Graduate Requirements, Ethnomusicology
Admission
Consideration for program admission requires:
- A bachelor’s degree comparable to a degree from the University of California in both distribution of academic subject matter and scholarly achievement
- Three letters of recommendation
- GRE scores are not required
- TOEFL or IELTS score (if applicable)
- A CV and a substantial paper or papers
- A minimum GPA of 3.0
- An Office of Graduate Studies online application with fee by the stated admission deadline.
- Transcripts (UC Davis requires academic records from each college-level institution you have attended. You will be instructed to upload scanned copies of your transcripts after you have submitted your online application. For more details visit https://gradstudies.ucdavis.edu/prospective-students/admissions-application/submitting-your-transcripts)
Residency
UC Davis CA residency requirements for graduate students are HERE. First year graduate students who are US citizens but not CA residents must complete the CA residency process before the end of their first quarter.
Language
Ethnomusicology students must successfully pass an exam in two foreign languages, one of which must be a language relevant to the student’s fieldwork/research.
Examinations
After the second quarter of the second year, students take comprehensive examinations, and then draft their dissertation proposal. At the end of the third year, they take a qualifying examination. Upon successful completion, students advance to candidacy.
Transfer Credits
Ordinarily all work for the master’s degree is done in residence on the Davis campus. However, with the consent of the graduate advisor and the dean of Graduate Studies, some work taken elsewhere may be credited toward the degree. The limit for such transfer credit is six units from another institution or up to one-half of the unit requirement if earned from another campus of the University of California, provided the units were not used in satisfaction of the requirements for another degree. Students may transfer up to 12 units of work from the Concurrent Courses program offered by University Extension.
Dissertation
Candidates are required to present and successfully defend a dissertation in a final public oral examination. The doctoral dissertation is to be an original and significant contribution to the field of musical scholarship. The dissertation is supervised by the faculty and approved by a committee named by the Graduate Division. The final copies should conform to the requirements described by the Office of Graduate Studies.
Length of study
While this can vary according to individual circumstances, completion of the doctoral program typically takes five to six years.