Program Description | Admission | Degree Requirements | Courses
Program Description
The Counselor Education doctoral program provides the highest professional degree available to students who aspire to leadership positions in counselor education and school counseling. The degree includes a prescribed curriculum of required and elective courses for a minimum of sixty-nine hours of graduate credit. However, the doctoral degree is awarded on the basis of successful completion of this coursework and completion of a major research study resulting in the presentation and defense of a dissertation.
Students who complete the doctoral degree in counselor education will be able to:
- apply counseling theory and research to the counselor education and/or school counseling leadership functions;
- plan and deliver research based counselor education didactic courses;
- apply counselor supervision theory and research to individual and group supervision in counselor education and school counseling programs;
- use advanced level communication and interpersonal skills in consultation, counseling, counselor education, supervision and evaluation;
- interpret the relationships among federal, state and local agencies and the laws and ethical considerations applicable to the counselor education and school counseling program management fields;
- apply advanced level diagnostic and assessment methodology, and develop the capacity to teach appropriate treatment plans for a wide range of psychological concerns to master’s level students;
- demonstrate multicultural awareness and competence during doctoral level counseling, supervision and consultation;
- incorporate adult education pedagogy and research as a basic tool in administering counselor education and staff development programs;
- design doctoral level counseling research and interpret results;
- apply data to advanced level counseling capabilities and school counseling leadership functions; and
- successfully complete extensive internship experiences directly related to the student’s individual professional goals.
Admission
Admission requires devoting a significant amount of time to the program. The inability to devote the necessary time will require the individual to drop out of the program.
This program follows a cohort model. This means that individuals are admitted to a specific group, called a cohort, and are required to take their coursework at the same time as the other individuals in the cohort. Cohorts begin in May or June of each year. In the event that students encounter personal emergencies that result in dropping out of the normal schedule, they may be required to join another cohort with a different schedule.
The application deadline is February 1.
Applicants seeking admission to the doctoral program in Counselor Education must submit the following directly to the Office of Graduate Studies:
- A Graduate Studies Application with the application fee
- Official transcript(s) showing receipt of a baccalauarete degree and a master's degree from an accredited institution
- Official GRE scores
- Program application and fee
- Personal statement (1000 words maximum)
- Five Reference Evaluation Forms, three from officials in schools or mental health agencies where the applicant has been employed and two from current or former graduate-level professors. These must be “closed” recommendations.
The master’s degree and additional coursework should be substantially equivalent to a core of 48 hours of Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP) required curriculum areas. The graduate GPA should be 3.5 or higher.
Applicant Interview and Selection Process
The Counselor Education doctoral admissions committee will consider all
applications through a holistic review process, taking into account GPAs,
GRE scores, work experience, recommendations, and interview scores. After
reviewing the pool of applicants, the doctoral admissions committee will
recommend the top candidates for the on-campus interview process. Applicants
invited for the interview will be given specific guidelines for the process which will include an interview with the doctoral admissions committee and
an on-site writing proficiency assessment. All qualified doctoral students are
admitted under regular admission to the program.
Degree Requirements
The program requires completion of a minimum of sixty-nine hours of graduate credit, as prescribed in the plan below. At the close of the second semester, admitted students will meet with the Doctoral Director as to their status in the doctoral program. After admission to candidacy, students and their dissertation chair will jointly select their doctoral dissertation committee. A comprehensive examination will be taken during the sixth semester of coursework. Students must be enrolled during the semester the comprehensive examination is taken.
Plan 1 - PhD in Counselor Education