|
Emilio Bejel |
PhD Degree
Our department offers three specializations: Hispanic Linguistics and Spanish or Latin American Literatures and Cultures. For detailed information about each specialization and its requirements and qualifying examination, review our Graduate Handbook (Word).
Advising and Mentorship
Our department believes that mentoring is a key aspect of a graduate student's experience. Our faculty works closely with their graduate students to create a positive and challenging environment that fosters intellectual and professional growth. Serving as advocates and mentors, they:
- Advise students about degree requirements.
- Guide students through thesis or dissertation research.
- Encourage students' professional development.
General Requirements
- Enrollment: 12 units per quarter for full-time status; less than 6 units per quarter for part-time status. (Teaching Assistants, Research Assistants, and Associate Instructors are expected to enroll in 12 units of course work.)
- Grades: A grade average of B or better must be maintained in courses taken for the degree. On receipt of a grade of C or lower in any course, a candidate will be warned. A second grade of C or lower will be regarded as grounds for disqualification.
- Languages: Ph.D. students must demonstrate competence in reading comprehension in two languages other than English and Spanish before being admitted to the qualifying exam. One of these should be French or German, and the other should be related to the student's field of research.
Reading List
Literature students construct their reading list using as a basis the lists available from the graduate program assistant. The available lists are: Historical Periods: Golden Age, Modern Spanish and Modern Spanish-American, and Medieval; and Genres: Hispanic and Peninsular Poetry, Hispanic and Peninsular Prose fiction, and Hispanic and Peninsular Theater. Students should include literature from all genres of one historical period and all periods of one genre. Their dissertation adviser must approve their reading list.
Linguistics students construct their reading list using the M.A. Reading
list as a basis. Their dissertation adviser must approve their reading
list.
Qualifying Examination
The qualifying exam consists of both a written and oral portion. There are five members of the qualifying exam committee who are recommended by the student and the Ph.D. adviser. Previous exams are available for review from the graduate program assistant, and students are encouraged to study them.
Dissertation Project
Six weeks before the scheduled date for the qualifying exam, a Ph.D. candidate must present a dissertation proposal to his or her exam committee members for approval. The final dissertation should demonstrate the student's ability for independent investigation and analysis, and it must be approved by the committee in charge of the dissertation and by the Graduate Council before the Ph.D. degree will be recommended. In no case will the Ph.D. degree be granted merely for the faithful completion of a course of study, however extensive. Detailed instructions on the format of the dissertation and abstract may be obtained at http://gradstudies.ucdavis.edu/continue/filing.htm.
Completion Schedule
The minimum residence requirement for a Masters degree is six regular quarters of full-time enrollment (12 units per quarter). Two six-week summer sessions may be counted as the equivalent of one regular quarter for purposes of satisfying this requirement. A minimum of two units must be taken in each summer session. Typically, students complete the program in five to six years.
Designated Emphases
Spanish graduate students may participate in a Designated Emphasis (DE), a specialization that might include a new method of inquiry or an important field of application which is related to their existing Ph.D. program. The DE is awarded in conjunction with the Ph.D. degree and is signified by a transcript designation; for example, "Ph.D. in Spanish with a Designated Emphasis in Critical Theory." Students must complete all the requirements for the Spanish program, as well as the courses required for the selected DE. See the Graduate Handbook (Word) for more information.
The Graduate Program in Spanish is affiliated with 5 Designated Emphases: Classics and the Classical Tradition, Critical Theory, Feminist Theory and Research, Native American Studies, and Second Language Acquisition.


