Admissions
www.yale.edu/graduateschool/admissions/
Application for admission to any of the Graduate School's
programs should begin in the summer or fall of the academic
year before the one in which students propose to register.
Application materials for all programs in the Graduate School
may be viewed on the Graduate School's Web site or obtained
by writing to Graduate School Admissions, Yale University,
PO Box 208323, New Haven CT 06520-8323 (graduate.admissions@yale.edu).
Application for admission to the Graduate School may be made
to only one department or program. The online application
is the preferred method of applying to programs of the Graduate
School. The individual program descriptions listed in this
book, in the information and application brochure, and on
the Graduate School Web site explain the prerequisites for
each department and program. Applicants must state their intended
department specialization when requesting application materials.
Completed applications, including three letters of recommendation,
transcripts, standardized test scores, and the non-refundable
application fee, are due by January 2, 2004 for most programs.
Please check the Graduate School Web site for those programs
with earlier deadline dates.
Students who seek a professional degree should write to one
of the University's professional
schools. Holders of American Ph.D. or Sc.D. degrees, or
their foreign equivalents, are not eligible for admission
to the Graduate School in the field in which they have already
earned a degree. They may apply in other fields and are also
eligible to apply for admission as Special Students, for nondegree
study (please see Nondegree Study
below for more information). Students interested in postdoctoral
appointments should see the information under Degree
Requirements below.
All applicants are required to submit official results of
the Graduate Record Examinations (GRE) General Test, which
is administered in the United States and abroad by the Educational
Testing Service (ETS). This examination should be taken no
later than the November testing date. Some departments and
programs also require scores from a GRE Subject Test; consult
the individual program of study listings for those requirements.
Applicants whose native language is not English must present
evidence of proficiency in English by satisfactorily completing
the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), which is
administered by ETS. This examination should be taken no later
than the November testing date. The TOEFL requirement is waived
only for applicants who have successfully attended for at
least two years a university where English is the language
of instruction.
Students who do not demonstrate sufficient proficiency in
English may be retested and/or asked to take courses in English
for speakers of other languages. A higher level of proficiency
will be required in order for students to serve as teaching
fellows.
All students who accept offers of admission to Ph.D. programs
and whose native language is not English must present acceptable
scores on the Test of Spoken English (TSE) or SPEAK test before
being appointed as teaching fellows with instructional responsibilities.
The TOEFL and TSE are administered in the United States and
abroad by ETS. The SPEAK test is administered by Yale’s
English Language Institute on cam-pus only.
International students who accept offers of admission will
be required to give appropriate evidence of necessary financial
support for one or two academic years, depending upon their
program of study, before the University will be able to issue
visa documents.
Applicants will usually be notified of action concerning
admission during the month of March. Official notification
is sent by mail only; no decisions are provided by phone or
e-mail. All entering students must have obtained the bachelor’s
degree or its foreign equivalent. Offers of admission are
contingent on students’ providing official evidence
of having completed the bachelor’s degree or foreign
equivalent prior to registration. Students who are not able
to provide such evidence will not be permitted to register.
Those who have been engaged in graduate work at Yale or another
university must also present an official transcript giving
evidence of degree(s) awarded and/or satisfactory completion
of the previous year’s work.
Applicants who have been previously denied admission three
times will not be allowed to apply again.
Programs of Study
Full-Time Degree Candidacy
Most students enrolled in the Graduate School are
registered for full-time study as they pursue a Ph.D. or master’s
degree program. These students devote their full effort to
course work, preparation for qualifying examinations, gaining
teaching experience, and the research and writing leading
to the completion of the dissertation.
Part-Time Study
In rare circumstances, qualified individuals who are
unable to devote their full time to graduate study may apply
and be admitted as part-time students in either doctoral or
terminal master's programs. For more complete information
about part-time study, see Degree Requirements.
Nondegree Study
Qualified individuals who wish to study at the graduate
level as nondegree candidates may be admitted to the Division
of Special Registration (DSR). Admission to the DSR is for
one term or for one year only and carries with it no commitment
by the Graduate School for further study. Students admitted
for the academic year
must demonstrate satisfactory academic performance in the
first term in order to register for the second term. Students
in the DSR are issued transcripts indicating the appropriate
credit for work completed.
Application procedures for the DSR are the same as for students
seeking admission to regular degree programs. In addition,
applicants to the DSR must provide evidence of health care
for the duration of theirstudies at Yale at the time of application.
DSR students engaged solely in course work are identified
as special students. Special students admitted for part-time
study are charged tuition on a per-course basis, whether for
credit or audit. See page 415 for a schedule of tuition and
fee charges. Students admitted to the DSR as special students
are not eligible for financial aid, including federal and
most nonfederal student loans.
More advanced graduate students who are degree candidates
at other universities and who wish to do full-time dissertation-level
research or a combination of research and course work at Yale
may be admitted to the DSR as Visiting Affiliated Research
Graduate Students. Such students are charged full tuition.
A limited amount of tuition assistance based on need may be
available, but students in this category must always pay at
least $1,560 of their tuition per term. Students enrolling
for the summer only are charged $780. Applicants for admission
as Visiting Affiliated Research Graduate Students should complete
the Applicant’s Financial Statement and must submit
any other documentation that would clearly establish their
need for tuition assistance. Support beyond tuition in the
form of fellowship stipends, teaching fellowships, or research
assistantships is not available.
In certain circumstances, advanced graduate students who
are degree candidates at another university and who have made
arrangements with a specific Graduate School faculty member
for a research project under his or her direct supervision
may be admitted to the DSR as Visiting Assistants in Research.
Any proposal for the admission of a visiting assistant in
research must be discussed by the relevant departmental director
of graduate studies and the appropriate associate dean. Such
students hold standard graduate student assistantship in research
appointments in the faculty member’s department. The
appointment is funded by the faculty member. The tuition charge
for students enrolled as Visiting Assistants in Research is
$1,560 per term. Students enrolling for the summer
only are charged $780.
Some departments at Yale have formal exchange agreements
with universities in other countries that have been approved
by the Graduate School. Graduate students who are admitted
to Yale under such approved exchange agreements may be registered
as Visiting International Exchange Students. Visiting International
Exchange Students normally are not charged a tuition fee.
Cumulative enrollment in the DSR is limited to two years.
Students enrolled in the DSR who are subsequently admitted
to degree programs may receive academic and tuition credit
for work done while enrolled in the DSR, provided that the
department recommends such credit and the appropriate associate
dean approves.
Interdisciplinary Study
All graduate students are formally associated with
one department or program but students may be encouraged to
take one or more courses in a related department. Students
are often advised by faculty members from more than one department
during their dissertation research. Students in the Graduate
School, with permission of the director of graduate studies
and the relevant school, may take advantage of particular
course or research opportunities in Yale College and in Yale’s
professional schools.
Combined and Joint-Degree Programs
The Graduate School offers students interested in
African American Studies, Classics, Film Studies, and Renaissance
Studies an opportunity to pursue a combined Ph.D. with departments
in related fields. In addition to these academic programs,
there are several formal interdisciplinary Ph.D. programs
in the Graduate School listed under the appropriate departmental
entries of this bulletin. Ad hoc programs may also be approved.
A student who is interested in an ad hoc program should prepare
a written proposal for review and approval by the relevant
departments and associate deans.
Students are encouraged to contact the appropriate directors
of graduate studies about specific opportunities for interdisciplinary
study throughout the Graduate School and the University.
The Graduate School also participates in the following formal
joint-degree programs with the professional schools: the J.D./M.A.
and J.D./Ph.D. programs in cooperation with the Law School;
the M.D./Ph.D. program in cooperation with the School of Medicine;
the M.A./M.B.A. programs in cooperation with the School of
Management; and the M.A./M.F.S. and M.A./M.E.S. programs in
cooperation with the School of Forestry & Environmental
Studies. For all joint-degree programs except the M.D./Ph.D.,
students are required to submit formal applications to both
the professional school and the Graduate School indicating
their interest in enrolling in the joint program. Individuals
interested in the M.D./Ph.D. program apply directly to the
School of Medicine.
Exchange Scholar Program
www.yale.edu/graduateschool/academics/special_programs.html
Graduate students in Yale Ph.D. programs may petition to
enroll full-time for a term or for an academic year as exchange
scholars at a number of other institutions, including the
University of California at Berkeley, Brown, Chicago, Columbia,
Cornell, Harvard, Princeton, and Stanford Universities, and
at MIT and the University of Pennsylvania. The Exchange Scholars
Program enables students to take advantage of special educational
opportunities not available at their home institutions. For
applications, contact Assistant Dean Thomas Burns (thomas.burns@yale.edu),
Room 134, Hall of Graduate Studies (HGS). Applications must
be received at least three weeks prior to the beginning of
the term for which the student is applying.
International Graduate Student Exchange
Agreements
All international exchange agreements must be approved
in advance by the Graduate School to ensure that they meet
University policy and Graduate School guidelines. Departments
interested in establishing an exchange program must prepare
a statement that demonstrates that there is a clear academic
and reciprocal need for such a program, and that the program
will conform to the established guidelines for all such exchange
agreements.
International Exchange Programs
Center for International and Area Studies
Fox International Fellowship Program (Moscow State University;
University of Cambridge; Free University, Berlin; Fudan University,
Shanghai; University of Tokyo)
Council on East Asian Studies
Inter-University Center for Japanese Language Studies, Yokohama;
Inter-University Board for Chinese Language Studies, Tsinghua
University, Beijing; International
Chinese Language Program, National Taiwan University,
Taipei Tokyo University
Economic Growth Center
Research Institute for Economics and Business Administration
(Kobe University, Japan)
Engineering
Ecole Normale Supérieure de Cachan (ENSC), France
Epidemiology and Public Health
Many internship opportunities in numerous countries across
the world
Graduate School
Royal Holloway College, University of London, England; The
Connecticut Department of Education and the State of Baden-Württemberg
Exchange, Germany
French
Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris; University of Geneva,
Switzerland
Linguistics
Tokyo Metropolitan University, Japan
Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology
Peking University, Beijing, China
Political Science
Nuffield College, University of Oxford, England
Programs in Development
Council on East Asian Studies
Kyoto University, Japan
German
Free University, Berlin, Germany
History
Leiden University, Netherlands; Paris-Sorbonne, Paris VI
Agrarian Studies
Amsterdam School for Social Science Research, Netherlands
Summer Study
www.yale.edu/summer
Many graduate students remain in New Haven during the summer
for independent study and research (see Summer
Registration below). Although the Graduate School does
not offer courses in the summer, a program of undergraduate
courses is available, as well as an intensive program of instruction
in languages, and graduate students may wish to take advantage
of those programs while in New Haven. For further details
on summer offerings at Yale, please contact Yale Summer and
Special Programs, PO Box 208282, New Haven CT 06520-8282.
Degree Requirements
The requirements set forth in the pages that follow are
the minimum Graduate School degree requirements and apply
to all degree candidates. Students should consult the listings
of individual departments and programs for additional
specific departmental requirements.
Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of
Philosophy
Length of Study
In most fields of study, six years should normally be sufficient
for the completion of the Ph.D., although it is understood
that seven years may be needed by students in fields requiring
extensive field work or the mastery of difficult foreign languages.
Departments and programs make every effort to design a course
of study and to provide advice and guidance to make it possible
for students to complete their work within six years. Normally
three, or at most three and one-half, years are devoted to
the completion of predissertation requirements (courses, examinations,
selection of a dissertation topic). The remaining time, typically
two to three years, is devoted to conducting research and
writing the dissertation. Advanced standing that has been
granted for work done in a Yale M.A./M.S. program will be
counted as part of the six years (for further information,
please see Transfer Credit and Advanced
Standing below).
Students must register each term until the dissertation is
submitted or until six years (twelve terms) of study have
been completed. Students who have not completed the dissertation
by the end of the sixth year of study may request a period
of extended registration, by submitting a one-page petition
for extended registration, the standard dissertation progress
report that is required annually of all students admitted
to candidacy, and a continuous registration form. Before a
period of extended registration is approved, the student’s
adviser and director of graduate studies must certify that
the student is making good progress on the dissertation, will
be working full-time on it during the year, and has a reasonable
prospect of completing it by the end of the registration period.
The Graduate School will normally approve petitions supported
by these certifications for a seventh year of registration
provided that the student is not employed more than twenty
hours per week and will be at Yale or in another location
conducive to writing the dissertation.
Part-Time Study
Students in Ph.D. programs are expected to register for full-time
study. In extraordinary circumstances a student may petition
the Graduate School for permission to register as a half-time
student for a limited period. Students may not register for
half-time study for more than three of the first four academic
years they are enrolled. Thereafter, they must register full-time
until the four-year tuition obligation has been satisfied.
Any Ph.D. student who registers half-time at any point in
his or her graduate program must fulfill the four-year tuition
obligation to receive the Ph.D. (see page 394). Students may
not register less than half-time.
Students who wish to study part-time should consult with
their director of graduate studies and the appropriate associate
dean to develop a proposed plan of study, so that both the
student and the Graduate School have a common understanding
about the time by which the requirements leading to admission
to candidacy must be completed. Such a plan of study may be
modified with the consent of the director of graduate studies
and the associate dean. Part-time study has a five-year limit
for students in terminal master’s degree programs. Only
candidates for terminal master’s degrees may enroll
less than half-time.
Noncumulative Registration
In certain areas of study, it may be necessary for a registered
student to acquire an academic skill (typically, knowledge
of a foreign language) that is essential for a degree requirement
or for research in a particular field and for the overall
progress of the dissertation but is not an inherent part of
the dissertation itself. A student in this situation may request
up to one year of “noncumulative registration.”
It is important to note that general study in a field related
to or parallel with the topic of the dissertation is not appropriate
for noncumulative registration.
A student who wishes to have a specific period of study designated
as “noncumulative” should discuss the reasons
for such a period of study with and secure prior approval
from his or her associate dean. If prior authorization has
been given by the Graduate School, the period of time spent
in acquiring the necessary academic skill will not be counted
as part of the student’s six-year period of candidacy.
The Continuous Registration Fee (CRF) is charged during the
period of noncumulative registration. Noncumulative registration
does not change the four-year full-tuition obligation. The
tuition charge and any University Fellowship aid will be postponed
if a student registers noncumulatively before the four-year
full-tuition obligation has been satisfied.
Residence Requirement
Students seeking the Ph.D. degree are required to be in residence
in the New Haven area during at least three academic years.
This is an academic requirement, distinct from and independent
of the tuition requirement described below. The residence
requirement must normally be met within the first four years
of study. Any exception to the residence requirement must
be approved by the department and by the appropriate associate
dean.
Tuition Requirement and the Continuous
Registration Fee
All Ph.D. candidates are charged four years (eight terms)
of full tuition, or proportionately less if all degree requirements,
including submission of the dissertation, are completed in
less than four continuous years of full-time study from the
date of matriculation in the Ph.D. program.
Once the full-tuition obligation has been completed, students
are charged the Continuous Registration Fee (CRF), $256 per
term in 2003–2004, until the dissertation is submitted
or the terminal date is passed. Students who are permitted
to register after the sixth year are also charged the CRF.
Transfer Credit and Advanced
Standing
The Graduate School does not award transfer credit for graduate
work completed before matriculation at Yale. A department
may, with the approval of the Graduate School, waive a portion
of the Ph.D. course requirement in recognition of previous
graduate-level work done at Yale or elsewhere. Such a waiver
does not affect the full-tuition requirement. Courses taken
previous to matriculation at Yale will not appear in the student’s
Graduate School transcript.
With the approval of the department, a student who is currently
enrolled may petition for advanced standing in the Graduate
School of up to one year for work completed in a Yale master’s
or professional doctoral program that is relevant to the student’s
Ph.D. program. This petition must be received by the appropriate
associate dean in the Graduate School before the end of the
student’s first year of study in the Ph.D. program.
Such students may also be offered admission with advanced
standing by the department and the Graduate School. Such advanced
standing will reduce the four-year tuition requirement and
eligibility for Graduate School fellowship aid accordingly.
The normal six-year period of registration will be similarly
reduced.
Language Requirement
Language requirements are set by individual departments and
programs. Specific language requirements are explained in
the individual departmental listings.
All departmental requirements are subject to initial approval
by the Executive Committee of the Graduate School and are
monitored by the divisional degree committees. A department
cannot make exceptions to its own requirements without authorization
by the appropriate degree committee.
The required level of proficiency in foreign languages, and
the method for demonstrating it, are determined by the individual
departments. Most give their own examinations. A few permit
the requirement to be satisfied by passing particular courses.
Students are urged to be prepared to meet language requirements
at the beginning of their first year of study.
Course and Honors Requirements
The course requirements for the Ph.D. degree are set individually
by each department or program. Although departments may set
more stringent requirements, to meet the minimum Graduate
School quality requirement for the Ph.D., students must achieve
the grade of Honors in at least one full-year or two full-term
graduate courses, taken after matriculation in the Graduate
School and during the nine-month academic year. The Honors
requirement must be met in courses other than those concerned
exclusively with dissertation research and preparation.
A student who has not met the Honors requirement at the end
of the fourth term of full-time study will not be permitted
to register for the fifth term. In exceptional circumstances,
the director of graduate studies may petition the degree committee,
through the appropriate dean, that a student who has not met
the Honors requirement be permitted to continue study. Such
a petition should be made before the end of the fourth term
of study in time to be considered by the degree committee
at its meeting that term.
Qualifying Examination
Each Ph.D. student must pass a general examination, separate
from course examinations, in the major subject offered and
in such subordinate subjects as may be required by the department.
Such examinations are described in the individual
departmental listings. Students should consult with the
director of graduate studies for further information about
this requirement.
Prospectus
The prospectus should be viewed as a preliminary statement
of what the student proposes to do in his or her dissertation
and not as an unalterable commitment. The appropriate form
and typical content of a prospectus inevitably vary from field
to field. In most cases, however, a prospectus should contain
the following information:
1. A statement of the topic of the dissertation and an explanation
of its importance. What in general might one expect to learn
from the dissertation that is not now known, understood, or
appreciated?
2. A concise review of what has been done on the topic in
the past. Specifically, how will the proposed dissertation
differ from or expand upon previous work? A basic bibliography
should normally be appended to this section.
3. A statement of where most of the work will be carried
out—for example, in the Yale library or another library
or archive, in the laboratory of a particular faculty member,
or as part of a program of field work at specific sites in
the United States or abroad.
4. If the subject matter permits, a tentative proposal for
the internal organization of the dissertation—for example,
major sections, subsections, sequence of chapters.
5. A provisional timetable for completion of the dissertation.
Although it is difficult to prescribe a standard length for
the prospectus, it should be long enough to include essential
information for all proposed topics but concise enough to
focus clearly on the subject. About seven pages, including
bibliography, should be suf-ficient in most cases.
Admission to Candidacy
Admission to candidacy indicates that the department and the
Graduate School consider the student prepared to do original
and independent research. Students will be admitted to candidacy
when they have completed all predissertation requirements,
including the dissertation prospectus. Admission to candidacy
will normally take place by the end of the third year of study.
Any programmatic variations from this pattern that have been
approved by the Executive Committee of the Graduate School
are described in the individual
department statements. Teaching is required in some departments
and is an expectation in all. A student who has not been admitted
to candidacy at the expected time will not be permitted to
register for the following term.
Training in Teaching
The Teaching Fellow Program (TFP) is the principal framework
at Yale in which graduate students learn to become effective
teachers. Learning to teach and to evaluate student work is
fundamental to the education of graduate students. The TFP
provides opportunities for graduate students to develop teaching
skills, under faculty guidance, through active participation
in the teaching of Yale undergraduates. Teaching fellows who
encounter problems or difficulties related to their teaching
appointments are encouraged to meet with the director of the
TFP (Judith Dozier Hackman) or their associate dean (Richard
Sleight for the natural sciences and Anthropology, Linguistics,
Psychology, and Statistics; Pamela Schirmeister for the humanities
and the other social sciences). A student must be registered
in the Graduate School to be appointed as a teaching fellow
(TF) or as a part-time acting instructor (PTAI). TFs assist
faculty in teaching and administering relatively large undergraduate
courses. PTAIs are responsible for small undergraduate courses,
subject to guidance and advice by department faculty. For
a more detailed description of these types of appointments,
see “Teaching Fellow Levels”.
The Graduate School requires that all students who teach
be in good academic standing. In addition, they must be fluent
in English, except for those who only grade. Graduate students
whose native language is not English are required to meet
the oral English proficiency standard before they may begin
teaching. The standard may be met by (1) passing the SPEAK
test, (2) passing the Test of Spoken English (TSE), or (3)
having received a degree from an institution where the principal
language of instruction is En-glish. (Degrees awarded en route
to the Ph.D. at Yale will not satisfy this requirement.) In
some instances, a student’s director of graduate studies
(DGS) may require that students with degrees from English-speaking
institutions also pass the SPEAK test to satisfy the language
requirement.
Deferral
of Teaching Year
Students in a teaching year, normally years three and four,
may request to defer a teaching year or semester into the
fifth year for compelling academic reasons. Such reasons include
but are not limited to the receipt of an external fellowship,
a need to do research in absentia, or insufficient preparation
for teaching.
A student who wishes to defer a teaching year must make arrangements
to do so no later than the beginning of the fourth year. At
the time the deferral is requested, the student and DGS should
agree on the teaching the student will do in the fifth year.
The assignment should be at the level normally expected in
a regular teaching year, that is, a TF 3.5 or 4, depending
on the department.
The deferral must be approved by the DGS and the associate
dean. If the deferral is approved, the student will receive
a supplemental University fellowship to bring the amount of
the fifth-year teaching fellowship up to the standard departmental
stipend. Under no circumstances may a student defer a teaching
year beyond the fifth year, and all students must still complete
the Dissertation Fellowship by the end of the sixth year.
Dissertation
The dissertation should demonstrate the student’s
mastery of relevant resources and methods and should make
an original contribution to knowledge in the field.
The originality of a dissertation may consist of the discovery
of significant new information or principles of organization,
the achievement of a new synthesis, the development of new
methods or theories, or the application of established methods
to new materials. Normally, it is expected that a dissertation
will have a single topic, however broadly defined, and that
all parts of the dissertation will be interrelated. This does
not mean that sections of the dissertation cannot constitute
essentially discrete units. Dissertations in the physical
and biological sciences, for example, often present the results
of several independent but related experiments.
Given the diverse nature of the fields in which dissertations
are written and the wide variety of topics that are explored,
it is impossible to designate an ideal length for the dissertation.
Clearly, however, a long dissertation is not necessarily a
better one. The value of a dissertation ultimately depends
on the quality of its thought and the clarity of its exposition.
In consultation with their faculty advisers and directors
of graduate studies, students should give serious thought
to the scale of proposed dissertation topics. There should
be a reasonable expectation that the project can be completed
in two to three years.
In accordance with general University policy, classified
or restricted research is not acceptable as part of the dissertation.
Exceptions must be approved in advance by the Degree Committee.
For information about submission of the dissertation, please
see page 401. Students should also consult the booklet entitled
Preparation and Submission of the Doctoral Dissertation, available
at the Student Information Office, Room 140, Hall of Graduate
Studies (HGS).
Requirements for the Degree of Master of
Philosophy
The Master of Philosophy is awarded en route to the
Ph.D. The minimum general requirements for this degree are
that a student shall have completed all requirements for the
Ph.D. except the prospectus and dissertation. Students will
not generally have satisfied the requirements for the Master
of Philosophy until after two years of study, except where
graduate work done before admission to Yale has reduced the
student's graduate course work at Yale. In no case will the
degree be awarded for less than one year of residence in the
Yale Graduate School. Not all departments offer the M.Phil.
degree. Information regarding special departmental requirements
for the degree, if any, are stated in the individual
department listings.
Requirements for the Degree of Master of
Arts or Master of Science
Except in the case of programs listed below under terminal
M.A./M.S. Degrees, students are not admitted as candidates
for the Master of Arts or Master of Science degree. However,
students in most doctoral departments may be awarded the M.A.
or M.S. en route to the Ph.D. degree.
Although departments may set more stringent requirements,
the minimum general requirements that must be met for award
of the M.A. or M.S. en route are (1) completion of the first
year of the program leading to the Ph.D., with grades that
satisfy departmental requirements; (2) completion of one academic
year in full-time residence, or the equivalent, at Yale; (3)
recommendation by the department for award of the degree,
subject to final review and approval by the appropriate degree
committee. In no case may courses taken prior to matriculation
in the Graduate School, or in Yale College or other summer
programs, be applied toward the requirements for the Master
of Arts or Master of Science degree.
Some departments do not offer the M.A. or M.S. en route to
the Ph.D., or award it only to students who are withdrawing
from the Ph.D. program. For information about this or any
special departmental requirements additional to the general
requirements stated above, see the departmental
listings.
Students enrolled in a Ph.D. program may receive a master’s
degree from another department provided that it is in a related
field of study and the director of graduate studies in both
departments and the appropriate associate dean agree on the
student’s program of study prior to enrollment in courses.
Courses taken toward a master’s degree in another department
must be part of the student’s course requirement for
the Ph.D., as approved by the director of graduate studies
in both departments. However, such course work cannot also
be counted toward a master’s degree in the department
to which the student was admitted. Students who wish to obtain
a master’s degree in a field that is not directly related
to the doctoral degree must apply for a personal leave from
the Ph.D. program and submit an application for admission
to the master’s program. Any financial aid offered to
the student for a Ph.D. program may not be transferred to
a master’s degree course of study.
Terminal M.A./M.S. Degrees
The M.A./M.S. degrees are offered as terminal degrees in twenty-two
departments and programs: African Studies, American Studies,
Applied Mathematics, Archaeology, Biostatistics (Epidemiology
and Public Health), Computer Science, East Asian Studies,
Engineering and Applied Science, English, Germanic Languages
and Literatures, History, History of Medicine and Science,
International and Development Economics (IDE), International
Relations, Mathematics, Medieval Studies, Molecular Biophysics
and Biochemistry, Music, Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations,
Russian and East European Studies, Slavic Languages and Literatures,
and Statistics.
The residence and tuition requirements for a terminal M.A./M.S.
degree are: a minimum of one year of full tuition and course
work in residence in one-year programs, or a minimum of two
years of full tuition and course work in residence in two-year
programs. For information about which departments offer one-year
programs and which offer two-year programs, see
departmental listings.
With the approval of the department and the appropriate associate
dean, a student may be admitted for part-time study toward
the master’s degree. In that case, tuition will be charged
on a per-course basis. Part-time study does not change the
one- or two-year full-tuition obligation described above.
Part-time students must complete all degree requirements within
five years of continuous registration.
Individual departments establish the specific course and
language requirements for these degrees. Although departments
may set more stringent requirements, the minimum Graduate
School requirement for students admitted for M.A./M.S. degrees
is an overall grade average of High Pass, including a grade
of Honors in at least one full-term graduate course (for students
enrolled in one-year programs), or in at least two full-term
graduate courses (for students enrolled in two-year programs).
No credit will be awarded toward the M.A./M.S. degree for
courses taken prior to matriculation in the Graduate School,
or taken in Yale or other summer programs. Students in one
of Yale’s professional schools who matriculate in the
Graduate School to complete a joint master’s degree
may, however, with the permission of their director of graduate
studies, count courses already completed in their professional
school program toward the joint degree. See the individual
program or department listings.
The master’s degree may also be earned jointly with
the B.A./B.S. in certain departments by students enrolled
in Yale College. For further information, please see Yale
College Programs of Study, available from the Office of the
Dean of Yale College.
Requirements for Joint-Degree Programs
Students who are candidates for degrees in any of the
joint programs sponsored by the Graduate School and Yale’s
professional schools must meet the requirements established
by each school for the degree they are seeking. Degree requirements
in the Graduate School include both the Graduate School’s
general requirements and any special requirements set by the
relevant department or program. In all cases, the Honors requirement
must be fulfilled in non-research courses offered primarily
for Graduate School students, taken after matriculation in
the Graduate School.
In addition to the J.D./Ph.D., J.D./M.A., and M.D./Ph.D.
programs described below, joint-degree programs with other
professional schools have been approved for students in International
Relations and International and Development Economics.
These programs are described in the departmental statements
for International and Development
Economics and International Relations.
J.D./Ph.D. and J.D./M.A. programs
Admission to the Graduate School joint-degree programs with
the Law School, described below, requires separate admission
to both schools as well as approval by the appropriate associate
dean in each school, and by the director of graduate studies
in the student’s Graduate School department. Students
must apply for admission to a joint program no later than
their first year of study in a J.D., Ph.D., or two-year M.A.
program, and must matriculate in the joint program no later
than the beginning of their second year. Students wishing
to pursue a J.D./M.A. in a one-year M.A. program must apply
for admission no later than their first year of study in the
J.D. program and must matriculate in the M.A. program as a
joint-degree candidate.
In the J.D./Ph.D. program, the first year of study is spent
principally in the Law School. The second and third years
are combined according to the interest of the student. As
many as six term courses, designated by the student at the
beginning of the term, may be counted toward both degrees.
During this time all course work and language requirements
for the Ph.D. program are normally completed. The J.D. should
be completed by the end of the fourth year. During the fifth
year the student is expected to complete all remaining predissertation
requirements and be admitted to candidacy. Any exception to
this pattern of study must be approved by the appropriate
associate dean.
The minimum residence requirement in the J.D./Ph.D. program
is four years. The tuition requirement is two and one-half
years in the Law School and three and one-half years in the
Graduate School. Financial aid is provided by each school
according to its own criteria, typically for two and one-half
years in the Law School and three and one-half years in the
Graduate School, and is awarded by each school during the
terms in which the student pays tuition in that school.
In the J.D./M.A. program, the J.D. and M.A. degrees are awarded
simultaneously at the end of the fourth year of study in one-year
M.A. programs and at the end of four and one-half years of
study in two-year M.A. programs. The Graduate School tuition
requirement for J.D./M.A. students in one-year M.A. programs
is one year of tuition; students in two-year M.A. programs
have a one and one-half year tuition requirement in the Graduate
School. In all cases students pay three years of tuition in
the Law School. Students in J.D./M.A. programs, like other
students in M.A. programs, are not ordinarily eligible for
University Fellowship aid through the Graduate School. Students
usually enroll in the Law School during the first year of
study. The pattern of enrollment in subsequent years depends
on whether the M.A. program is a one-year or a two-year program.
No more than two Law School courses may be counted toward
the M.A.
M.D./PH.D
Program
This program is sponsored jointly by the Graduate
School and the School of Medicine. Applications for admission
to the joint program are reviewed by a committee composed
of faculty members and deans from both schools. Normally,
admission to the program includes simultaneous admission to
both schools. However, students may apply to the joint program
by October 15 of their second year of study in either the
M.D. or Ph.D. program, and they must matriculate in the joint
program no later than the beginning of the following year.
Students request affiliation with a particular department
or program in the Graduate School by the middle of their third
year of study in the joint program, after their course and
research interests have been defined. Although students usually
pursue their research in one of the biological sciences, those
interested in earning the Ph.D. through work in another department
may do so under certain circumstances, with the approval of
the M.D./Ph.D. committee.
The residence requirement in this program is seven years.
The full-tuition requirement is three and one-half years in
the Medical School and two and one-half years in the Graduate
School. To qualify for the M.D. and Ph.D. degrees, students
must satisfy all degree requirements of both schools. Normally,
a student admitted to this joint program must satisfy the
Graduate School Honors requirement by the end of the second
year of study and must complete all remaining predissertation
requirements within four terms of affiliation with the Ph.D.
department. This schedule may be adjusted for students who
have been enrolled in either the Medical School or the Graduate
School before admission to the M.D./Ph.D. program.
Petitioning for Degrees
Graduate School degrees are awarded twice each year,
at Commencement in May and in the fall (normally in December,
depending on the schedule of the Yale Corporation). Degrees
are not granted automatically. Students must file a petition
for each degree by the appropriate date (see Schedule of Academic
Dates and Deadlines on pages 438–41). Petitions that
have received favorable recommendations from the student’s
department are reviewed by the appropriate degree committee.
When the degree committee has given its approval, the petition
is forwarded to the Faculty of the Graduate School and then
to the Yale Corporation. If the petition is successful, the
student will be notified in writing by the dean of the Graduate
School.
Students enrolled in Ph.D. programs should not petition for
M.A./M.S. and M.Phil. degrees until the end of the term in
which requirements for the degree are completed (e.g., students
completing degree requirements during the spring term should
petition for award of the degree the following fall).
Dissertation Submission
Dissertations must be submitted to the Graduate School
by October 1 for degrees to be considered at the fall meetings
of the degree committees and by March 15 for consideration
at May meetings of the degree committees. These deadlines
have been established to allow sufficient time for readers
to make careful evaluations and for departments to review
those evaluations and make their recommendations to the Graduate
School. No extensions of the deadlines will be granted. Dissertations
submitted after the deadlines will be considered during the
following term.
Students are advised to obtain the booklet entitled Preparation
and Submission of the Doctoral Dissertation prior to preparing
their dissertations. This booklet, available from the Graduate
School Student Information Office (140 HGS), describes the
formatting requirements for the dissertation and the processes
for submission and approval. Candidates should obtain a Dissertation
Submission Packet from the Graduate School Student Information
Office prior to submitting their dissertations. This packet
contains directions for submission and all required forms.
In accord with the traditional scholarly ideal that the candidate
for a doctorate must make a contribution to knowledge, all
dissertations that have been accepted by the Graduate School
are made available in the University library and published
on microfilm (UMI Company). The only required fee associated
with submission is $20 for binding of the library copy of
the dissertation. UMI charges authors $45 if they wish to
register a copyright. Publication on microfilm does not prevent
the author from publishing the dissertation in another format
at any time. Fees are subject to change.
Students must register continuously until either they have
been awarded the Ph.D. or six years have elapsed since matriculation,
whichever occurs first. During the first six years, students
must be registered through the term of dissertation submission.
Registration beyond the sixth year is not required. Registered
students who submit dissertations will remain registered until
the end of the term and will retain all privileges of registration
(for example, library privileges, health care coverage, and
e-mail accounts). Students who complete all Ph.D. requirements
within four continuous years of full-time study in the Ph.D.
program will be registered and charged full tuition only through
the term in which the dissertation is submitted. Students
who have registered part time or taken a leave of absence
must complete the four-year, full-tuition obligation, regardless
of when they submit the dissertation.
The Graduate School does not require departments to evaluate
the dissertations of degree candidates who are no longer registered.
In practice, however, departments normally agree to evaluate
these dissertations.
Commencement
www.yale.edu/commencement
GScommencement@yale.edu
There is only one University Commencement ceremony each year,
on a Monday in late May. All degrees awarded for both December
and May of each year are presented at the May ceremony. The
Graduate School Diploma Ceremony takes place at noon on Monday
in Woolsey Hall, following the University Ceremony in the
morning. However, students receiving master’s degrees
from the Yale Center for International and Area Studies (YCIAS)
and the Economic Growth Center receive their diplomas in a
separate ceremony held at Luce Hall, 34 Hillhouse Avenue.
Included are master’s candidates in African Studies,
East Asian Studies, International and Development Economics,
International Relations, and Russian and East European Studies.
All degree candidates for the M.A., M.S., M.Eng., and M.Phil.,
whether teminal or en route, or the Ph.D. are encouraged to
march at Commencement and receive their diploma from the dean.
If the student does not attend the ceremony, the diploma may
also be mailed. Tickets are not required, for degree candidates
or their guests, but degree candidates who march are responsible
for the rental or purchase of their own academic regalia,
or cap and gown; details are listed on the Web site above.
Degree candidates will receive information on Commencement
each year, but they should also see the information on the
Commencement Web site. The Office of Graduate Student Life
of the McDougal Center coordinates Commencement for the Graduate
School.
Academic Regulations
Registration
Only registered students may attend classes, receive
financial aid, or use the facilities of the University. Students
must register every term for the duration of their degree
program (normally six years or less for Ph.D. programs and
one or two years for students in M.A./M.S. programs). This
regulation applies to all students, whether engaged in course
work, preparation for qualifying examinations, or dissertation
research and, in the case of students in Ph.D. programs, whether
study is in residence or in absentia. Students who do not
register for any term for which they have not been granted
a leave of absence (see pages 407–9) will be considered
to have withdrawn from the Graduate School. Privileges associated
with registered status (i.e., library privileges, health care
coverage, and e-mail accounts) will likewise be withdrawn.
No student may register for any term unless he or she is
making satisfactory progress toward the degree and has been
cleared by the Office of Student Financial Services to register.
In compliance with Connecticut state law, no student will
be allowed to register unless satisfactory evidence of immunity
to measles and rubella has been presented to the Yale University
Health Service (see University
Services and Facilities).
Satisfactory progress means that the student has met all
Graduate School and departmental requirements normally expected
for each stage of the student’s program. For Ph.D. students
before admission to candidacy and for M.A./M.S. students,
this includes satisfactory completion of courses from the
preceding term(s). As indicated under Degree
Requirements above (Course and Honors Requirements and
Admission to Candidacy), students in Ph.D. programs must satisfy
the Honors requirement before beginning the fifth term of
study and must be admitted to candidacy by the appropriate
time. In addition to satisfying these general Graduate School
requirements, students must meet any additional requirements
specified by their departments. Ph.D. students who have been
admitted to candidacy must continue to demonstrate satisfactory
progress toward the degree in the annual dissertation progress
report. Students who fail to meet departmental or Graduate
School requirements by the designated deadlines, and students
who have been admitted to candidacy who fail to submit the
annual dissertation progress report, will be barred from further
registration and withdrawn.
Course Enrollment
Any student who wishes to enroll in courses during
a term must submit to the registrar a course enrollment form,
signed by the director of graduate studies of the student's
department. The deadlines for filing course enrollment forms
each term are listed in the Schedule
of Academic Dates and Deadlines. Students who submit course
enrollment forms after the appropriate deadline will be assessed
a $25 fee.
No student may attend any class unless officially registered
in the course. No credit will be given for work done in any
course for which a student is not officially registered, even
if the student entered the course with the approval of the
instructor and the director of graduate studies. Students
enrolling in courses offered by a Yale professional school
are subject to all policies and deadlines of both the professional
school and the Graduate School.
A student who wishes to audit a course must receive permission
from the instructor before enrolling as an auditor, as not
all faculty permit auditors in their classes. The minimum
general requirement for auditing is attendance in two-thirds
of the class sessions; instructors may set additional requirements
for auditing their classes.
Course Changes
Once the course enrollment form has been submitted to the
registrar, all changes must be approved by the student’s
director of graduate studies and then filed with the registrar.
If a student is enrolled in a professional school course,
all changes in enrollment status must be reported to the registrar
of that school as well as to the Graduate School. Forms for
reporting changes to the Graduate School are available at
the Graduate School Student Information Office, 140 HGS, as
well as from the student’s department.
The dates for changing enrollment in a course from credit
to audit or audit to credit and for withdrawing from a course
are listed in the Schedule
of Academic Dates and Deadlines. If a student stops attending
a course in which he or she is enrolled for credit but does
not file a course change form with the registrar, a permanent
“Incomplete” will be recorded on the student’s
record for that course. Similarly, if a student attends a
course, for credit or audit, that was not listed on the student’s
approved course enrollment form for that term, the course
will not be entered in the student’s record and credit
for the course will not be given. A fee of $25 per course
will be charged for changes made after midterm (fall term:
October 24; spring term: March 5).
Grades
The grades assigned in the Graduate School are:
H = Honors
HP = High Pass
P = Pass
F = Fail
Marks of Credit/No Credit are assigned for History of Art
students enrolled in History of Art courses.
Marks of Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory may be assigned only
when the department sponsoring the course has designated such
marks. In such cases, all students enrolled in the course
must receive these marks; individual students may not receive
grades for the course.
The Graduate School does not calculate grade-point averages
nor does it assign numerical or letter equivalents to Graduate
School grades. Grades assigned according to grading scales
other than those described above will be returned to the instructor
for conversion.
The Schedule of Academic Dates and Deadlines on pages 438–41
indicates the dates on which grades are due for the current
year. Instructors have the responsibility for assigning dates
for submission of course work to meet these grade deadlines.
If a student and instructor have agreed that an extension
is appropriate, the student must submit a request for the
Temporary Incomplete (TI) with the intended completion date,
signed by the instructor and the director of graduate studies.
The instructor will indicate the mark of TI on the grade sheet,
which is to be submitted to the Office of the Registrar by
the appropriate grade submission deadline. Only one TI for
courses taken in a single term is permitted. Temporary Incompletes
received in an academic year must be converted to final grades
by October 1 of the following academic year. If a grade is
not received by the registrar by this date, the TI will be
converted to a permanent Incomplete (I) on the student’s
record.
In certain extraordinary circumstances, such as serious illness
or a family emergency, and on the recommendation of the student’s
department, the associate dean may grant an additional extension.
A written request for such an extension must be made by the
director of graduate studies on the student’s behalf
within two weeks of the grade submission deadline. The request
should indicate the special circumstances and suggest a date
by which the student will complete the work. If the request
is approved, the associate dean will inform the student and
instructor. If the grade is submitted to the registrar by
the new deadline approved by the associate dean, it will replace
the Temporary Incomplete. If a grade is not received by the
registrar by this date, a Temporary Incomplete (TI) will be
converted to a permanent Incomplete (I) on the student’s
record.
“Provisional” or “temporary” grades
(as opposed to Incompletes) are not permitted. Once submitted
to the Office of the Registrar, a grade may be changed only
in cases of arithmetical or clerical error on the part of
the instructor and only with the approval of the appropriate
associate dean.
Students are reminded that the policies stated above are
the Graduate School minimum general requirements. Departments
or individual instructors may have more stringent policies
and students should consult their departmental handbooks or
directors of graduate studies about such requirements.
Registration Status and Leaves of Absence
Registration in Residence
Students who are studying on campus, attending classes, and
using University facilities are considered to be in residence.
All M.A./M.S. and nondegree (DSR) students must register in
residence each term, as do most students in Ph.D. programs
(see also Registration in Absentia and Continuous Registration
Fee, below). Students who will be in residence during any
term are required to register in person during the normal
registration period at the beginning of that term (see the
Schedule of Academic Dates
and Deadlines).
A fee of $25 will be charged to students who register in
residence after the close of the registration period but within
the first ten days of the term. Registration after the tenth
day of the term requires the permission of the director of
graduate studies, the registrar, and, in some instances, of
the appropriate associate dean. Additional fees may be imposed
for registration after the tenth day of the term. Late fees
may be waived only if the registrar receives written notification
from the student or director of graduate studies before the
start of the registration period that the student will register
late because of participation in an academic program, such
as a summer language course or professional meeting, that
coincides with the registration period. A student who cannot
register during the registration period because of a sudden
serious illness or family emergency should contact the deputy
registrar (142 HGS) as soon as possible.
Registration in Absentia
Ph.D. students who have not yet completed the four-year full-tuition
requirement and whose program of study requires full-time
dissertation research, full-time field work, or full-time
study at another academic institution outside the New Haven
area, may request to be registered in absentia. Such registration
requires the recommendation of the director of graduate studies
and the approval of the appropriate associate dean. Forms
for requesting registration in absentia may be obtained at
the Graduate School Student Information Office reception desk
and should be filed at least one month before the beginning
of the term during which the student expects to be studying
away from New Haven. A student who has not completed the three-year
residence requirement will be permitted to register in absentia
for compelling academic reasons only, and normally only if
the student has completed all other predissertation requirements.
Students who register in absentia before completing the four-year
full-tuition requirement will normally be charged full tuition.
Registration in absentia does not reduce the four-year full-tuition
or three-year residence requirements, nor will a student who
has not met the full tuition requirement be permitted to pay
the special fee for more than one year. For additional information,
see Eligibility for Fellowships.
Students who are enrolled in the Yale Health Plan and are
registering in absentia should consult the staff of the Member
Services department at the University Health Services about
the policies governing coverage while they are away from New
Haven.
Continuous Registration Fee
Ph.D. students who have completed the tuition and residence
requirements described on pages 393–94 above must continue
to register each term through the sixth year whether in residence
or in absentia, or until they submit the dissertation, whichever
occurs first. Students are charged a Continuous Registration
Fee (CRF), which in 2003–2004 is $256 per term. Students
who are granted extensions beyond the sixth year are also
charged this fee. Forms for continuing registration are provided
to eligible students before the start of each term and must
be submitted by the end of the registration period for that
term.
Summer Registration
Most Ph.D. students and many M.A./M.S. students continue full-
or half-time independent study or research during the summer.
Students who were registered during the preceding spring term
and are engaged in degree-related activities at least half-time
may register for the summer research term, approximately June
1 through August 31.
Leaves of Absence
Students who wish or need to interrupt their study temporarily
may request a leave of absence. There are two types of leave,
personal and medical, both of which are described below. The
general policies that apply to both types of leave are:
1. All leaves of absence must be approved by the appropriate
associate dean on the recommendation of the department. Medical
leaves also require the recommendation of a Yale Health Plan
(YHP) physician, as described below; see Medical Leave of
Absence.
2. Students in Ph.D. programs may be granted a leave
for one term or one academic year. A leave extends the eligibility
for fellowship aid by a time equal to the duration of the
leave, but not for partial terms. The expected last date of
registration will be adjusted by one term for each term of
the leave.
Students in one-year M.A./M.S. programs may be on leave
for a maximum of one term. Students in two-year M.A./M.S.
programs may be on leave for a maximum total of one year.
In exceptional circumstances renewal of one term or one
year, to a maximum total of two years of leave, may be granted
for students in Ph.D. programs. Leaves of absence for students
in M.A./M.S. programs are not renewable. Students who fail
to register for the term following the end of the approved
leave will be considered to have withdrawn from the Graduate
School.
3. Students on leave may complete, by the appropriate
deadline for the term in which the course was taken, outstanding
work in courses for which they have been granted approved
incompletes. They may not, however, fulfill any other degree
requirements during the time on leave. (Students who intend
to work toward the degree while away from the University must
request registration in absentia.) Students who in fact make
progress toward the degree while on leave will have their
registration changed retroactively to in absentia for the
period of the leave.
4. Students on leave are not eligible for financial
aid, including loans, or for the use of any University facilities
normally available to registered students, with the exception
of the Yale Health Plan, in which they may enroll through
the Student Affiliate Coverage plan. In order to secure continuous
YHP coverage, enrollment in this plan must be requested prior
to the beginning of the term in which the student will be
on leave or, if the leave commences during the term, within
thirty days of the date when the leave is granted. Coverage
is not automatic; enrollment forms are available from the
Member Services department of the Yale Health Service, 17
Hillhouse Avenue, 203.432.0246. Additional information may
be found in the YHP Student Handbook.
5. A leave of absence does not exempt the student from
meeting the tuition requirement (payment of eight terms of
full tuition in Ph.D. programs, or the appropriate established
tuition charge in M.A./M.S. programs) or from paying the Continuous
Registration Fee (if appropriate), but merely postpones the
required charges.
6. Students on leave of absence do not have to file
a formal application for readmission. However, they must notify
the registrar in writing of their intention to return. Such
notification should be given at least six weeks prior to the
end of the approved leave.
Personal Leave of Absence
A student who is current with his or her degree requirements
and who wishes to interrupt study temporarily for reasons
such as pregnancy, maternity or paternity care, or because
of financial exigencies, may request a personal leave of absence.
The general policies governing leaves of absence are described
above. Students are eligible for personal leaves after satisfactory
completion of at least one term of study. Normally, students
in Ph.D. programs are not eligible for personal leaves after
the fourth year of study. In certain exceptional cases, however,
personal leaves may be granted to students beyond the fourth
year of study for reasons of pregnancy, maternity or paternity
care, or for military service. Personal leaves cannot be granted
retroactively and normally will not be approved after the
tenth day of a term.
To request a personal leave of absence, the student must
write to the appropriate associate dean before the beginning
of the term for which the leave is requested, explaining the
reasons for the proposed leave and stating both the proposed
start and end dates of the leave and the address at which
the student can be reached during the period of the leave.
If the dean finds the student to be eligible and the department
approves, the leave will be granted. In any case the student
will be informed in writing of the action taken. Students
who do not apply for a personal leave of absence, or who apply
for a leave but are not granted one, and who do not register
for any term, will be considered to have withdrawn from the
Graduate School.
Medical Leave of Absence
A student who must interrupt study temporarily because of
illness may be granted a medical leave of absence with the
approval of the appropriate associate dean, on the written
recommendation of a physician on the staff of the University
Health Services and of the student's department. The general
policies governing all leaves of absence are described above,
including information about health care coverage. A student
who is making satisfactory progress toward his or her degree
requirements is eligible for a medical leave any time after
matriculation. Students who are granted a medical leave during
any term will have their tuition adjusted according to the
same schedule used for withdrawals (please see Schedule
of Academic Dates and Deadlines). Before re-registering,
a student on medical leave must secure written permission
to return from a physician at the University Health Services.
Advanced Ph.D. students may return at any time, with the permission
of the Yale Health Plan.
Forms for requesting a medical leave of absence are available
at the Graduate School Student Information Office. Health
coverage options during a leave of absence are described under
University Services and Facilities.
Eligible Ph.D. students will receive a Health Award from the
Graduate School to cover the cost of the Student Affiliate
Coverage Plan for the remainder of the term in which the leave
is started, if they apply for this coverage through the Yale
Health Plan within thirty days of the start of their leave.
Withdrawal and Readmission
A student who wishes to terminate his or her program of study
should confer with the director of graduate studies and the
appropriate associate dean regarding withdrawal; their signatures
on an official withdrawal form are required for withdrawal
in good standing. The associate dean will determine the effective
date of the withdrawal, upon consultation with the department.
The University identification card must be submitted with
the approved withdrawal form in order for withdrawal in good
standing to be recorded. Withdrawal forms are available at
the Graduate School Student Information Office.
Students who fail to meet departmental or Graduate School
requirements by the designated deadlines will be barred from
further registration and withdrawn, unless an extension or
exception has been granted by the appropriate dean or degree
committee. Students who do not register for any fall or spring
term, and for whom a leave of absence has not been approved
by the appropriate associate dean, are considered to have
withdrawn from the Graduate School.
A student who is currently registered and who withdraws during
the academic year without submitting an approved withdrawal
form and the University identification card will be liable
for the tuition charge (or Continuous Registration Fee) for
the term in which the withdrawal occurs. Tuition charges for
students who withdraw in good standing will be adjusted as
described in the Schedule
of Academic Dates and Deadlines. The Continuous Registration
Fee for the term is not canceled if a student withdraws after
the fourteenth day of the term. Health service policies related
to withdrawal and readmission under University
Services and Facilities.
A student who has withdrawn from the Graduate School in good
standing and who wishes to resume study at a later date must
apply for readmission. Neither readmission nor financial aid
is guaranteed to students who withdraw. The deadline for making
application for readmission is January 2 of the year in which
the student wishes to return to the Graduate School. The student’s
application will be considered by the department, which will
make a recommendation for review by the appropriate associate
dean. The student’s remaining tuition obligation will
be determined at the time of readmission. Ph.D. students who
withdraw after completion of the full tuition requirement
and who are subsequently readmitted will be charged the accumulated
CRF up to a maximum of four terms.
Personal Conduct
Yale University is an academic community dedicated
to the advancement of learning. Its members freely associate
themselves with the University and in doing so affirm their
commitment to a philosophy of tolerance and respect for all
members of the community. They pledge to help sustain the
intellectual integrity of the University and to uphold its
standards of honesty, free expression, and inquiry. They are
expected to abide by the regulations of the University. They
are also expected to obey local, state, and federal laws,
and violations of these may be cause for discipline by the
Graduate School.
The Graduate School specifically prohibits the following forms
of behavior by graduate students:
1. Cheating on examinations, problem sets, and any other
form of test; also, falsification and/or fabrication of data.
2. Plagiarism, that is, the failure in a dissertation,
essay, or other written exercise to acknowledge ideas, research,
or language taken from others.
3. Misuse of the materials or facilities of the University
Library.
4. Unauthorized use of University services, equipment,
or facilities, such as telephones and photocopying equipment.
5. Violation of University rules for using information
technology services and facilities, including computers, the
University network, and electronic mail. (See Policies for
Use of Information Technology Services Facilities.)
6. Assault on, or coercion, harassment, or intimidation
of, any member of the University community, including harassment
on the basis of race, religion, gender, ethnicity, or sexual
orientation; sexual harassment; or the use of a teaching position
to harass or intimidate another student.
7. Disruption of a legitimate function or activity of the
University community, including disrupting classes and meetings,
blocking entrances and exits to University buildings, unauthorized
occupation of any space on the Yale campus, or preventing
the free expression or dissemination of ideas. (See Report
of the Committee on Freedom of Expression at Yale.)
8. Refusal to comply with the direction of a University
police officer or other University official, including a member
of faculty, acting in the performance of her or his duties.
9. Misuse, alteration, or fabrication of University
credentials or documents, such as an identification card or
a transcript or grade list, including grade lists submitted
by teaching fellows.
10. Misrepresentation or lying during a formal inquiry
by University officials.
11. Misrepresentation in applying for admission or
financial aid.
12. Theft, misuse of funds, or willful damage of University
property.
13. Trespassing on University property to which access
is prohibited.14. The possession or use of explosives,
incendiary devices, or weapons on or about the campus is absolutely
prohibited.
15. Interference with the proper operation of safety
or security devices, including fire alarms, electronic gates,
and sprinkler systems.
16. Unlawful manufacture, possession, use, or distribution
of illicit drugs or alcohol on University property or as part
of any University activity.
Violations of any of the above regulations will be referred
to the Graduate School Committee on Regulations and Discipline,
composed of three graduate students, three faculty members,
normally one from each division, and an associate dean. Students
found guilty of such violations will be subject to one or
more of the following penalties:
Reprimand
Probation
Suspension
Dismissal
Fines
Restriction
In addition to imposing these penalties for offenses subject
to disciplinary action, the University may refer students
for prosecution, and students found guilty of unlawful possession,
use, or distribution of illicit drugs or alcohol on University
property or as part of any University activity may be required
to complete an appropriate rehabilitation program.
Copies of the procedures of the Committee on Regulations
and Discipline are available at registration along with Programs
and Policies and may also be obtained at other times from
the office of each of the associate deans of the Graduate
School. The deans may be consulted for further information
and advice. A copy of the procedures is sent automatically
to any student who is charged with a violation of the Graduate
School’s regulations.
Grievance Procedures
To address complaints and grievances of various kinds,
the following procedures have been adopted.
Complaints of Sexual Harassment
A standing committee reviews complaints of sexual harassment
brought by graduate students against administrators, faculty
of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, other instructors
of graduate students, postdoctoral appointees, or other graduate
students.
The Graduate School Procedure for Student Complaints
This procedure governs any case in which a student has a complaint,
including but not limited to a complaint of discrimination
on the basis of race, sex, color, religion, national or ethnic
origin, sexual preference, or handicap, against a member of
the faculty or administration of the Graduate School. Complaints
that involve a misapplication of Graduate School policy are
also appropriate for consideration by the Dean’s Advisory
Committee on Student Grievances. Complaints that require an
emendation of policy will be referred to the Graduate School
Executive Committee.
Provost's Procedure
The Provost’s Procedure governs cases in which a student
has a complaint, including but not limited to a complaint
of sexual harassment or of discrimination on the basis of
race, sex, color, religion, national or ethnic origin, sexual
preference, or handicap, against a faculty member who is not
a member of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences; or against an
employee who is not an administrator in the Graduate School
or who is not subject to discipline by the student’s
dean.
Copies of the grievance procedures of the Graduate School
are available at registration along with Programs and Policies
and may also be obtained at other times from the office of
each of the associate deans of the Graduate School, or from
the Information Office. The deans may be consulted for further
information and advice.
Freedom
of Expression
The Yale faculty has formally endorsed as an official
policy of Yale University the following statement from the
Report of the Committee on Freedom of Expression at Yale,
published in January 1975.
The primary function
of a university is to discover and disseminate knowledge
by means of research and teaching. To fulfill this function
a free interchange of ideas is necessary not only within
its walls but with the world beyond as well. It follows
that the university must do everything possible to ensure
within it the fullest degree of intellectual freedom. The
history of intellectual growth and discovery clearly demonstrates
the need for unfettered freedom, the right to think the
unthinkable, discuss the unmentionable, and challenge the
unchallengeable. To curtail free expression strikes twice
at intellectual freedom, for whoever deprives another of
the right to state unpopular views necessarily also deprives
others of the right to listen to those views.
We take a chance, as
the First Amendment takes a chance, when we commit ourselves
to the idea that the results of free expression are to the
general benefit in the long run, however unpleasant they
may appear at the time. The validity of such a belief cannot
be demonstrated conclusively. It is a belief of recent historical
development, even within universities, one embodied in American
constitutional doctrine but not widely shared outside the
academic world, and denied in theory and in practice by
much of the world most of the time.
Because few other institutions
in our society have the same central function, few assign
such high priority to freedom of expression. Few are expected
to. Because no other kind of institution combines the discovery
and dissemination of basic knowledge with teaching, none
confronts quite the same problems as a university.
For if a university is
a place for knowledge, it is also a special kind of small
society. Yet it is not primarily a fellowship, a club, a
circle of friends, a replica of the civil society outside
it. Without sacrificing its central purpose, it cannot make
its primary and dominant value the fostering of friendship,
solidarity, harmony, civility, or mutual respect. To be
sure, these are important values; other institutions may
properly assign them the highest, and not merely a subordinate,
priority; and a good university will seek and may in some
significant measure attain these ends. But it will never
let these values, important as they are, override its central
purpose. We value freedom of expression precisely because
it provides a forum for the new, the provocative, the disturbing,
and the unorthodox. Free speech is a barrier to the tyranny
of authoritarian or even majority opinion as to the rightness
or wrongness of particular doctrines or thoughts.
If the priority assigned
to free expression by the nature of a university is to be
maintained in practice, clearly the responsibility for maintaining
that priority rests with its members. By voluntarily taking
up membership in a university and thereby asserting a claim
to its rights and privileges, members also acknowledge the
existence of certain obligations upon themselves and their
fellows. Above all, every member of the university has an
obligation to permit free expression in the university.
No member has a right to prevent such expression. Every
official of the university, moreover, has a special obligation
to foster free expression and to ensure that it is not obstructed.
The strength of these
obligations, and the willingness to respect and comply with
them, probably depend less on the expectation of punishment
for violation than they do on the presence of a widely shared
belief in the primacy of free expression. Nonetheless, we
believe that the positive obligation to protect and respect
free expression shared by all members of the university
should be enforced by appropriate formal sanctions, because
obstruction of such expression threatens the central function
of the university. We further believe that such sanctions
should be made explicit, so that potential violators will
be aware of the consequences of their intended acts.
In addition to the university’s
primary obligation to protect free expression there are
also ethical responsibilities assumed by each member of
the university community, along with the right to enjoy
free expression. Though these are much more difficult to
state clearly, they are of great importance. If freedom
of expression is to serve its purpose and thus the purpose
of the university, it should seek to enhance understanding.
Shock, hurt, and anger are not consequences to be weighed
lightly. No member of the community with a decent respect
for others should use, or encourage others to use, slurs
and epithets intended to discredit another’s race,
ethnic group, religion, or sex. It may sometimes be necessary
in a university for civility and mutual respect to be superseded
by the need to guarantee free expression. The values superseded
are nevertheless important, and every member of the university
community should consider them in exercising the fundamental
right to free expression.
We have considered the
opposing argument that behavior which violates these social
and ethical considerations should be made subject to formal
sanctions, and the argument that such behavior entitles
others to prevent speech they might regard as offensive.
Our conviction that the central purpose of the university
is to foster the free access of knowledge compels us to
reject both of these arguments. They assert a right to prevent
free expression. They rest upon the assumption that speech
can be suppressed by anyone who deems it false or offensive.
They deny what Justice Holmes termed “freedom for
the thought that we hate.” They make the majority,
or any willful minority, the arbiters of truth for all.
If expression may be prevented, censored or punished, because
of its content or because of the motives attributed to those
who promote it, then it is no longer free. It will be subordinated
to other values that we believe to be of lower priority
in a university.
The conclusions we draw,
then, are these: even when some members of the university
community fail to meet their social and ethical responsibilities,
the paramount obligation of the university is to protect
their right to free expression. This obligation can and
should be enforced by appropriate formal sanctions. If the
university’s overriding commitment to free expression
is to be sustained, secondary social and ethical responsibilities
must be left to the informal processes of suasion, example,
and argument.
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