all Ph.D. students, after their first year, must distribute registrations for 12 credits of ENGL 6990 Dissertation Research over several terms.
Non-Course Requirements
Language Requirement
Before taking their comprehensive exams, all Ph.D. candidates must demonstrate reading proficiency in one language other than English relevant to their research.
Doctoral Competency Exam
Ph.D. candidates take a Doctoral Competency Exam that has written and oral components and is described in the English Department Graduate Handbook.
Public Defense
Completed dissertations are assessed by the student’s committee and are formally accepted after a public defense.
Continuation Standards
Students must maintain a cumulative grade point average (GPA) of 3.30 in all graduate/professional courses.
Roadmaps are recommended semester-by-semester plans of study for programs and assume full-time enrollment unless otherwise noted.
Courses and milestones designated as critical (marked with !) must be completed in the semester listed to ensure a timely graduation. Transfer credit may change the roadmap.
This roadmap should not be used in the place of regular academic advising appointments. All students are encouraged to meet with their advisor/mentor each semester. Requirements, course availability and sequencing are subject to change.
Year One | ||
---|---|---|
Fall | Credits | |
Critical course: ENGL 5XXX or 6XXX | 5000-level or 6000-level English elective | 3 |
Critical course: ENGL 5XXX or 6XXX | 5000-level or 6000-level English elective | 3 |
Credits | 6 | |
Spring | ||
Critical course: ENGL 5XXX or 6XXX | 5000-level or 6000-level English elective | 3 |
Critical course: ENGL 5XXX or 6XXX | 5000-level or 6000-level English elective | 3 |
Credits | 6 | |
Year Two | ||
Fall | ||
Critical course: ENGL 5XXX or 6XXX | 5000-level or 6000-level English elective | 3 |
Critical course: ENGL 5XXX or 6XXX | 5000-level or 6000-level English elective | 3 |
Credits | 6 | |
Spring | ||
Critical course: ENGL 5XXX or 6XXX | 5000-level or 6000-level English elective | 3 |
Critical course: ENGL 5XXX or 6XXX | 5000-level or 6000-level English elective | 3 |
Credits | 6 | |
Year Three | ||
Fall | ||
Critical course: Preparations for Exams and Dissertation Prospectus | ||
ENGL 6990 | Dissertation Research | 3 |
Critical course: Foreign Language Course (see Program Notes) | 0-3 | |
Credits | 3-6 | |
Spring | ||
Critical course: Completion of Written & Oral Comprehensive Exams & Dissertation Prospectus Approval | ||
ENGL 6990 | Dissertation Research | 3 |
Credits | 3 | |
Year Four | ||
Fall | ||
ENGL 6990 | Dissertation Research | 3 |
Credits | 3 | |
Spring | ||
ENGL 6990 | Dissertation Research | 3 |
Credits | 3 | |
Year Five | ||
Fall | ||
ENGL 6990 | Dissertation Research | 0 |
Credits | 0 | |
Spring | ||
Critical course: Completion of Dissertation Defense | ||
ENGL 6990 | Dissertation Research | 0 |
Credits | 0 | |
Total Credits | 36-39 |
Program Notes
Students who have taken graduate coursework in four of the five following fields as master’s students, beyond completing ENGL 5000 Methods of Literary Research (3 cr), ENGL 5010 Teaching Writing (3 cr), and ENGL 5110 Literary Theory (3 cr), need only take nine (of 24 required) hours in three of the five fields as part of their doctoral coursework. Doctoral students who have not met the threshold master’s level criterion must take 12 (of 24 required) hours in four of the following five fields:
- Medieval literature (3 hrs.)
- Early-Modern literature (c. 1500-1800) (3 hrs.)
- Literature of the long 19th century (c. 1789-1914): British, American, African American or transatlantic (3 hrs.)
- Modern and/or contemporary literature: British, Irish, American, African American, transatlantic or postcolonial (3 hrs.)
- Rhetoric and/or composition exclusive of ENGL 5010 Teaching Writing (3 cr)
Prior to taking the qualifying examinations, every student in the doctoral program must certify a reading competence in scholarship drawn from one language other than English relevant to his/her literary study.
There are four ways to demonstrate reading competence in a language:
- By documenting reading competence as an M.A. student.
- By performing satisfactorily in an accelerated reading course by the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures.
- By successfully completing a 4000-level course in the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures.
- Through a two-hour examination administered by the English department and graded by the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures.
For additional information about graduate study in English, please contact gradenglish@slu.edu or call 314-977-3016 and ask for the graduate program coordinator.