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The Ph'D' Program Department of Economics FIU

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ECONOMETRICS. ECO 7424 Econometric Methods I. ECO 7425 ... Econometrics II. Micro II. Micro I. Fund. Micro. Math Methods II. Macro II. Macro I. Fund. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Ph'D' Program Department of Economics FIU


1
The Ph.D. ProgramDepartment of EconomicsFIU
2
PhD program
  • Degree Requirements
  • Courses
  • Core Courses
  • Field Courses
  • Exams
  • Papers
  • Dissertation
  • Teaching Assistantship

3
Degree Requirements
  • Must complete course work
  • Fulfill certain requirements.

4
Degree Requirements
  • For the Ph.D. degree, the student must complete a
    minimum of 75 credit hours.
  • These 75 hours must include at least
  • Coursework 45 semester credit hours (15 courses)
    of graduate level course work
  • Advanced Workshop 12 credits in the Advanced
    Workshops (4 seminar courses)

5
Degree Requirements
  • Dissertation Credit 18 credits of dissertation

6
Additional Requirements
  • Qualifying Exams and Field Requirement
  • Qualifying examination in core theory
  • One field paper

7
Additional Requirements
  • Residency
  • The university residency requirement (18 credits
    in a 12-month period) must be satisfied prior to
    registering for dissertation credit.
  • Dissertation Defense
  • Successful completion, defense, and acceptance
    of your Ph.D. dissertation

8
Course Work
  • Complete 45 hours (15 courses) of graduate level
    course work.
  • Supervised research (independent study),
    seminars, and dissertation credit do not count
    toward this objective.

9
Course Work
  • The required minimum of 15 courses consists of
  • 11 courses in the core
  • 4 field courses

10
Core Courses
  • MICRO
  • ECO 6115 Fundamentals of Graduate Microeconomics
  • ECO 7115 Microeconomic Theory I
  • ECO 7116 Microeconomic Theory II

11
Core Courses
  • MACRO
  • ECO 6204 Fundamentals of Graduate Macroeconomics
  • ECO 7206 Macroeconomic Theory I
  • ECO 7207 Macroeconomic Theory II

12
Core Courses
  • MATH
  • ECO 7405 Mathematical Methods in Economic
    Analysis I
  • ECO 7xxx Mathematical Methods in Economic
    Analysis II

13
Core Courses
  • ECONOMETRICS
  • ECO 7424 Econometric Methods I
  • ECO 7425 Econometric Methods II
  • ECO 7xxx Econometric Methods III

14
Core Courses
  • Students must attain at least an overall B
    average (3.0) in the following 7 core courses
  • 3 Micro Courses
  • 3 Macro Courses
  • Mathematical Methods in Economic Analysis

15
Grades
  • No credit toward a graduate degree is given for
    any course in which a grade of C or less is
    obtained.
  • A graduate student who receives a grade lower
    than B- in a course must retake that course.
  • If a retake also results in a grade lower than
    B-, the student will not be permitted to continue
    in the Ph.D. Program.
  • A graduate student who receives a grade lower
    than B- in more than two courses will not be
    allowed to stay in the Economics Ph.D. Program.
  • Students are required to maintain a minimum GPA
    of 3.0 (of 4) in their coursework.

16
Core Courses Calendar
17
Comprehensive Qualifying Exams
  • At the end of the second semester, students must
    pass a comprehensive qualifying examination on
    core theory (Microeconomics and Macroeconomics).
  • The student must earn at least a B (3.0) average
    in the micro, macro, and math core courses before
    taking the qualifying exam.

18
Comps
  • The two parts of the Ph.D. qualifying
    examination, Microeconomic Theory and
    Macroeconomic Theory, are considered independent.
  • Students who pass only one part of the
    examination need only retake the part they
    failed.
  • A student who fails the same part twice will not
    be permitted to continue in the Economics Ph.D.
    Program.

19
Field Courses
  • During the fourth and fifth semester, students
    continue their course work.
  • At minimum, students will be required complete
    course work in two major fields of
    specialization.
  • Major field indicates a chosen field in which
    students must fulfill the field paper
    requirement.

20
Field Paper Calendar
  • Choose field-paper field by the Fall of 3rd year
  • Continue working on field paper during the Spring
    of 3rd year
  • Field paper due by the end of 3rd year (Complete
    the paper, present it in a workshop, get it
    accepted by the committee)
  • If called for, redo the field paper by the
    beginning of the 4th year

21
Fields
  • International Trade
  • International Money
  • Industrial Organization I
  • Industrial Organization II

22
Candidacy
  • Successfully complete
  • the field exam
  • The field paper
  • Ready to be admitted to candidacy
  • Start receiving dissertation credit by

23
Candidacy
  • Choose an area of research
  • Consult with faculty (potential PhD committee
    members)
  • Present a dissertation proposal
  • Choose a primary advisor and other committee
    members
  • Steps 1-4 to be completed by the end of the 3rd
    year

24
Dissertation Work
  • Conduct research and complete a dissertation
  • Continue taking courses to complete a minimum of
    12 credits of Advanced Workshop and 18 credits of
    dissertation.
  • Enroll for at least 3 credits per term (including
    the summer) until the dissertation requirement
    has been completed.

25
Dissertation Work
  • Students will normally be required to enroll as
    full-time students at the University for at least
    a year during this dissertation work period.
  • Exceptions must be approved by the students
    primary advisor. This year of required
    residency will be the year after the student
    completes the field requirements.

26
Summary I
27
Summary II
28
Summary II
29
Teaching assistantship
  • Teaching assistantships are initially awarded by
    the Graduate Director, following the
    recommendations of the Graduate Studies
    Committee.
  • Before being awarded an assistantship, a student
    must first be admitted to an Economics Graduate
    Program.
  • Teaching assistantships will normally be renewed
    for up to four years, provided students continue
    to make satisfactory academic progress
    (maintenance of a GPA of at least 3.0 and passing
    core theory and satisfying field paper
    requirements at the designated times).

30
TA Responsibilities
  • Teaching assistants are expected to be present
    throughout the semester.
  • Absence during a portion of the semester could
    result in revocation of your assistantship.
  • You should contact any professors you are
    assigned to as soon as possible after receiving
    your assignment.

31
TA Responsibilities
  • During the first year of graduate study,
    assistants are usually assigned to assist regular
    faculty members.
  • Responsibilities may include grading exams and
    assignments (under the professors guidance), and
    holding office hours.
  • Assistants may also be expected to attend the
    classes they are assigned to.
  • Teaching assistants duties should not exceed 20
    hours per week.

32
TA Responsibilities
  • Once Ph.D. students receive their MA degrees and
    pass the core courses, they may be assigned the
    responsibility of teaching an introductory class.
  • Advanced teaching assistants may be assigned to
    teach a more advanced class.

33
Activity Report
  • Students must submit to the Graduate Director an
    Activity Report at the end of each semester.

34
Activity Report
  • This report details
  • What was accomplished the past semester
  • What were the reasons and remedies for any
    shortcomings
  • What the student plans to do in the next semester
  • What the student plans to do in the next year
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