Doctoral Concentrations
Tourism
Natural Resource Recreation
Sport Management
Curriculum and Examination
Curriculum includes core departmental, college, and university course
requirements and recommended courses. In summary, doctoral students
must pass a comprehensive written and oral qualifying examination
upon completion of all course work, maintain a satisfactory academic
record, submit an approved dissertation topic, and receive the supervisory
committee's opinion of ability for advancement to candidacy. Upon
completion of the dissertation, the student must successfully complete
an oral examination pertaining to the dissertation research.
Supervisory Committee
Prior to registration, it is highly recommended that all incoming doctoral
students have identified and gotten approval of a graduate faculty
member in the department who is willing and available to supervise
the student. The respective faculty is usually the academic advisor
and the Chair of the supervisory committee. The members of the supervisory
committee should be appointed as soon as possible after the student
has begun doctoral work, and in general no later than the end of
the second semester of equivalent full-time study.
The supervisory committee for a candidate for the doctoral degree
shall consist of no fewer than four members selected from the Graduate
Faculty.
At least two persons, including the chairperson, will be from the
department recommending the degree, and at least one member will
be drawn from
a different academic discipline. The supervisory committee will include
at least one person selected from the Graduate Faculty from outside
the discipline of the major.
Transfer of Credit
A maximum of 30 credit hours of previous graduate course work taken
at an accredited institution will be allowed to transfer within 7
years of being admitted to the University of Florida. If transferring
as a Ph.D. student from another institution, a maximum of 45 credit
hours of all previous graduate coursework will be allowed to transfer.
Qualifying Examination
All Ph.D. candidates must take the qualifying examination. It may be
taken during the third term of graduate study beyond the bachelor’s
degree. The student must be registered in the term the qualifying
examination is given.
The examination, prepared and evaluated by the full supervisory committee
or the major and minor academic units, is both written and oral and
covers the major and minor subjects. Except for allowed substitutions,
all members of the supervisory committee must be present with the
student at the oral part. At this time the supervisory committee
is responsible
for deciding whether the student is qualified to continue work toward
a Ph.D. degree.
If a student fails the qualifying examination, the Graduate School
must be notified. A re-examination may be requested, but it must
be recommended by the supervisory committee and approved by the
Graduate School. At least 1 term of additional preparation is needed
before
re-examination.
Time lapse: Between the oral part of the qualifying examination
and the date of the degree there must be at least 2 terms. The
term the
qualifying examination is passed is counted, if the examination
occurs before the midpoint of the term.
Registration in Research Courses
Advanced Research (HLP 7979) is open to doctoral students not yet admitted
to candidacy. Students enrolled in HLP 7979 during the term they
qualify for candidacy will stay in this registration unless the academic
unit elects to change their enrollment to Research for Doctoral Dissertation
(HLP 7980), which is reserved for doctoral students admitted to candidacy.
Admission to Candidacy
A graduate student becomes a candidate for the Ph.D. degree when the
student is granted formal admission to candidacy. Such admission
requires the approval of the student’s supervisory committee,
the academic unit chair, the college dean, and the Dean of the Graduate
School. The approval must be based on:
1) The academic record of the student
2) The supervisory committee’s opinion on overall fitness for
candidacy
3) An approved dissertation topic
4) A qualifying examination as described above
The student should apply for admission to candidacy as soon as the
qualifying examination is passed and a dissertation topic is approved
by the student’s supervisory committee. A student may not register
for HLP 7980 (Research for Dissertation) until he or she is admitted
to candidacy for a doctoral degree.
Dissertation
Every candidate for a doctoral degree is required to prepare and present
a dissertation that shows independent investigation and is acceptable
in form and content to the supervisory committee and to the Graduate
School. Dissertations must be written in English and is acceptable
in form and content to the supervisory committee and to the Graduate
School. The work must be of publishable quality and must be in a
form suitable for publication, using the Graduate School’s
format requirements.
Dissertation first submission: when first presented to the Graduate
School Editorial Office, the dissertation should be near-final (not
a draft), completely formatted, and printed on plain paper (do not
print 2-sided). The Graduate School Editorial Office reviews dissertations
for acceptable format, and to make recommendations as needed. Students
should be completely familiar with the format requirements and should
work with the ETD Lab to troubleshoot their files before printing
out their first submission for the Graduate School Editorial Office
Final Examination
After the submission of the dissertation and the completion of all
other prescribed work for the degree, but in no case earlier than
six months before the conferring of the degree, the candidate will
be given a final oral examination by the supervisory committee meeting
on campus. All supervisory committee members must be present with
the candidate at the oral examination. The candidate and the entire
supervisory committee must be present at the defense. The defense
should be no more than 6 months before degree award.
All forms should be signed at the defense: the candidate and the
supervisory committee chair sign the ETD Rights and Permission
form; and the entire
supervisory committee should sign the ETD Signature Page and the
Final Examination Report. If dissertation changes are requested,
the supervisory
committee chair may hold the Final Examination report until satisfied
with the dissertation. Satisfactory performance on this examination
and adherence to all Graduate School regulations outlined above complete
the degree requirements for the doctoral degree.
Time Limitation
All work for the doctorate must be completed within five calendar
years after successful completion of the qualifying examination
or the qualifying
examination must be repeated.