UIS
Graduate and Undergraduate Catalog
Academic
Year 2004 - 2005
DOCTOR OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
(D.P.A.)
Faculty Ethan Bernick, Beverly Bunch, Willa Bruce, Patricia Byrnes,
Glen Hahn Cope, Milan Dluhy, Hilary Frost-Kumpf, Lon Mackelprang,
Meredith Newman, Anthony Sisneros
Emeritus Faculty Phillip Gregg, Naomi B. Lynn, Kenneth Oldfield
Contact: (217) 206-6076
dpa@uis.edu or www.uis.edu/dpa/
Program
Description
The mission of the doctor of public administration program
is to educate students for public service careers in state
government
and management, or for careers in academia. The program emphasizes
the theory, analysis, evaluation, and practice of public
administration and public policy. Research, along with its
applications, is
also
emphasized. Core courses are supplemented with a specialty
concentration chosen from a range of program areas. Public
administration doctoral
education is intended to enhance student capabilities for
public service, leadership, research, and teaching.
The DPA program has the following objectives: 1) to enhance
the knowledge, competence, and leadership capacity of managers
and
professionals in state government agencies and nonprofit
organizations; 2) to increase the intellectual and professional
resources
available to state government and nonprofit organizations;
3) to increase
research and teaching resources in state government and
nonprofit management; 4) to contribute to the national pool of
knowledge
about state government and nonprofit administration, policy,
and leadership; 5) to enhance the public affairs effort
of the University
of Illinois at Springfield; and 6) to strengthen the field
of public administration within Illinois.
Admission
For admission, applicants must meet the following requirements:
1) master's degree, with a minimum grade-point average
of 3.25 in graduate course work, 2) satisfactory performance
on the
GRE taken within the past five years, 3) demonstration
of
writing skills through the submission of a recent writing
sample, 4)
demonstration
of ability to succeed in doctoral studies by the recommendations
of three persons, at least one of whom is an academic
reference, 5) demonstration of personal commitment to academic
excellence
through a three- to five-page statement of academic and
career goals, and 6) a current resume. International
students must
also
demonstrate English proficiency with a score of at least
575 on the TOEFL.
Admission decisions are made by the Doctoral Program
Committee, which evaluates the information submitted
by each applicant
to the program. For admission to the DPA program, the
goals and
objectives of the student must, in the judgment of
this committee, be an appropriate
fit with the mission and capacity of the DPA program.
Interested persons are encouraged to contact the DPA
program before
starting the application process.
Students are encouraged to submit application materials
by March 15 for the fall semester and by October
30 for spring
admission.
However, applications received later may be considered.
Prerequisites
Prerequisite course requirements include:
1) a one-semester undergraduate or graduate course
in economics, preferably microeconomics;
2) a graduate-level course on the American political
system (or a graduate degree in public administration,
political
studies, or the equivalent);
3) analytical tools (PAD 503, POS 503, or the equivalent)
completed within the past five years;
4) budgeting and finance (PAD 504, or the equivalent);
and
5) public policy (PAD 531 or POS 518, or the equivalent).
An applicant who meets all admission requirements
other than the course prerequisites may be admitted
pending
completion of these
requirements. In no case will a student be allowed
to take a core or research course before meeting
its prerequisite.
Courses taken for a letter grade typically challenge
the student to produce higher quality work than
do those taken
only for
credit and, generally, will better serve the
student. Students are therefore
strongly encouraged to take prerequisite requirements
for a letter grade rather than as credit/no credit.
Advising
An initial faculty adviser will be assigned at
the time a student is admitted to the DPA program.
The
adviser
will assist the
student in planning which courses to take.
Before a student has completed
16 credit hours in the doctoral program or
enrolls in a concentration
course, he or she will select a permanent faculty
adviser and a Plan of Study Committee.
Course Requirements
The student's Plan of Study Committee is responsible
for assisting the student in developing a
program of study
that meets the
course requirements specified below.
Each student must complete at least 54 hours
of course work plus a minimum of 12 hours
of dissertation
credit.
Students
may petition
for up to 12 hours of transfer credit for
graduate work deemed appropriate for the
DPA. All students
will be
required to
complete core courses, research courses,
and transfer courses with a
grade of B or better in each course.
Core Courses (20 hours)
PAD 601 Advanced Seminar in Public Administration
Theory and Organizational Analysis
PAD 602 Advanced Seminar in Organizational
Behavior in Public Systems
PAD 603 Advanced Seminar in Financial
Management and Fiscal Policy
PAD 604 Advanced Seminar in Public Policy
Processes and Analysis
PAD 605 Administrative Ethics and Public
Service
Research Courses (12 hours)
PAD 611 Advanced Seminar in Quantitative
Methods
PAD 612 Advanced Seminar in Qualitative
Methods
PAD 613 Advanced Seminar in Research
Methods
Concentrations (20 hours)
After completing all required core
and research courses, the student
will work
with his/her
adviser to develop
a concentration study
plan. This plan must be approved
by the Plan of Study Committee before
the student
takes
any concentration
courses. Additional
work and permission of the instructor
is required for doctoral students
enrolled in non-prerequisite
500-level
courses.
Prior
to enrollment, the student must also
provide
their Plan of Study Committee with
a written statement
on 1) a description
of the
DPA requirements for the course,
and 2) an explanation of
how the course
fits with their concentration area.
1. Nonprofit Management (20 hours)
The following 12 hours are required,
plus an additional 8 hours.
PAD 623 Nonprofit History and
Philanthropy
PAD 624 The Nonprofit Organization
in a Market Economy
PAD 625 Nonprofit Leadership
2. State Government (20 hours)
The following 12 hours are required,
plus an additional 8 hours.
PAD 631 Intergovernmental Relations
PAD 632 Legislative and Administrative
Politics or
POS 512 Seminar in State Politics
PAD 633 Special Topics in State
Government
3. Special Interest (20 hours)
The student may choose an area
of special interest and work
with his/her
Plan
of Study Committee
to identify the five
classes in the area most appropriate
to the student's individual
interests.
Dissertation (minimum 14 hours)
PAD 687 Dissertation Proposal
Preparation Seminar (credit/no
credit) 2-4
Hours
PAD 690 Dissertation (credit/no
credit) minimum 12 Hours
Examination
After the student completes
DPA course work, he or
she will be
required
to take a comprehensive
examination,
which is
both oral
and written.
Dissertation Work (a minimum
of 14 hours)
Admission to Candidacy.
After successful completion
of
the comprehensive
exam, the student is
admitted to candidacy
and may officially
begin work on the dissertation
proposal (PAD 687). Campus
policy requires
that after completing
all
requirements for candidacy,
the student
must be continuously
enrolled in
at least one semester
hour
of dissertation course
work each fall and spring
semester
until
the dissertation
is
completed,
defended, and
accepted.
Dissertation Committee.
The chair of the Dissertation
Committee is the student's
dissertation adviser.
Students will work
with their committees
(selected by the students
with program
approval).
Dissertation Proposal.
A written dissertation
proposal
must
be formally approved
by the student's
Dissertation Committee
before
dissertation work
may begin. Students will
be required
to take PAD 687
Dissertation Proposal
Preparation Seminar
as a part
of their dissertation
proposal
preparation.
Oral Dissertation
Defense. An oral
examination
on the dissertation
will be conducted
by the Dissertation
Committee
according
to doctoral program
regulations. The
dissertation adviser
will
chair the oral
dissertation defense,
which
will be open to
the campus community.
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