Draft May 2005

Ph.D. in Curriculum & Instruction

with an emphasis in
Educational Computing, Design and Online Learning (ECDOL)

Faculty from this program area are housed in the Dept. Secondary Education


Quick Index
Mission |  Graduates |  Faculty |  PhD requirements |  ECDOL requirements |  ECDOL Courses |  Prerequisites |  Transfer credits |  Checklist

The College of Education and C&I Mission To prepare knowledgeable, ethical, caring decision makers in a diverse world.
The ECDOL Specialization Mission To prepare educators who want to learn how to use technology to help improve learning and cognition, to support technology-driven school reform, and to teach and conduct scholarly research in higher education.

Who We Are: Graduates

Nearly all of our doctoral graduates work in one of the following capacities:
• faculty in higher education

• multimedia or online education specialists assisting faculty (in higher education)
• continuing in their own field as technology-using or computer science educators, often with a promotion

Who We Are: Faculty • Dr. Rosemary Talab
Other faculty and adjunct faculty
Our Projects and Themes Our faculty and graduate students are involved in constructivist learning environments, distance learning design and methods, project-based learning, copyright issues, ethical and equity issues, integrated curriculum and cross-curricular projects, telecollaboration, and informal and intentional learning projects.
 

 


PhD Program in C&I

The PhD in C & I requires at least 90 credits30 for Dissertation Research, and 30 doctoral coursework (and of course 30 from the Masters degree):

•9 hrs in research (usually EDCEP 816, 817, EDCEP 917 or EDADL 838 Qualitative Research in Education)

•21 hrs. in or related to this specialization (see checklist)

•30 hrs. of dissertation (EDETC 999) credits

ECDOL Specialization Requirements

•Prerequisites (not to be counted as part of the 30 hours of doctoral coursework):

  • EDCEP 816 Research Methods & Treatment of Data
  • EDCIP 803 Curriculum Development
  • EDETC 718 Learning Technologies.

•EDETC 887 Proseminar I and EDETC 888 Proseminar II, taken in the first and second semesters, respectively

•At least one additional research course in place of the usual EDCEP 816 (which we view as a prerequisite)

•EDCI 886 Seminar/Writing the Dissertation Proposal, taken during the appropriate semester

•A course in cognition (either EDCEP 829 Learning Principles OR EDCEP 912 Psychological Bases of Educational Thought and Practice) and EDEL 886 Seminar/Constructivism

•2 credits of the required 30 credits of EDETC 999 will be applied to EDETC 999 Doctoral Research Projects, a research project with a faculty member. To be taken before doing the dissertation.

Transferring in Credit Hours You may theoretically transfer up to 10 credit hours, if your advisor feel it fits the above outline of requirements. It is advisable not to transfer in content area courses.
ECDOL Courses

These courses and seminars have been offered recently
(Future offerings will depend on faculty available to teach them and students interested in taking them)

EDETC 887 Proseminar I (each fall)
EDETC 888 Proseminar II (each spring)
EDETC 723 Computers in a content area (Recently: Cognition & Technology)
EDETC 763 Instructional Design
EDETC 786 Topics courses (Recently: Project-based Learning with Technology)
EDETC 863 Interactive Systems Design
EDETC 884 Hypermedia
EDETC 886 Seminar
EDETC 890 Cognitive Issues in Educational Computing
EDETC 986 Advanced Seminar
 

Program of Study By the end of your first 6 courses in this program (typically the third semester) a Program of Study must be filed with the Graduate School. It lists the courses you have taken and plan to take. It is through this document that you choose a Major Professor and 3 additional committee members (at leas one outside the Dept. of Secondary Education).
Prelim Exams Ordinarily students take preliminary examinations after they have done their coursework and before they submit a formal dissertation proposal, although some may choose to do their prelim studying and proposal writing during the same semester. Prelims are given 2 times a year, and you must write in 4 areas during a 2-day period (3 hours for each area). After passing prelims, you are admitted to candidacy.
Proposal Meeting You must meet with your committee to formally present (in writing and orally) a proposal for your dissertation. The proposal typically constists of Chapters 1-3 of your dissertation. Your major professor will chair this meeting.
Dissertation Defense After completing your research and writing it up in professional format, you must present and defend that thesis before your committee and an outside chair. As of the fall of 2007, all dissertations will be submitted online and not in paper format.