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General
Requirements
Guidelines for International Students
(Concerning program
of study, qualifying examinations and dissertations)
The number of international students in the Graduate Department of Religion
has grown in recent years, and the Department is committed to diversification
and globalization. We try to be alert to problems as well as possibilit9ies,
and to learn from our experience.
International students are often interested in topics connected with their
own social, cultural, or religious setting. We have noticed some potential
difficulties that may accompany such interests, and thus we are attempt
here to identify them and deal with them constructively. These difficulties
may come to light during course work, or in preparing for Qualifying Examinations,
or in developing the dissertation proposal, or in writing the dissertation
itself. We hope that any problems can be identified well in advance.
1. The subject matter to be dealt with may be massive in scope. This may
be because it is not easy to separate one issue or one social institution
from others. It may be because there is not yet a body of research drawing
scattered materials together or analyzing the distinct themes or problems.
We must emphasize the importance of gauging both the feasibility of a
project and its potential contribution to research. These can be achieved
more readily if the project is related to already existing lines of research,
developing them farther or in new ways.
2. The project or the dissertation may be programmatic in character. Some
international students are interested in developing and arguing a construtive
position—a theology or an ethic or an ecclesiastical program—for
their particular situation. A programmatic dissertation may not only be
massive in scope but require extensive argumentation. It is important
that a dissertation of this character take criticisms and alternative
positions into account.
3. Many aspects of the work may be outside the expertise of any faculty
members within the University. In such a case, the Graduate School always
has the right to ask that some other line of research be undertaken, more
in keeping with the faculty’s own research experience. But we try
to accommodate to students’ interests. Faculty members have considerable
experience in dealing with many topics outside their chief field of research;
thus they can always be of help in assessing how thorough the research
has been or how convincing an argument is. They may insist that the student’s
research be brought into relationship with analogous kinds of research
that are more familiar in our own academic setting. But it may also be
possible to ask for help from scholars outside the University, and perhaps
outside the U.S. They might be needed at various stages: in administering
the qualifying examinations, or in advising the dissertation, or as readers
of the final dissertation. Inevitably questions will arise about how to
select the appropriate persons, whose recommendations to follow, and how
to check on their expertise or their opinions. Suggestions from international
students will be welcomed, but of course we cannot limit such “external
readers” to those suggested by the students.
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