Comprehensive Exam Objectives
The purpose of the comprehensive examination is for students to demonstrate mastery of knowledge in a substantiveÌýarea of social work or social welfare. The exam is intended to demonstrate the student's ability to conciselyÌýcommunicate:
- an integration and synthesis of empirical and theoretical knowledge
- a critical analysis of prior research, and
- implications for future scholarly work.
The comprehensive exam is viewed as the passageway to the dissertation project and is intended to demonstrate the student's ability to bridge coursework concepts to their eventual dissertation research. The exam allows the student to explore their field of interest, identify gaps in the literature and move towards developing their dissertation research question and methods.
Comprehensive Exam Policy & ProceduresÌý
The Comprehensive Examination begins in the spring after a student has completed their four courses. The student’sÌýDoctoral Committee (supervisor, internal and external members) must be constituted by the end of the first springÌýsemester (June) of the student’s program.
- To begin the Comprehensive Exam process, students must submit a 2000-2500-word comprehensive exam proposal to the Doctoral Committee with the following elements (see guidelines):Ìý
- An introduction to the intended PhD research area
- Proposal of 2-3 questions with a justification for both the topics and the number of questions.
- These questions are typically focused on theoretical frameworks, empirical knowledge and
- methodological issues.
- An initial bibliography (not included in the word limit).
- The Doctoral Committee will determine the final two or three exam questions. When the questions and timeline for the exam are determined, the student and all committee members must sign the Comprehensive Exam Questions & Timeline.
- The comprehensive exam begins the day after the student is given the final exam questions.
- The student registers for the exam (SWRK 701 Comprehensive Examination) in the semester in which they
- expect to submit their final written component of the Comprehensive Exam.
Timeline
September PhD 2 |
Student begins program by registering in full-timeÌýCoursework (minimum of 2 courses per semester). Students should begin thinking about research directions. |
|||
January - April PhD 2 |
Student and supervisor begin to discuss the comprehensive exam proposal (expectations, purpose, process) and the composition of Doctoral Committee. See attached proposal guidelines. |
|||
April - May PhD 2 |
Students and/or supervisors reach out to potential committee members to discuss proposed comps focus (tentative areas of exploration) and process (timelines, what input will be expected).Ìý This information is important so secured committee members know what will be expected of them and can confirm availabilities.Ìý When the committee members confirm their capacity to serve the committee membership form is completed (this form, titled PhD Supervisory Committee Membership Form, can be found here: /socialwork/prospective/phd/forms) and uploaded by student in myProgress (this is an important step to maintain satisfactory status) |
|||
June - August PhD 2 |
Student begins to draft comprehensive examination proposal with input from Supervisor. |
|||
July PhD 2 - ÌýSeptÌýPhD 3 |
Once deemed ready by supervisor, the student distributes proposal to the full committee. At the time of distribution, a date should be set to discuss the proposal (via email) a timeline for written committee feedback should be set and clarification on where and to whom feedback should be sent should be offered. It is often preferable for the committee to exchange feedback together via email and ask that the supervisor distribute the collective feedback to the student prior to the meeting. |
|||
August - September PhD 3 Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Ìý Comps Proposal should be approved by end of October PhD 3 |
Committee meeting to discuss the proposal:
Students are expected to receive approval and start writing their comprehensive examinations by no later than the end of October of PhD 3. Missing this deadline could compromise the student’s capacity to engage in the PhD seminar (winter PhD 3). For further details about the purpose and content of the comprehensive examination proposal see Guidelines for the Comprehensive Exam Proposal. Ìý |
|||
AugÌýPhD 2 -ÌýFebÌýPhD 3 |
Comprehensive examination writing period. Every student has three months to complete the written component of their comprehensive examination. The written component must not exceed 15,000 words (excluding references). Once complete the student submits the examination via email to all committee members with a cc the PhD Director? While the writing of the comprehensive examination is an independent process students can reach out to supervisors to ask for clarification on expectations. Supervisors will be positioned to indicate the extent to which they can provide advice and input. Students can also reach out to peers, the writing centre and any other resources deemed of utility during this writing stage. Please remember independence does not mean total isolation. |
|||
November PhD 3 - early FebruaryÌý PhD 3 |
Students submit written component of the Comp Exam and Committee has 3 weeks to review. | |||
Within 3 weeks Ìý Evaluation of Written Component |
Doctoral committee members agree on their evaluation of the written component of the exam. |
|||
Pass: Within a month, student moves on to the Oral Defense component of Comprehensive Exam. The student is informed by email that they may proceed to the oral component of the comprehensive examination. NO WRITTEN feedback is provided to the student in this case. Rather the feedback becomes the topic of questioning at the oral defence. No further changes to the written component of the examination should be required after the defence if the committee deems the examination acceptable without revision. |
Pass with Revisions: If only one of the written exam questions requires revisions, & the student must resubmit that question within 2 weeks of receiving the Committee’s detailed feedback on what must be revised. The committee will have 2 weeks to determine whether the revision is a Pass or a Fail (which would count as their first Fail on the exam). If the revision is a pass NO FURTHER WRITTEN feedback should be sent to the student prior to the oral defence. |
Fail: If more than one of the written exam questions requires major revisions, the student will receive detailed written comments from the committee and has 3 months to rewrite their Exam (first Fail on the exam). The Committee would then have 3 weeks to determine whether the new submission is a Pass or a Fail (which would be the 2nd Fail, ending the exam and requiring the student’s withdrawal from the PhD program.) |
||
Within 1 month of passing Written Component Ìý Oral Defence |
The Dissertation Committee meets for the student’s Oral Defence. The comprehensive oral defence is chaired by the Graduate Program Director or a delegate. All committee members and the student are present. The student is given 20 minute to provide an overview of their comprehensive examination. The presentation should focus on high level key findings and their implications for future work. Each member of the committee asks questions to determine the student’s grasp of the literature and capacity to think critically about the scholarship. This question period should not exceed 90 minutes. Following these components, the committee deliberates to make a determination on the oral component of the examination which is documented in writing (see /socialwork/files/socialwork/comp_exam_evaluation_form_2024.pdf) |
|||
Pass: Student becomes a PhD Candidate and proceeds to the Dissertation Project If student passes the oral component of their examination the student must send the evaluation form to the graduate program coordinator as proof of course completion. |
Fail: Student receives detailed written feedback on the oral presentation through the supervisor and may repeat the Oral Defense a month later. If the student fails a second time, they will be required to withdraw from the PhD program. If a student has not demonstrated a capacity to critically reflect on the literature in the oral component of their defence (e.g. they cannot position themselves within the major debates in the literature, they fail to outline the major debates in the literature; they are unable to articulate the strengths and limitations of their work ) a non-passing grade will be recorded with an appended written description of what the student should do to prepare for a second defence. This will likely involve revisiting aspects of the literature deemed of utility and hence revising the written portion of the comprehensive examination. |
|||
February - May PhD 3 |
Dissertation Seminar |
N.B. All concerns about the timeline should be discussed with the GPD.
Written Component of the Comprehensive Exam
Before beginning the Comprehensive Exam, the Committee must submit the Comp Exam Question form.
Once the period of the exam has begun, the student may not have contact with the committee members about theÌýexam. They must use their academic judgement in determining the scope of the essays and be prepared to defendÌýtheir decisions.
The written component must not exceed 15,000 words in total (balanced between the questions), excludingÌýbibliography.
The student has a maximum of three months to complete the written part of the exam. After receiving the finalÌýsubmission, the committee has three weeks to complete their evaluation.
Passing or Failing the Written Component
The Committee, by consensus, or failing consensus, by a majority, must evaluate the written exam to:
- ÌýPass, in which case the student may continue on to the oral defence; OR
- ÌýPass with revisions, when a maximum of one of the questions is unsatisfactory. The student must receive written feedback on the unsatisfactory question and resubmit that question within 2 weeks. The committee then has 2 weeks to reevaluate the resubmitted question; OR
- Fail, when more than one of the questions is unsatisfactory. The student will receive detailed written feedback on their exam and has three months to rewrite and resubmit. If the Committee evaluates the work to be unsatisfactory a second time, the student is then considered to have failed the exam and is withdrawn from the program.
Evaluation criteria (not an exhaustive list)
- An integration and synthesis of empirical and theoretical knowledge
- Critical analysis of prior research, and
- Implications for future scholarly work
- High level of scholarly writing.
Oral Defence Component of the Comprehensive Exam
Once the student has passed the written component of the exam (including with revisions), the student mustÌýcomplete the oral defense. This defense occurs during a Doctoral Committee meeting and is chaired by the JointÌýPhD Program Director or delegate. The defence lasts no more than 2 hours.
- The student is asked to summarize the key outcomes of their comprehensive exam (maximum 20 minutes).
- The student responds to questions posed by the Doctoral Committee. The Committee will then determine whether the student demonstrates the necessary knowledge to be permitted to continue in the Joint PhD program to the Dissertation Proposal.
Evaluation criteria (not an exhaustive list)
- Knowledge of the discipline
- Understanding of the proposed field of research
- Ability to present and defend material orally
- Ability to respond to questions about the implications of the exam findings.
Passing or Failing the Oral Defense
The Committee will determine whether the student passes at the end of the scheduled exam time. The options are:
- Pass: When the student passes the oral defense, the student is considered to have passed the Comprehensive Exam and becomes a PhD Candidate.
- Fail: Should the student fail the oral defense, he or she is allowed a second attempt within one month of the first attempt. Failure on the second attempt means the student is required to withdraw from the PhD Program.
Upon completion of Comprehensive Exam, the PhD Comprehensive Exam Form should be submitted to the Student Affairs Coordinator, in the Social Work General Office.