Current Student Resources

Disability Disciplines Doctoral Program

Activities

Coursework

Coursework includes a set of core courses that establish foundation and framework for a rigorous and scholarly understanding of issues related to disability disciplines. In addition, each specialization provides unique coursework focused on issues that are more specific to that specialization.

Preliminary Exams

Early in his/her program - typically after one year of full-time study - students must pass a preliminary exam. This exam focuses on research methods and critical content related to the specialization. Details of the structure and content of the exam varies across specializations.

Products and Demonstrations of Competence

A set of seven required products and demonstrations of competence provide a context for collaboration and mentoring around the critical skill-sets necessary for successful university professors. The products and demonstrations of competence include research, college teaching, supervision, conference presentation, publication, review of literature, and grant writing. These activities are focused on the particular content and issues that are important within the student's specialization. This set of activities constitutes the program's comphrehensive exam; they must be completed before the student proposes their dissertation.

Dissertation

The dissertation is the culminating project of the doctoral program. It involves original research that advances the field by contributing new knowledge that is relevant to an important question. The dissertation is a creative and scholarly endeavor that builds upon the student's coursework, products and demonstrations of competence, and extensive mentoring from the faculty.

Get in touch


Dr. Thomas Higbee

Professor and Department Head


Thomas Higbee

Office Location: EDUC 313A
Phone: 435-797-1933
Email: tom.higbee@usu.edu