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Wikipedia

Doctorate

A doctorate (from Latin docere, "to teach"), doctor's degree (from Latin doctor, "teacher"), or doctoral degree is an academic degree awarded by universities and some other educational institutions, derived from the ancient formalism licentia docendi ("licence to teach"). In most countries, a research degree qualifies the holder to teach at university level in the degree's field or work in a specific profession. There are a number of doctoral degrees; the most common is the Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), awarded in many different fields, ranging from the humanities to scientific disciplines.

Doctoral diploma of the astronomer Friedrich Hopfner, issued 1905 by the German Charles-Ferdinand University in Prague

In the United States and some other countries, there are also some types of technical or professional degrees that include "doctor" in their name and are classified as a doctorate in some of those countries. Professional doctorates historically came about to meet the needs of practitioners in a variety of disciplines.

Many universities also award honorary doctorates to individuals deemed worthy of special recognition, either for scholarly work or other contributions to the university or society.

History

Middle Ages

The term doctor derives from Latin, meaning "teacher" or "instructor". The doctorate (Latin: doctoratus) appeared in medieval Europe as a license to teach Latin (licentia docendi) at a university.[1] Its roots can be traced to the early church in which the term doctor referred to the Apostles, church fathers, and other Christian authorities who taught and interpreted the Bible.[1]

The right to grant a licentia docendi (i.e. the doctorate) was originally reserved to the Catholic Church, which required the applicant to pass a test, take an oath of allegiance, and pay a fee. The Third Council of the Lateran of 1179 guaranteed access—at that time essentially free of charge—to all able applicants. Applicants were tested for aptitude.[2] This right remained a bone of contention between the church authorities and the universities, slowly distancing themselves from the Church. In 1213 the right was granted by the pope to the University of Paris, where it became a universal license to teach (licentia ubique docendi).[2] However, while the licentia continued to hold a higher prestige than the bachelor's degree (baccalaureus), the latter was ultimately reduced to an intermediate step to the master's degree (magister) and doctorate, both of which now became the accepted teaching qualifications.[2] According to Keith Allan Noble (1994), the first doctoral degree was awarded in medieval Paris around 1150 by the University of Paris.[3]

George Makdisi theorizes that the ijazah issued in early Islamic madrasahs was the origin of the doctorate later issued in medieval European universities.[4][5] Alfred Guillaume and Syed Farid al-Attas agree that there is a resemblance between the ijazah and the licentia docendi.[6] However, Toby Huff and others reject Makdisi's theory.[7][8][9][10] Devin J. Stewart notes a difference in the granting authority (individual professor for the ijzazah and a corporate entity in the case of the university doctorate).[11]

17th and 18th centuries

 
Cover of the thesis presented by Claude Bernard to obtain his Doctor of Medicine degree (1843)

The doctorate of philosophy developed in Germany in the 17th century (likely c. 1652).[12] The term "philosophy" does not refer solely to the field or academic discipline of philosophy. Still, it is used in a broader sense under its original Greek meaning: "love of wisdom". In most of Europe, all fields (history, philosophy, social sciences, mathematics, and natural philosophy/natural sciences)[13] were traditionally known as philosophy, and in Germany and elsewhere in Europe the basic faculty of liberal arts was known as the "faculty of philosophy". The Doctorate of Philosophy adheres to this historic convention, even though most degrees are not for the study of philosophy. Chris Park explains that it was not until formal education and degree programs were standardized in the early 19th century that the Doctorate of Philosophy was reintroduced in Germany as a research degree,[14] abbreviated as Dr. phil. (similar to Ph.D. in Anglo-American countries). Germany, however, differentiated then in more detail between doctorates in philosophy and doctorates in the natural sciences, abbreviated as Dr. rer. nat. and also doctorates in the social/political sciences, abbreviated as Dr. rer. pol., similar to the other traditional doctorates in medicine (Dr. med.) and law (Dr. jur.).

University doctoral training was a form of apprenticeship to a guild. The traditional term of study before new teachers were admitted to the guild of "Masters of Arts" was seven years, matching the apprenticeship term for other occupations. Originally the terms "master" and "doctor" were synonymous, but over time the doctorate came to be regarded as a higher qualification than the master's degree.

University degrees, including doctorates, were originally restricted to men. The first women to be granted doctorates were Juliana Morell in 1608 at Lyons[15] or maybe Avignon (she "defended theses" in 1606 or 1607, although claims that she received a doctorate in canon law in 1608 have been discredited),[citation needed] Elena Cornaro Piscopia in 1678 at the University of Padua, Laura Bassi in 1732 at Bologna University, Dorothea Erxleben in 1754 at Halle University and María Isidra de Guzmán y de la Cerda in 1785 at Complutense University, Madrid.[16]

Modern times

 
Man and woman wearing Durham and Glasgow PhD gowns, respectively.

The use and meaning of the doctorate have changed over time and are subject to regional variations. For instance, until the early 20th century, few academic staff or professors in English-speaking universities held doctorates, except for very senior scholars and those in holy orders. After that time, the German practice of requiring lecturers to have completed a research doctorate spread. Universities' shift to research-oriented education (based upon the scientific method, inquiry, and observation) increased the doctorate's importance. Today, a research doctorate (PhD) or its equivalent (as defined in the US by the NSF) is generally a prerequisite for an academic career. However, many recipients do not work in academia.

Professional doctorates developed in the United States from the 19th century onward. The first professional doctorate offered in the United States was the M.D. at Kings College (now Columbia University) after the medical school's founding in 1767.[17] However, this was not a professional doctorate in the modern American sense. It was awarded for further study after the qualifying Bachelor of Medicine (M.B.) rather than a qualifying degree.[18] The MD became the standard first degree in medicine in the US during the 19th century, but as a three-year undergraduate degree. It did not become established as a graduate degree until 1930. As the standard qualifying degree in medicine, the MD gave that profession the ability (through the American Medical Association, established in 1847 for this purpose) to set and raise standards for entry into professional practice.[19][20]

 
American academic doctors gather before the commencement exercises at Brigham Young University (April 2008). The American code for academic dress identifies academic doctors with three bands of velvet on the sleeve of the doctoral gown.

In the shape of the German-style PhD, the modern research degree was first awarded in the US in 1861, at Yale University.[21] This differed from the MD in that the latter was a vocational "professional degree" that trained students to apply or practice knowledge rather than generate it, similar to other students in vocational schools or institutes. In the UK, research doctorates initially took higher doctorates in Science and Letters, first introduced at Durham University in 1882.[22] The PhD spread to the UK from the US via Canada and was instituted at all British universities from 1917. The first (titled a DPhil) was awarded at the University of Oxford.[23][24]

Following the MD, the next professional doctorate in the US, the Juris Doctor (JD), was established by the University of Chicago in 1902. However, it took a long time to be accepted, not replacing the Bachelor of Laws (LLB) until the 1960s, by which time the LLB was generally taken as a graduate degree. Notably, the JD and LLB curriculum were identical, with the degree being renamed as a doctorate, and it (like the MD) was not equivalent to the PhD, raising criticism that it was "not a 'true Doctorate'".[25][26] When professional doctorates were established in the UK in the late 1980s and early 1990s, they did not follow the US model. Still, they were set up as research degrees at the same level as PhDs but with some taught components and a professional focus for research work.[27]

Now usually called higher doctorates in the United Kingdom, the older-style doctorates take much longer to complete since candidates must show themselves to be leading experts in their subjects. These doctorates are less common than the PhD in some countries and are often awarded honoris causa. The habilitation is still used for academic recruitment purposes in many countries within the EU. It involves either a long new thesis (a second book) or a portfolio of research publications. The habilitation (highest available degree) demonstrates independent and thorough research, experience in teaching and lecturing, and, more recently, the ability to generate supportive funding. The habilitation follows the research doctorate, and in Germany, it can be a requirement for appointment as a Privatdozent or professor.

Types

Since the Middle Ages, the number and types of doctorates awarded by universities have proliferated throughout the world. Practice varies from one country to another. While a doctorate usually entitles a person to be addressed as "doctor", the use of the title varies widely depending on the type and the associated occupation.

Research doctorate

Research doctorates are awarded in recognition of publishable academic research, at least in principle, in a peer-reviewed academic journal. The best-known research degree title in the English-speaking world, is Doctor of Philosophy (abbreviated Ph.D.,[28] PhD[29] or, at some British universities, DPhil[30][31][32]) awarded in many countries throughout the world. In the U.S., for instance, although the most typical research doctorate is the PhD, accounting for about 98% of the research doctorates awarded, there are more than 15 other names for research doctorates.[28][33] Other research-oriented doctorates (some having a professional practice focus) include the Doctor of Education (Ed.D.[28] or EdD[29]), the Doctor of Science (D.Sc. or Sc.D.[28]), Doctor of Arts (D.A.[28]), Doctor of Juridical Science (J.S.D. or S.J.D.[28]), Doctor of Musical Arts (D.M.A.[28]), Doctor of Professional Studies/Professional Doctorate (ProfDoc or DProf),[29] Doctor of Public Health (Dr.P.H.[28]), Doctor of Social Science (D.S.Sc. or DSocSci[29]), Doctor of Management (D.M. or D.Mgt.),[34] Doctor of Business Administration (D.B.A.[28] or DBA[35]), the UK Doctor of Management (DMan),[36] various doctorates in engineering, such as the US Doctor of Engineering (D.Eng., D.E.Sc. or D.E.S.,[28] also awarded in Japan and South Korea), the UK Engineering Doctorate (EngD),[37] the German engineering doctorate Doktoringenieur (Dr.-Ing.) the German natural science doctorate Doctor rerum naturalium (Dr. rer. nat.) and the economics and social science doctorate Doctor rerum politicarum (Dr. rer. pol.). The UK Doctor of Medicine (MD or MD (Res)) and Doctor of Dental Surgery (DDS) are research doctorates.[29] The Doctor of Theology (Th.D.,[28] D.Th. or ThD[29]), Doctor of Practical Theology (DPT)[29] and the Doctor of Sacred Theology (S.T.D.,[28] or D.S.Th.) are research doctorates in theology.[38]

Criteria for research doctorates vary but typically require completion of a substantial body of original research, which may be presented as a single thesis or dissertation, or as a portfolio of shorter project reports (thesis by publication). The submitted dissertation is assessed by a committee of, typically, internal, and external examiners. It is then typically defended by the candidate during an oral examination (called viva (voce) in the UK and India) by the committee, which then awards the degree unconditionally, awards the degree conditionally (ranging from corrections in grammar to additional research), or denies the degree. Candidates may also be required to complete graduate-level courses in their field and study research methodology.

Criteria for admission to doctoral programs vary. Students may be admitted with a bachelor's degree in the U.S. and the U.K. However, elsewhere, e.g. in Finland and many other European countries, a master's degree is required. The time required to complete a research doctorate varies from three years, excluding undergraduate study, to six years or more.

Licentiate

Licentiate degrees vary widely in their meaning, and in a few countries are doctoral-level qualifications. Sweden awards the licentiate degree as a two-year qualification at the doctoral level and the doctoral degree (PhD) as a four-year qualification.[39] Sweden originally abolished the Licentiate in 1969 but reintroduced it in response to demands from business.[40] Finland also has a two-year doctoral level licentiate degree, similar to Sweden's.[41] Outside of Scandinavia, the licentiate is usually a lower-level qualification. In Belgium, the licentiate was the basic university degree prior to the Bologna Process and was equivalent to a bachelor's degree.[42][43] In France and other countries, it is the bachelor's-level qualification in the Bologna process.[44] In the Pontifical system, the Licentiate in Sacred Theology (STL) is equivalent to an advanced master's degree, or the post-master's coursework required in preparation for a doctorate (i.e. similar in level to the Swedish/Finnish licentiate degree). While other licences (such as the Licence in Canon Law) are at the level of master's degrees.[45]

Higher doctorate and post-doctoral degrees

A higher tier of research doctorates may be awarded based on a formally submitted portfolio of published research of an exceptionally high standard. Examples include the Doctor of Science (DSc or ScD), Doctor of Divinity (DD), Doctor of Letters (DLitt or LittD), Doctor of Law or Laws (LLD), and Doctor of Civil Law (DCL) degrees found in the UK, Ireland and some Commonwealth countries, and the traditional doctorates in Scandinavia.

The habilitation teaching qualification (facultas docendi or "faculty to teach") under a university procedure with a thesis and an exam is commonly regarded as belonging to this category in Germany, Austria, France, Liechtenstein, Switzerland, Poland, etc. The degree developed in Germany in the 19th century "when holding a doctorate seemed no longer sufficient to guarantee a proficient transfer of knowledge to the next generation."[46] In many federal states of Germany, the habilitation results in an award of a formal "Dr. habil." degree or the holder of the degree may add "habil." to their research doctorate such as "Dr. phil. habil." or "Dr. rer. nat. habil." In some European universities, especially in German-speaking countries, the degree is insufficient to have teaching duties without professor supervision (or teaching and supervising PhD students independently) without an additional teaching title such as Privatdozent. In Austria, the habilitation bestows the graduate with the facultas docendi, venia legendi. Since 2004, the honorary title of "Privatdozent" (before this, completing the habilitation resulted in appointment as a civil servant). In many Central and Eastern Europe countries, the degree gives venia legendi, Latin for "the permission to lecture," or ius docendi, "the right to teach," a specific academic subject at universities for a lifetime. The French academic system used to have a higher doctorate, called the "state doctorate" (doctorat d'État), but, in 1984, it was superseded by the habilitation (Habilitation à diriger des recherches, "habilitation to supervise (doctoral and post-doctoral) research", abbreviated HDR) which is the prerequisite to supervise PhDs and to apply to Full Professorships.

While this section has focused on earned qualifications conferred in virtue of published work or the equivalent, a higher doctorate may also be presented on an honorary basis by a university — at its own initiative or after a nomination — in recognition of public prestige, institutional service, philanthropy, or professional achievement. In a formal listing of qualifications, and often in other contexts, an honorary higher doctorate will be identified using language like "DCL, honoris causa," "HonLLD," or "LittD h.c.."

Professional doctorate

Depending on the country, professional doctorates may also be research degrees at the same level as PhDs. The relationship between research and practice is considered important and professional degrees with little or no research content are typically aimed at professional performance. Many professional doctorates are named "Doctor of [subject name] and abbreviated using the form "D[subject abbreviation]" or "[subject abbreviation]D",[29] or may use the more generic titles "Professional Doctorate", abbreviated "ProfDoc" or "DProf",[29] "Doctor of Professional Studies" (DPS) [47][48] or "Doctor of Professional Practice" (DPP).[49][50]

In the US, professional doctorates (formally "doctor's degree – professional practice" in government classifications) are defined by the US Department of Education's National Center for Educational Statistics as degrees that require a minimum of six years of university-level study (including any pre-professional bachelor's or associate degree) and meet the academic requirements for professional licensure in the discipline. The definition for a professional doctorate does not include a requirement for either a dissertation or study beyond master's level, in contrast to the definition for research doctorates ("doctor's degree – research/scholarship"). However, individual programs may have different requirements.[51][52] There is also a category of "doctor's degree – other" for doctorates that do not fall into either the "professional practice" or "research/scholarship" categories.[53] All of these are considered doctoral degrees.[54]

In contrast to the US, many countries reserve the term "doctorate" for research degrees. If, as in Canada and Australia, professional degrees bear the name "Doctor of ...", etc., it is made clear that these are not doctorates. Examples of this include Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD), Doctor of Medicine (MD), Doctor of Dental Surgery (DDS), Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP), and Juris Doctor (JD). Contrariwise, for example, research doctorates like Doctor of Business Administration (DBA), Doctor of Education (EdD) and Doctor of Social Science (DSS) qualify as full academic doctorates in Canada though they normally incorporate aspects of professional practice in addition to a full dissertation.[55][56] In the Philippines, the University of the Philippines Open University offers a Doctor of Communication (DComm) professional doctorate.[57]

All doctorates in the UK and Ireland are third cycle qualifications in the Bologna Process, comparable to US research doctorates. Although all doctorates are research degrees, professional doctorates normally include taught components, while the name PhD/DPhil is normally used for doctorates purely by thesis. Professional, practitioner, or practice-based doctorates such as the DClinPsy, MD, DHSc, EdD, DBA, EngD and DAg[58] are full academic doctorates. They are at the same level as the PhD in the national qualifications frameworks; they are not first professional degrees but are "often post-experience qualifications" in which practice is considered important in the research context.[27][29][35][59] In 2009 there were 308 professional doctorate programs in the UK, up from 109 in 1998, with the most popular being the EdD (38 institutions), DBA (33), EngD/DEng (22), MD/DM (21), and DClinPsy/DClinPsych/ClinPsyD (17).[60] Similarly, in Australia, the term "professional doctorate" is sometimes applied to the Scientiae Juridicae Doctor (SJD),[61][62] which, like the UK professional doctorates, is a research degree.[63][64]

Honorary doctorate

When a university wishes to formally recognize an individual's contributions to a particular field or philanthropic efforts, it may choose to grant a doctoral degree honoris causa ('for the sake of the honor'), waiving the usual requirements for granting the degree.[65][66] Some universities do not award honorary degrees, for example, Cornell University,[67] the University of Virginia,[68] and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[69]

National variations

Argentina

In Argentina the doctorate (doctorado)[70] is the highest academic degree. The intention is that candidates produce original contributions in their field knowledge within a frame of academic excellence.[71] A dissertation or thesis is prepared under the supervision of a tutor or director. It is reviewed by a Doctoral Committee composed of examiners external to the program and at least one examiner external to the institution. The degree is conferred after a successful dissertation defence.[72] In 2006, there were approximately 2,151 postgraduate careers in the country, of which 14% were doctoral degrees.[71] Doctoral programs in Argentina are overseen by the National Commission for University Evaluation and Accreditation,[73][failed verification] an agency in Argentina's Ministry of Education, Science and Technology.[74]

Brazil

Doctoral candidates are normally required to have a master's degree in a related field. Exceptions are based on their individual academic merit. A second and a third foreign language are other common requirements, although the requirements regarding proficiency commonly are not strict. The admissions process varies by institution. Some require candidates to take tests while others base admissions on a research proposal application and interview only. In both instances however, a faculty member must agree prior to admission to supervise the applicant.

Requirements usually include satisfactory performance in advanced graduate courses, passing an oral qualifying exam and submitting a thesis that must represent an original and relevant contribution to existing knowledge. The thesis is examined in a final public oral exam administered by at least five faculty members, two of whom must be external. After completion, which normally consumes 4 years, the candidate is commonly awarded the degree of Doutor (Doctor) followed by the main area of specialization, e.g. Doutor em Direito (Doctor of Laws), Doutor em Ciências da Computação (Doctor of Computer Sciences), Doutor em Filosofia (Doctor of Philosophy), Doutor em Economia (Doctor of Economics), Doutor em Engenharia (Doctor of Engineering) or Doutor em Medicina (Doctor of Medicine). The generic title of Doutor em Ciências (Doctor of Sciences) is normally used to refer collectively to doctorates in the natural sciences (i.e. Physics, Chemistry, Biological and Life Sciences, etc.)

All graduate programs in Brazilian public universities are tuition-free (mandated by the Brazilian constitution). Some graduate students are additionally supported by institutional scholarships granted by federal government agencies like CNPq (Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico) and CAPES (Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento do Pessoal de Ensino Superior). Personal scholarships are provided by the various FAP's (Fundações de Amparo à Pesquisa) at the state level, especially FAPESP in the state of São Paulo, FAPERJ in the state of Rio de Janeiro and FAPEMIG in the state of Minas Gerais. Competition for graduate financial aid is intense and most scholarships support at most 2 years of Master's studies and 4 years of doctoral studies. The normal monthly stipend for doctoral students in Brazil is between US$500 and $1000.

A degree of Doutor usually enables an individual to apply for a junior faculty position equivalent to a US assistant professor. Progression to full professorship, known as Professor Titular requires that the candidate be successful in a competitive public exam and normally takes additional years. In the federal university system, doctors who are admitted as junior faculty members may progress (usually by seniority) to the rank of associate professor, then become eligible to take the competitive exam for vacant full professorships. In São Paulo state universities, associate professorships and subsequent eligibility to apply for a full professorship are conditioned on the qualification of Livre-docente and requires, in addition to a doctorate, a second thesis or cumulative portfolio of peer-reviewed publications, a public lecture before a panel of experts (including external members from other universities), and a written exam.

In recent years some initiatives as jointly supervised doctorates (e.g. "cotutelles") have become increasingly common in the country, as part of the country's efforts to open its universities to international students.[75]

Denmark

Denmark offers four levels of degrees:

  1. A three-year bachelor's degree (e.g. Bachelor of Arts degree)
  2. A cand.mag., a five-year candidate's degree (e.g. Candidatus/Candidata Magisterii), generally compared to a master's degree
  3. A ph.d. degree, which replaced the licentiate in 1988, and does not grant the holder the right to the title dr. or doktor.[76]
  4. A doctor's degree (e.g. Doctor Philosophiae), which is the higher doctorate. It can take the forms dr.phil (for humanistic and STEM subjects), dr.jur (in law) or dr.theol (in theology).[76] (A three-year extended research program, leading to the magister's degree was phased out to meet the international standards of the Bologna Process.)

For the ph.d. degree, the candidate writes a thesis and defends it orally at a formal disputation. The candidate (a ph.d. student or fellow) will enroll at a ph.d. school at a university. In the disputation, the candidate defends their thesis against three official opponents, and may take opponents or questions from those present in the auditorium (ex auditorio).

For the higher doctorate, the candidate writes a major thesis and has to defend it orally in which the candidate (called præses) defends this thesis against two official opponents as well as opponents from the auditorium (ex auditorio). The opponents are required to be full professors.

The higher doctorate was introduced as a separate degree from the ph.d. in 1989 as part of the transition to a new degree structure, since the changes in the degree system would leave people without recognized qualifications. Many Danish academics with permanent positions thus made a doctoral dissertations in the 90s when the system was new. The original intention was to phase out (or merge) the higher doctorate in favor of the ph.d., but this has not yet happened.[76] A ph.d. degree or equivalent qualifications are required for certain academic positions in Denmark, but the higher doctorate is never required for any positions but may be considered equivalent qualifications to the ph.d.

Egypt

In Egypt, the highest degree doctorate is awarded by Al-Azhar University est. 970, which grants ( العالمية Ālimiyya\ Habilitation).

The Medical doctorate (abbreviated as M.D.) is equivalent to the Ph.D. degree.[77] To earn an M.D. in a science specialty, one must have a master's degree (M.Sc.) (or two diplomas before the introduction of M.Sc. degree in Egypt) before applying. The M.D. degree involves courses in the field and defending a dissertation. It takes on average three to five years.

Many postgraduate medical and surgical specialties students earn a doctorate. After finishing a 6-year medical school and one-year internship (house officer), physicians and surgeons earn the M.B. B.Ch. degree, which is equivalent to a US MD degree. They can then apply to earn a master's degree or a speciality diploma, then an MD degree in a specialty.

The Egyptian M.D. degree is written using the name of one's specialty. For example, M.D. (Geriatrics) means a doctorate in Geriatrics, which is equivalent to a Ph.D. in Geriatrics.

Finland

The Finnish requirement for the entrance into doctoral studies is a master's degree or equivalent. All universities have the right to award doctorates.[78] The ammattikorkeakoulu institutes (institutes of higher vocational education that are not universities but often called "Universities of Applied Sciences" in English) do not award doctoral or other academic degrees. The student must:

  • Demonstrate understanding of their field and its meaning, while preparing to use scientific or scholarly study in their field, creating new knowledge.
  • Obtain a good understanding of development, basic problems and research methods
  • Obtain such understanding of the general theory of science and letters and such knowledge of neighbouring research fields that they are able to follow the development of these fields.

The way to show that these general requirements have been met is:

  • Complete graduate coursework.
  • Demonstrate critical and independent thought
  • Prepare and publicly defend a dissertation (a monograph or a compilation thesis of peer-reviewed articles). In fine arts, the dissertation may be substituted by works and/or performances as accepted by the faculty.

Entrance to a doctoral program is available only for holders of a master's degree; there is no honors procedure for recruiting Bachelors. Entrance is not as controlled as in undergraduate studies, where a strict numerus clausus is applied. Usually, a prospective student discusses their plans with a professor. If the professor agrees to accept the student, the student applies for admission. The professor may recruit students to their group.[79] Formal acceptance does not imply funding. The student must obtain funding either by working in a research unit or through private scholarships. Funding is more available for natural and engineering sciences than in letters. Sometimes, normal work and research activity are combined.[80]

Prior to introduction of the Bologna process, Finland required at least 42 credit weeks (1,800 hours) of formal coursework. The requirement was removed in 2005, leaving the decision to individual universities, which may delegate the authority to faculties or individual professors. In Engineering and Science, required coursework varies between 40 and 70 ECTS.

The duration of graduate studies varies. It is possible to graduate three years after the master's degree, while much longer periods are not uncommon. The study ends with a dissertation, which must present substantial new scientific/scholarly knowledge. The dissertation can either be a monograph or it an edited collection of 3 to 7 journal articles. Students unable or unwilling to write a dissertation may qualify for a licentiate degree by completing the coursework requirement and writing a shorter thesis, usually summarizing one year of research.

When the dissertation is ready, the faculty names two expert pre-examiners with doctoral degrees from the outside the university. During the pre-examination process, the student may receive comments on the work and respond with modifications.[81] After the pre-examiners approve, the doctoral candidate applies the faculty for permission to print the thesis. When granting this permission, the faculty names the opponent for the thesis defence, who must also be an outside expert, with at least a doctorate. In all Finnish universities, long tradition requires that the printed dissertation hang on a cord by a public university noticeboard for at least ten days prior to for the dissertation defence.[82]

The doctoral dissertation takes place in public. The opponent and the candidate conduct a formal debate, usually wearing white tie, under the supervision of the thesis supervisor. Family, friends, colleagues and the members of the research community customarily attend the defence. After a formal entrance, the candidate begins with an approximately 20-minute popular lecture (lectio praecursoria), that is meant to introduce laymen to the thesis topic. The opponent follows with a short talk on the topic, after which the pair critically discuss the dissertation. The proceedings take two to three hours. At the end the opponent presents their final statement and reveals whether he/she will recommend that the faculty accept it. Any member of the public then has an opportunity to raise questions, although this is rare. Immediately after the defence, the supervisor, the opponent and the candidate drink coffee with the public. Usually, the attendees of the defence are given the printed dissertation.[83] In the evening, the passed candidate hosts a dinner (Finnish: karonkka) in honour of the opponent. Usually, the candidate invites their family, colleagues and collaborators.[84]

Doctoral graduates are often Doctors of Philosophy (filosofian tohtori), but many fields retain their traditional titles: Doctor of Medicine (lääketieteen tohtori), Doctor of Science in Technology (tekniikan tohtori), Doctor of Science in Arts (Art and Design), etc.

The doctorate is a formal requirement for a docenture or professor's position, although these in practice require postdoctoral research and further experience. Exceptions may be granted by the university governing board, but this is uncommon, and usually due to other work and expertise considered equivalent.

France

History

Before 1984 three research doctorates existed in France: the State doctorate (doctorat d'État, "DrE", the old doctorate introduced in 1808), the third cycle doctorate (Doctorat de troisième cycle, also called doctorate of specialty, Doctorat de spécialité, created in 1954 and shorter than the State doctorate) and the diploma of doctor-engineer (diplôme de docteur-ingénieur created in 1923), for technical research.

During the first half of the 20th century, following the submission of two theses (primary thesis, thèse principale, and secondary thesis, thèse complémentaire) to the Faculty of Letters (in France, "letters" is equivalent to "humanities") at the University of Paris, the doctoral candidate was awarded the Doctorat ès lettres. There was also the less prestigious "university doctorate" Doctorat d'université which could be received for the submission of a single thesis.

In the 1950s, the Doctorat ès lettres was renamed to Doctorat d'État.[85] In 1954 (for the sciences) and 1958 (for letters and human sciences), the less demanding Doctorat de troisième cycle degree was created on the model of the American Ph.D. with the purpose to lessen what had become an increasingly long period of time between the typical students' completion of their Diplôme d'études supérieures, roughly equivalent to a Master of Arts) and their Doctorat d'État.[85]

After 1984, only one type of doctoral degree remained: the "doctorate" (Doctorat). A special diploma was created called the "accreditation to supervise research" (Habilitation à diriger des recherches), a professional qualification to supervise doctoral work. (This diploma is similar in spirit to the older State doctorate, and the requirements for obtaining it are similar to those necessary to obtain tenure in other systems.) Before only professors or senior full researchers of similar rank were normally authorized to supervise a doctoral candidate's work.[86] Now habilitation is a prerequisite to the title of professor in university (Professeur des universités) and to the title of Research Director (Directeur de recherche) in national public research agency such as CNRS, INRIA, or INRAE.

Admission

Today, the doctorate (doctorat) is a research-only degree. It is a national degree and its requirements are fixed by the minister of higher education and research. Only public institutions award the doctorate. It can be awarded in any field of study. The master's degree is a prerequisite. The normal duration is three years. The writing of a comprehensive thesis constitutes the bulk of the doctoral work. While the length of the thesis varies according to the discipline, it is rarely less than 150 pages, and often substantially more. Some 15,000 new doctoral matriculations occur every year and ~10,000 doctorates are awarded.[87]

Doctoral candidates can apply for a three-year fellowship. The most well known is the Contrat Doctoral (4,000 granted every year with a gross salary of 1758 euros per month as of September 2016).

Since 2002 candidates follow in-service training, but there is no written examination for the doctorate. The candidate has to write a thesis that is read by two external reviewers. The head of the institution decides whether the candidate can defend the thesis, after considering the external reviews. The jury members are designated by the head of the institution. The candidate's supervisor and the external reviewers are generally jury members. The maximum number of jury members is 8. The defense generally lasts 45 minutes in scientific fields, followed by 1 – 2 and a half hours of questions from the jury or other doctors present. The defense and questions are public. The jury then deliberates in private and then declares the candidate admitted or "postponed". The latter is rare. New regulations were set in 2016 and do not award distinctions.

The title of doctor (docteur) can also be used by medical and pharmaceutical practitioners who hold a doctor's State diploma (diplôme d'État de docteur, distinct from the doctorat d'État mentioned above). The diploma is a first-degree.

A guidelines with good practices and legal analysis has been published in 2018 by Association nationale des docteurs (ANDès) & Confédération des Jeunes Chercheurs (CJC) with funding of french Ministry of research.[88]

Germany

Doctoral degrees in Germany are research doctorates and are awarded by a process called Promotion. The concept of a US-style professional doctorate as an entry-level professional qualification does not exist. Most doctorates are awarded with specific Latin designations for the field of research (except for engineering, where the designation is German), instead of a general name for all fields (such as the Ph.D.). The most important degrees are:

  • Dr. rer. nat. (rerum naturalium; natural and formal sciences, i.e. physics, chemistry, biology, mathematics, computer science and information technology, or psychology);
  • Dr. phil. (philosophiae; humanities such as philosophy, philology, history, and social sciences such as sociology, political science, or psychology as well);
  • Dr. iur. (iuris; law);
  • Dr. oec. (oeconomiae; economics);
  • Dr. rer. pol. (rerum politicarum; economics, business administration, political science);
  • Dr. theol. (theologiae; theology);
  • Dr. med. (medicinae; medicine);
  • Dr. med. dent. (medicinae dentariae; dentistry);
  • Dr. med. vet. (medicinae veterinariae; veterinary medicine);
  • Dr.-Ing. (engineering).

In medicine, "doctoral" dissertations are often written alongside undergraduate study therefore, European Research Council decided in 2010 that such Dr. med. degrees do not meet the international standards of a Ph.D. research degree.[89][90] The duration of the doctorate depends on the field: a doctorate in medicine may take less than a full-time year to complete; those in other fields, two to six years.

Over fifty doctoral designations exist, many of them rare or no longer in use. As a title, the degree is commonly written in front of the name in abbreviated form, e.g., Dr. rer. nat. Max Mustermann or Dr. Max Mustermann, dropping the designation entirely. However, leaving out the designation is only allowed when the doctorate degree is not an honorary doctorate, which must be indicated by Dr. h.c. (from Latin honoris causa). Although the honorific does not become part of the name, holders can demand that the title appear in official documents. The title is not mandatory. The honorific is commonly used in formal letters. For holders of other titles, only the highest title is mentioned. Multiple holders of doctorate degrees can be addressed as Dres. (from Latin doctores). Professional doctorates obtained in other countries, not requiring a thesis or not being third cycle qualifications under the Bologna process, can only be used postnominally, e.g., "Max Mustermann, MD", and do not allow the use of the title Dr.[91] In contrast to English, in which a person's name is preceded by at most one title (except in very ceremonious usage), the formal German mode of address permits several titles in addition to "Herr" or "Frau" (which, unlike "Mr" or "Ms", is not considered a title at all, but an Anrede or "address"), including repetitions in the case of multiple degrees, as in "Frau Prof. Dr. Dr. Schmidt",[92] for a person who would be addressed as "Prof. Schmidt" in English.

In the German university system it is common to write two doctoral theses, the inaugural thesis (Inauguraldissertation), completing a course of study, and the habilitation thesis (Habilitationsschrift), which opens the road to a professorship.[93] Upon completion of the habilitation thesis, a Habilitation is awarded, which is indicated by appending habil. (habilitata/habilitatus) to the doctorate, e.g., Dr. rer. nat. habil. Max Mustermann. It is considered as an additional academic qualification rather than an academic degree formally. It qualifies the owner to teach at German universities (facultas docendi). The holder of a Habilitation receives the authorization to teach a certain subject (venia legendi). This has been the traditional prerequisite for attaining Privatdozent (PD) and employment as a full university professor. With the introduction of Juniorprofessuren—around 2005—as an alternative track towards becoming a professor at universities (with tenure), Habilitation is no longer the only university career track.

India

In India, doctorates are offered by universities. Entry requirements include master's degree. Some universities consider undergraduate degrees in professional areas such as engineering, medicine or law as qualifications for pursuing doctorate level degrees. Entrance examinations are held for almost all programs. In most universities, coursework duration and thesis is 5–6 years. The most common doctoral degree is Ph.D.

Italy

Until the introduction of the dottorato di ricerca in the mid-1980s, the laurea generally constituted the highest academic degree obtainable in Italy. The first institution in Italy to create a doctoral program was Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa in 1927 under the historic name "Diploma di Perfezionamento".[94][95] Further, the dottorato di ricerca was introduced by law and presidential decree in 1980,[96][97] in a reform of academic teaching, training and experimentation in organisation and teaching methods.[98][99]

Italy uses a three-level degree system following the Bologna Process. The first-level degree, called a laurea (Bachelor's degree), requires three years and a short thesis. The second-level degree, called a laurea magistrale (Master's degree), is obtained after two additional years, specializing in a branch of the field. This degree requires more advanced thesis work, usually involving academic research or an internship. The final degree is called a dottorato di ricerca (Ph.D.) and is obtained after three years of academic research on the subject and a thesis.

Alternatively, after obtaining the laurea or the laurea magistrale, one can complete a "Master's" (first-level Master's after the laurea; second-level Master's after the laurea magistrale) of one or two years, usually including an internship. An Italian "Master's" is not the same as a master's degree; it is intended to be more focused on professional training and practical experience.

Regardless of the field of study, the title for Bachelors Graduate students is Dottore/Dottoressa (abbrev. Dott./Dott.ssa, or as Dr.), not to be confused with the title for the Ph.D., which is instead Dottore/Dottoressa di Ricerca. A laurea magistrale grants instead the title of Dottore/Dottoressa magistrale. Graduates in the fields of Education, Art and Music are also called Dr. Prof. (or simply Professore) or Maestro. Many professional titles, such as ingegnere (engineer) are awarded only upon passing a post-graduation examination (esame di stato), and registration in the relevant professional association.

The Superior Graduate Schools in Italy[100] (Italian: Scuola Superiore Universitaria),[101] also called Schools of Excellence (Italian: Scuole di Eccellenza)[100][102] such as Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa and Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies keep their historical "Diploma di Perfezionamento" title by law[95][103] and MIUR Decree.[104][105]

Japan

Dissertation-only

Until the 1990s, most natural science and engineering doctorates in Japan were earned by industrial researchers in Japanese companies. These degrees were awarded by the employees' former university, usually after years of research in industrial laboratories. The only requirement is submission of a dissertation, along with articles published in well-known journals. This program is called ronbun hakase (論文博士). It produced the majority of engineering doctoral degrees from national universities. University-based doctoral programs called katei hakase (課程博士), are gradually replacing these degrees. By 1994, more doctoral engineering degrees were earned for research within university laboratories (53%) than industrial research laboratories (47%).[106] Since 1978, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) has provided tutorial and financial support for promising researchers in Asia and Africa. The program is called JSPS RONPAKU.[107]

Professional degree

The only professional doctorate in Japan is the Juris Doctor, known as Hōmu Hakushi (法務博士)[108] The program generally lasts two or three years. This curriculum is professionally oriented,[109] but unlike in the US the program does not provide education sufficient for a law license. All candidates for a bar license must pass the bar exam (Shihou shiken), attend the Legal Training and Research Institute and pass the practical exam (Nikai Shiken or Shihou Shushusei koushi).[110]

Netherlands and Flanders

The traditional academic system of the Netherlands provided basic academic diploma: propaedeuse and three academic degrees: kandidaat (the lowest degree), depending on gender doctorandus or doctoranda (drs.) (with equivalent degrees in engineering – ir. and law – mr.) and doctor (dr.). After successful completion of the first year of university, the student was awarded the propaedeutic diploma (not a degree). In some fields, this diploma was abolished in the 1980s. In physics and mathematics, the student could directly obtain a kandidaats (candidate) diploma in two years. The candidate diploma was all but abolished by 1989. It used to be attained after completion of the majority of courses of the academic study (usually after completion of course requirements of the third year in the program), after which the student was allowed to begin work on their doctorandus thesis. The successful completion of this thesis conveyed the doctoranda/us title, implying that the student's initial studies were finished. In addition to these 'general' degrees, specific titles equivalent to the doctorandus degree were awarded for law: meester (master) (mr.), and for engineering: ingenieur (engineer)(ir.). Following the Bologna protocol the Dutch adopted the Anglo-Saxon system of academic degrees. The old candidate's degree was revived to become the bachelor's degree and the doctorandus' (mr and ir degree) were replaced by master's degrees.

Students can only enroll in a doctorate system after completing a research university level master's degree; although dispensation can be granted on a case-by-case basis after scrutiny of the individual's portfolio. The most common way to conduct doctoral studies is to work as promovendus/assistent in opleiding (aio)/onderzoeker in opleiding (oio) (research assistant with additional courses and supervision), perform extensive research and write a dissertation consisting of published articles (over a period of four or more years, averaging about 5.5 to 6). Research can also be conducted without official research assistant status, for example through a business-sponsored research laboratory.

Every Ph.D. thesis has to be promoted by a full university professor or an associate professor[111]  who has the role of principal advisor and holds the right to do so (ius promovendi). The promotor (professor) determines whether the thesis quality suffices and can be submitted to the committee of experts. A committee of experts in the field review the thesis. Failures at this stage are rare because supervisors withhold inadequate work. The supervisors and promotor lose prestige among their colleagues should they allow a substandard thesis to be submitted.

After reviewer approval, the candidate publishes the thesis (generally more than 100 copies) and sends it to colleagues, friends and family with an invitation to the public defense. The degree is awarded in a formal, public, defense session, in which the thesis is defended against critical questions of the "opposition" (the review committee). Failure during this session is possible, but rare. Before the defense there may or may not be a public presentation, lasting 10 minutes (e.g. Eindhoven University of Technology) to exactly half hour (e.g. Delft University of Technology). The actual defense lasts exactly the assigned time slot (45 minutes to 1 hour exactly depending on the university) after which the defense is stopped by the bedel who closes the process.

The doctor's title is the highest academic title in the Netherlands. In research doctorates the degree is always Ph.D. or dr. with no distinction between disciplines. Three Dutch universities of technology (Eindhoven University of Technology, Delft University of Technology, and University of Twente) also award a 2-year (industry oriented) Professional Doctorate in Engineering (PDEng), named EngD from September 2022 onwards.[112] Those who obtained a degree in a foreign country can only use one of the Dutch titles drs., mr., ir., or dr if approved by the Dienst Uitvoering Onderwijs[113] though according to the opportunity principle, little effort monitors such frauds. Dutch doctors may use PhD behind their name instead of the uncapitalized shortcut dr. before their name.[114]

Those who have multiple doctor (dr.) titles may use the title dr.mult.[114] Those who have received honoris causa doctorates may use dr.h.c. before their own name.[114]

In Belgium's Flemish Community the doctorandus title was only used by those who actually started their doctoral work. Doctorandus is still used as a synonym for a Ph.D. student. The licentiaat (licensee) title was in use for a regular graduate until the Bologna reform changed the licentiaat degree to the master's degree (the Bologna reform abolished the two-year kandidaat degree and introduced a three-year academic bachelor's degree instead).

Russia

In the Russian Empire the academic degree "doctor of the sciences" (doktor nauk) marked the highest academic degree that can be achieved by an examination. (The "doctor nauk" degree was introduced in Russia in 1819, abolished in 1917, and revived in the USSR in 1934.)[115] This system was generally adopted by the USSR/Russia and many post-Soviet countries. A lower degree, "candidate [doctor] of the sciences" (kandidat nauk; first introduced in the USSR on January 13, 1934, by a decision of the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR), is, roughly, the Russian equivalent to the research doctorate in other countries.

Spain

 
The ancient ceremony of bestowing Complutense's Doctoral biretta.

Doctoral degrees are regulated by Royal Decree (R.D. 778/1998),[116] Real Decreto (in Spanish). They are granted by the university on behalf of the king. Its diploma has the force of a public document. The Ministry of Science keeps a national registry of theses called TESEO.[117] According to the National Institute of Statistics (INE), fewer than 5% of M.Sc. degree holders are admitted to Ph.D. programmes.

 
Traditionally, the friends of a new doctor honored him painting a victor on the walls (in this case, the Seville Cathedral).

All doctoral programs are research-oriented. A minimum of 4 years of study is required, divided into 2 stages:

  • A 2-year (or longer) period of studies concludes with a public dissertation presented to a panel of 3 Professors. Upon approval from the university, the candidate receives a Diploma de Estudios Avanzados (part qualified doctor, equivalent to M.Sc.). From 2008 it is possible to substitute the former diploma by a recognized master program.
  • A 2-year (or longer) research period includes extensions for up to 10 years. The student must present a thesis describing a discovery or original contribution. If approved by their thesis director, the study is presented to a panel of 5 distinguished scholars. Any Doctor attending the public defense is allowed to challenge the candidate with questions. If approved, the candidate receives the doctorate. Four marks used to be granted: Unsatisfactory (Suspenso), Pass (Aprobado), Remarkable (Notable), "Cum laude" (Sobresaliente), and "Summa cum laude" (Sobresaliente Cum Laude). Those Doctors granted their degree "Summa Cum Laude" were allowed to apply for an "Extraordinary Award".

Since September 2012 and regulated by Royal Decree (R.D. 99/2011) (in Spanish),[118] three marks can be granted: Unsatisfactory (No apto), Pass (Apto) and "Cum laude" (Apto Cum Laude) as maximum mark. In the public defense the doctor is notified if the thesis has passed or not passed. The Apto Cum Laude mark is awarded after the public defense as the result of a private, anonymous vote. Votes are verified by the university. A unanimous vote of the reviewers nominates Doctors granted Apto Cum Laude for an "Extraordinary Award" (Premio Extraordinario de Doctorado).

In the same Royal Decree the initial 3-year study period was replaced by a Research master's degree (one or two years; Professional master's degrees do not grant direct access to Ph.D. Programs) that concludes with a public dissertation called Trabajo de Fin de Máster or Proyecto de Fin de Máster. An approved project earns a master's degree that grants access to a Ph.D. program and initiates the period of research.

A doctorate is required in order to teach at the university.[119]

Only Ph.D. holders, Grandees and Dukes can sit and cover their heads in the presence of the King.[120]

From 1857, Complutense University was the only one in Spain authorised to confer the doctorate. This law remained in effect until 1954, when the University of Salamanca joined in commemoration of its septcentenary. In 1970, the right was extended to all Spanish universities.[121]

All doctorate holders are reciprocally recognised as equivalent in Germany and Spain (according to the "Bonn Agreement of November 14, 1994").[122]

United Kingdom

History of the UK doctorate

The doctorate has long existed in the UK as, originally, the second degree in divinity, law, medicine and music. But it was not until the late 19th century that the research doctorate, now known as the higher doctorate, was introduced. The first higher doctorate was the Doctor of Science at Durham University, introduced in 1882.[22] This was soon followed by other universities, including the University of Cambridge establishing its ScD in the same year, the University of London transforming its DSc from an advanced study course to a research degree in 1885, and the University of Oxford establishing its Doctor of Letters (DLitt) in 1900.[123][124]

 
Ph.D. Gown, University of Cambridge

The PhD was adopted in the UK following a joint decision in 1917 by British universities, although it took much longer for it to become established. Oxford became the first university to institute the new degree, although naming it the DPhil.[123] The PhD was often distinguished from the earlier higher doctorates by distinctive academic dress. At Cambridge, for example, PhDs wear a master's gown with scarlet facings rather than the full scarlet gown of the higher doctors, while the University of Wales gave PhDs crimson gowns rather than scarlet.[125] Professional doctorates were introduced in Britain in the 1980s and 1990s. The earliest professional doctorates were in the social sciences, including the Doctor of Business Administration (DBA), Doctor of Education (EdD) and Doctor of Clinical Psychology (DClinPsy).[126]

British doctorates today

Today, except for those awarded honoris causa (honorary degrees), all doctorates granted by British universities are research doctorates, in that their main (and in many cases only) component is the submission of an extensive and substantial thesis or portfolio of original research, examined by an expert panel appointed by the university. UK doctorates are categorised as:[29]

Junior doctorates
  1. Subject specialist doctorates – normally PhD/DPhil; the most common form of doctorate
    • Integrated subject specialist doctorates – integrated PhDs including teaching at master's level
  2. Doctorates by publication – PhD by Published Works; only awarded infrequently
  3. Professional / practice-based / practitioner doctorates – e.g. EdD, ProfDoc/DProf, EngD, etc.; usually include taught elements and have an orientation that combines professional and academic aspects
Higher doctorates
e.g. DD, LLD, DSc, DLitt; higher level than junior doctorates, usually awarded either for a substantial body of work over an extended period or as honorary degrees.

The Quality Assurance Agency states in the Framework for Higher Education Qualifications of UK Degree-Awarding Bodies (which covers junior doctorates but not higher doctorates) that:[27]

Doctoral degrees are awarded to students who have demonstrated:

  • the creation and interpretation of new knowledge, through original research or other advanced scholarship, of a quality to satisfy peer review, extend the forefront of the discipline, and merit publication
  • a systematic acquisition and understanding of a substantial body of knowledge which is at the forefront of an academic discipline or area of professional practice
  • the general ability to conceptualise, design and implement a project for the generation of new knowledge, applications or understanding at the forefront of the discipline, and to adjust the project design in the light of unforeseen problems
  • a detailed understanding of applicable techniques for research and advanced academic enquiry

In the UK, the (junior) doctorate is a qualification awarded at FHEQ level 8/level 12 of the FQHEIS on the national qualifications frameworks.[27][29][127] The higher doctorates are stated to be "A higher level of award", which is not covered by the qualifications frameworks.[29]

Subject specialist doctorates

These are the most common doctorates in the UK and are normally awarded as PhDs. While the master/apprentice model was traditionally used for British PhDs, since 2003 courses have become more structured, with students taking courses in research skills and receiving training for professional and personal development. However, the assessment of the PhD remains based on the production of a thesis or equivalent and its defence at a viva voce oral examination, normally held in front of at least two examiners, one internal and one external.[29] Access to PhDs normally requires an upper second class or first class bachelor's degree, or a master's degree. Courses normally last three years, although it is common for students to be initially registered for MPhil degrees and then formally transferred onto the PhD after a year or two. Students who are not considered likely to complete a PhD may be offered the opportunity to complete an MPhil instead.[128]

Integrated doctorates, originally known as 'New Route PhDs', were introduced from 2000 onwards. These integrate teaching at master's level during the first one or two years of the degree, either alongside research or as a preliminary to starting research. These courses usually offer a master's-level exit degree after the taught courses are completed. While passing the taught elements is often required, examination of the final doctorate is still by thesis (or equivalent) alone.[29] The duration of integrated doctorates is a minimum of four years, with three years spent on the research component.[129]

In 2013, Research Councils UK issued a 'Statement of Expectations for Postgraduate Training', which lays out the expectations for training in PhDs funded by the research councils.[130] In the latest version (2016), issued together with Cancer Research UK, the Wellcome Trust and the British Heart Foundation, these include the provision of careers advice, in-depth advanced training in the subject area, provision of transferable skills, training in experimental design and statistics, training in good research conduct, and training for compliance with legal, ethical and professional frameworks. The statement also encourages peer-group development through cohort training and/or Graduate schools.[131]

Higher doctorates

Higher doctorates are awarded in recognition of a substantial body of original research undertaken over the course of many years. Typically the candidate submits a collection of previously published, peer-refereed work, which is reviewed by a committee of internal and external academics who decide whether the candidate deserves the doctorate. The higher doctorate is similar in some respects to the habilitation in some European countries. However, the purpose of the award is significantly different. While the habilitation formally determines whether an academic is suitably qualified to be a university professor, the higher doctorate does not qualify the holder for a position but rather recognises their contribution to research.[22]

Higher doctorates were defined by the UK Council for Graduate Education (UKCGE) in 2013 as:[22]

an award that is at a level above the PhD (or equivalent professional doctorate in the discipline), and that is typically gained not through a defined programme of study but rather by submission of a substantial body of research-based work.

In terms of number of institutions offering the awards, the most common doctorates of this type in UKCGE surveys carried out in 2008 and 2013 were the Doctor of Science (DSc), Doctor of Letters (DLitt), Doctor of Law (LLD), Doctor of Music (DMus) and Doctor of Divinity (DD); in the 2008 survey the Doctor of Technology (DTech) tied with the DD.[22] The DSc was offered by all 49 responding institutions in 2008 and 15 out of 16 in 2013 and the DLitt by only one less in each case, while the DD was offered in 10 responding institutions in 2008 and 3 in 2013. In terms of number of higher doctorates awarded (not including honorary doctorates) the DSc was most popular, but the number of awards was very low: the responding institutions had averaged an award of at most one earned higher doctorate per year over the period 2003–2013.[22]

Honorary degrees

Most British universities award degrees honoris causa to recognise individuals who have made a substantial contribution to a particular field. Usually an appropriate higher doctorate is used in these circumstances, depending on the candidate's achievements. However, some universities differentiate between honorary and substantive doctorates, using the degree of Doctor of the University (D.Univ.) for these purposes, and reserve the higher doctorates for formal academic research.

United States

 
In 1861, Yale University awarded the first Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degree in the United States.

U.S. research doctorates are awarded for advanced study followed by successfully completing and defending independent research presented in the form of a dissertation. Professional degrees may use the term "doctor" in their titles, such as Juris Doctor and Doctor of Medicine, but these degrees rarely contain an independent research component and are not research doctorates.[132] Law school graduates, although awarded the J.D. degree, are not normally addressed as "doctor". In legal studies, the Doctor of Juridical Science is considered the equivalent to a Ph.D.

Many universities offer Ph.D./D.Phil. followed by a professional doctorate or joint Ph.D./D.Phil. with a professional degree. Often, Ph.D. work is sequential to the professional degree, e.g., Ph.D./D.Phil. in law after a J.D. or equivalent[133][134][135][136] in physical therapy after DPT,[137][138] in pharmacy after Pharm.D.[139][140] Such professional degrees are referred to as an entry level doctorate program[141][142][143] and Ph.D. as a post-professional doctorate.[138]

Research degrees

The most common research doctorate is the Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D. or D.Phil.). This degree was first awarded in the U.S. at the 1861 Yale University commencement.[144] The University of Pennsylvania followed in 1871,[145] with Cornell (1872),[146] Harvard (1873),[147] Michigan (1876) [148] and Princeton (1879)[149] following suit. Controversy and opposition followed the introduction of the Ph.D. into the U.S. educational system, lasting into the 1950s, as it was seen as an unnecessary artificial transplant from a foreign (Germany) educational system, which corrupted a system based on England's Oxbridge model.[150]

Ph.D.s and other research doctorates in the U.S. typically entail successful completion of coursework, passing a comprehensive examination, and defending a dissertation.[151]

The median number of years for completion of U.S. doctoral degrees is seven.[38] Doctoral applicants were previously required to have a master's degree, but many programs accept students immediately following undergraduate studies.[152][153] Many programs gauge the potential of applicants to their program and grant a master's degree upon completion of the necessary course work. When so admitted, the student is expected to have mastered the material covered in the master's degree despite not holding one, though this tradition is under heavy criticism.[154] Successfully finishing Ph.D. qualifying exams confers Ph.D. candidate status, allowing dissertation work to begin.

The International Affairs Office of the U.S. Department of Education has listed 18 frequently awarded research doctorate titles identified by the National Science Foundation (NSF) as representing degrees equivalent in research content to the Ph.D.[155][156][157]

Professional degrees

Many fields offer professional doctorates (or professional master's) such as engineering, pharmacy, medicine, public health, dentistry, optometry, psychology, speech–language pathology, physical therapy, occupational therapy, health science, advanced practice registered nurse, chiropractic, naturopathic medicine, law, architecture, education, teaching, business, management, and others that require such degrees for professional practice or licensure. Some of these degrees are also termed "first professional degrees," since they are the first field-specific master's or doctoral degrees.

A Doctor of Engineering (DEng) is a professional degree. In contrast to a PhD in Engineering where students usually conduct original theory-based research, DEng degrees are built around applied coursework and a practice-led project and thus designed for working engineers in the industry. DEng students defend their thesis at the end of their study before a thesis committee in order to be conferred a degree.

A Doctor of Pharmacy is awarded as the professional degree in pharmacy replacing a bachelor's degree. It is the only professional pharmacy degree awarded in the US. Pharmacy programs vary in length between 4 years for matriculants with a B.S./B.A. to 6 years for others.

In the twenty-first century professional doctorates appeared in other fields, such as the Doctor of Audiology in 2007. Advanced Practice Registered Nurses were expected to completely transition to the Doctor of Nursing Practice by 2015, and physical therapists to the Doctor of Physical Therapy by 2020. Professional associations play a central role in this transformation amid criticisms on the lack of proper criteria to assure appropriate rigor. In many cases Masters level programs were relabeled as doctoral programs.[158]

Revocation

A doctoral degree can be revoked or rescinded by the university that awarded it. Possible reasons include plagiarism, criminal or unethical activities of the holder, or malfunction or manipulation of academic evaluation processes.[159]

See also


References

  1. ^ a b Verger, J. (1999), "Doctor, doctoratus", Lexikon des Mittelalters, vol. 3, Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, pp. 1155–1156
  2. ^ a b c Verger, J. (1999), "Licentia", Lexikon des Mittelalters, vol. 5, Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, pp. 1957–1958
  3. ^ Keith Allan Noble, Changing doctoral degrees: an international perspective, Society for Research into Higher Education, 1994, p. 8.
  4. ^ Makdisi, George (April–June 1989), "Scholasticism and Humanism in Classical Islam and the Christian West", Journal of the American Oriental Society, 109 (2): 175–182 [175–77], doi:10.2307/604423, JSTOR 604423
  5. ^ Devin J. Stewart, Josef W. Meri (2005). Degrees, or Ijazah. Medieval Islamic Civilization: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. pp. 201–203. ISBN 9781135455965.
  6. ^ Al-Attas, Syed Farid (1 January 2006). "From Jāmi' ah to University: Multiculturalism and Christian–Muslim Dialogue". Current Sociology. 54 (1): 112–132. doi:10.1177/0011392106058837. ISSN 0011-3921. S2CID 144509355. In the 1930s, the renowned Orientalist Alfred Guillaume noted strong resemblances between Muslim and Western Christian institutions of higher learning. An example he cited is the ijazah, which he recognized as being akin to the medieval licentia docendi, the precursor of the modern university degree.
  7. ^ Huff, Toby E. (2007). The rise of early modern science : Islam, China, and the West (2. ed., repr. ed.). Cambridge [u.a.]: Cambridge University Press. p. 155. ISBN 978-0521529945. It remains the case that no equivalent of the bachelor's degree, the licentia docendi, or higher degrees ever emerged in the medieval or early modern Islamic madrasas.
  8. ^ Verger, J. (1999), "Doctor, doctoratus", Lexikon des Mittelalters, vol. 3, Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, cols 1155–1156
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    Doctor's degree—other: A doctor's degree that does not meet the definition of a doctor's degree—research/scholarship or a doctor's degree—professional practice.
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doctorate, other, uses, doctor, disambiguation, doctorate, from, latin, docere, teach, doctor, degree, from, latin, doctor, teacher, doctoral, degree, academic, degree, awarded, universities, some, other, educational, institutions, derived, from, ancient, form. For other uses see Doctor disambiguation A doctorate from Latin docere to teach doctor s degree from Latin doctor teacher or doctoral degree is an academic degree awarded by universities and some other educational institutions derived from the ancient formalism licentia docendi licence to teach In most countries a research degree qualifies the holder to teach at university level in the degree s field or work in a specific profession There are a number of doctoral degrees the most common is the Doctor of Philosophy PhD awarded in many different fields ranging from the humanities to scientific disciplines Doctoral diploma of the astronomer Friedrich Hopfner issued 1905 by the German Charles Ferdinand University in Prague In the United States and some other countries there are also some types of technical or professional degrees that include doctor in their name and are classified as a doctorate in some of those countries Professional doctorates historically came about to meet the needs of practitioners in a variety of disciplines Many universities also award honorary doctorates to individuals deemed worthy of special recognition either for scholarly work or other contributions to the university or society Contents 1 History 1 1 Middle Ages 1 2 17th and 18th centuries 1 3 Modern times 2 Types 2 1 Research doctorate 2 2 Licentiate 2 3 Higher doctorate and post doctoral degrees 2 4 Professional doctorate 2 5 Honorary doctorate 3 National variations 3 1 Argentina 3 2 Brazil 3 3 Denmark 3 4 Egypt 3 5 Finland 3 6 France 3 7 Germany 3 8 India 3 9 Italy 3 10 Japan 3 10 1 Dissertation only 3 10 2 Professional degree 3 11 Netherlands and Flanders 3 12 Russia 3 13 Spain 3 14 United Kingdom 3 14 1 History of the UK doctorate 3 14 2 British doctorates today 3 14 3 Subject specialist doctorates 3 14 4 Higher doctorates 3 14 5 Honorary degrees 3 15 United States 3 15 1 Research degrees 3 15 2 Professional degrees 4 Revocation 5 See also 6 ReferencesHistory EditMiddle Ages Edit The term doctor derives from Latin meaning teacher or instructor The doctorate Latin doctoratus appeared in medieval Europe as a license to teach Latin licentia docendi at a university 1 Its roots can be traced to the early church in which the term doctor referred to the Apostles church fathers and other Christian authorities who taught and interpreted the Bible 1 The right to grant a licentia docendi i e the doctorate was originally reserved to the Catholic Church which required the applicant to pass a test take an oath of allegiance and pay a fee The Third Council of the Lateran of 1179 guaranteed access at that time essentially free of charge to all able applicants Applicants were tested for aptitude 2 This right remained a bone of contention between the church authorities and the universities slowly distancing themselves from the Church In 1213 the right was granted by the pope to the University of Paris where it became a universal license to teach licentia ubique docendi 2 However while the licentia continued to hold a higher prestige than the bachelor s degree baccalaureus the latter was ultimately reduced to an intermediate step to the master s degree magister and doctorate both of which now became the accepted teaching qualifications 2 According to Keith Allan Noble 1994 the first doctoral degree was awarded in medieval Paris around 1150 by the University of Paris 3 George Makdisi theorizes that the ijazah issued in early Islamic madrasahs was the origin of the doctorate later issued in medieval European universities 4 5 Alfred Guillaume and Syed Farid al Attas agree that there is a resemblance between the ijazah and the licentia docendi 6 However Toby Huff and others reject Makdisi s theory 7 8 9 10 Devin J Stewart notes a difference in the granting authority individual professor for the ijzazah and a corporate entity in the case of the university doctorate 11 17th and 18th centuries Edit Cover of the thesis presented by Claude Bernard to obtain his Doctor of Medicine degree 1843 The doctorate of philosophy developed in Germany in the 17th century likely c 1652 12 The term philosophy does not refer solely to the field or academic discipline of philosophy Still it is used in a broader sense under its original Greek meaning love of wisdom In most of Europe all fields history philosophy social sciences mathematics and natural philosophy natural sciences 13 were traditionally known as philosophy and in Germany and elsewhere in Europe the basic faculty of liberal arts was known as the faculty of philosophy The Doctorate of Philosophy adheres to this historic convention even though most degrees are not for the study of philosophy Chris Park explains that it was not until formal education and degree programs were standardized in the early 19th century that the Doctorate of Philosophy was reintroduced in Germany as a research degree 14 abbreviated as Dr phil similar to Ph D in Anglo American countries Germany however differentiated then in more detail between doctorates in philosophy and doctorates in the natural sciences abbreviated as Dr rer nat and also doctorates in the social political sciences abbreviated as Dr rer pol similar to the other traditional doctorates in medicine Dr med and law Dr jur University doctoral training was a form of apprenticeship to a guild The traditional term of study before new teachers were admitted to the guild of Masters of Arts was seven years matching the apprenticeship term for other occupations Originally the terms master and doctor were synonymous but over time the doctorate came to be regarded as a higher qualification than the master s degree University degrees including doctorates were originally restricted to men The first women to be granted doctorates were Juliana Morell in 1608 at Lyons 15 or maybe Avignon she defended theses in 1606 or 1607 although claims that she received a doctorate in canon law in 1608 have been discredited citation needed Elena Cornaro Piscopia in 1678 at the University of Padua Laura Bassi in 1732 at Bologna University Dorothea Erxleben in 1754 at Halle University and Maria Isidra de Guzman y de la Cerda in 1785 at Complutense University Madrid 16 Modern times Edit Man and woman wearing Durham and Glasgow PhD gowns respectively The use and meaning of the doctorate have changed over time and are subject to regional variations For instance until the early 20th century few academic staff or professors in English speaking universities held doctorates except for very senior scholars and those in holy orders After that time the German practice of requiring lecturers to have completed a research doctorate spread Universities shift to research oriented education based upon the scientific method inquiry and observation increased the doctorate s importance Today a research doctorate PhD or its equivalent as defined in the US by the NSF is generally a prerequisite for an academic career However many recipients do not work in academia Professional doctorates developed in the United States from the 19th century onward The first professional doctorate offered in the United States was the M D at Kings College now Columbia University after the medical school s founding in 1767 17 However this was not a professional doctorate in the modern American sense It was awarded for further study after the qualifying Bachelor of Medicine M B rather than a qualifying degree 18 The MD became the standard first degree in medicine in the US during the 19th century but as a three year undergraduate degree It did not become established as a graduate degree until 1930 As the standard qualifying degree in medicine the MD gave that profession the ability through the American Medical Association established in 1847 for this purpose to set and raise standards for entry into professional practice 19 20 American academic doctors gather before the commencement exercises at Brigham Young University April 2008 The American code for academic dress identifies academic doctors with three bands of velvet on the sleeve of the doctoral gown In the shape of the German style PhD the modern research degree was first awarded in the US in 1861 at Yale University 21 This differed from the MD in that the latter was a vocational professional degree that trained students to apply or practice knowledge rather than generate it similar to other students in vocational schools or institutes In the UK research doctorates initially took higher doctorates in Science and Letters first introduced at Durham University in 1882 22 The PhD spread to the UK from the US via Canada and was instituted at all British universities from 1917 The first titled a DPhil was awarded at the University of Oxford 23 24 Following the MD the next professional doctorate in the US the Juris Doctor JD was established by the University of Chicago in 1902 However it took a long time to be accepted not replacing the Bachelor of Laws LLB until the 1960s by which time the LLB was generally taken as a graduate degree Notably the JD and LLB curriculum were identical with the degree being renamed as a doctorate and it like the MD was not equivalent to the PhD raising criticism that it was not a true Doctorate 25 26 When professional doctorates were established in the UK in the late 1980s and early 1990s they did not follow the US model Still they were set up as research degrees at the same level as PhDs but with some taught components and a professional focus for research work 27 Now usually called higher doctorates in the United Kingdom the older style doctorates take much longer to complete since candidates must show themselves to be leading experts in their subjects These doctorates are less common than the PhD in some countries and are often awarded honoris causa The habilitation is still used for academic recruitment purposes in many countries within the EU It involves either a long new thesis a second book or a portfolio of research publications The habilitation highest available degree demonstrates independent and thorough research experience in teaching and lecturing and more recently the ability to generate supportive funding The habilitation follows the research doctorate and in Germany it can be a requirement for appointment as a Privatdozent or professor Types EditFurther information Doctor title Since the Middle Ages the number and types of doctorates awarded by universities have proliferated throughout the world Practice varies from one country to another While a doctorate usually entitles a person to be addressed as doctor the use of the title varies widely depending on the type and the associated occupation Research doctorate Edit Research doctorates are awarded in recognition of publishable academic research at least in principle in a peer reviewed academic journal The best known research degree title in the English speaking world is Doctor of Philosophy abbreviated Ph D 28 PhD 29 or at some British universities DPhil 30 31 32 awarded in many countries throughout the world In the U S for instance although the most typical research doctorate is the PhD accounting for about 98 of the research doctorates awarded there are more than 15 other names for research doctorates 28 33 Other research oriented doctorates some having a professional practice focus include the Doctor of Education Ed D 28 or EdD 29 the Doctor of Science D Sc or Sc D 28 Doctor of Arts D A 28 Doctor of Juridical Science J S D or S J D 28 Doctor of Musical Arts D M A 28 Doctor of Professional Studies Professional Doctorate ProfDoc or DProf 29 Doctor of Public Health Dr P H 28 Doctor of Social Science D S Sc or DSocSci 29 Doctor of Management D M or D Mgt 34 Doctor of Business Administration D B A 28 or DBA 35 the UK Doctor of Management DMan 36 various doctorates in engineering such as the US Doctor of Engineering D Eng D E Sc or D E S 28 also awarded in Japan and South Korea the UK Engineering Doctorate EngD 37 the German engineering doctorate Doktoringenieur Dr Ing the German natural science doctorate Doctor rerum naturalium Dr rer nat and the economics and social science doctorate Doctor rerum politicarum Dr rer pol The UK Doctor of Medicine MD or MD Res and Doctor of Dental Surgery DDS are research doctorates 29 The Doctor of Theology Th D 28 D Th or ThD 29 Doctor of Practical Theology DPT 29 and the Doctor of Sacred Theology S T D 28 or D S Th are research doctorates in theology 38 Criteria for research doctorates vary but typically require completion of a substantial body of original research which may be presented as a single thesis or dissertation or as a portfolio of shorter project reports thesis by publication The submitted dissertation is assessed by a committee of typically internal and external examiners It is then typically defended by the candidate during an oral examination called viva voce in the UK and India by the committee which then awards the degree unconditionally awards the degree conditionally ranging from corrections in grammar to additional research or denies the degree Candidates may also be required to complete graduate level courses in their field and study research methodology Criteria for admission to doctoral programs vary Students may be admitted with a bachelor s degree in the U S and the U K However elsewhere e g in Finland and many other European countries a master s degree is required The time required to complete a research doctorate varies from three years excluding undergraduate study to six years or more Licentiate Edit Main article Licentiate Licentiate degrees vary widely in their meaning and in a few countries are doctoral level qualifications Sweden awards the licentiate degree as a two year qualification at the doctoral level and the doctoral degree PhD as a four year qualification 39 Sweden originally abolished the Licentiate in 1969 but reintroduced it in response to demands from business 40 Finland also has a two year doctoral level licentiate degree similar to Sweden s 41 Outside of Scandinavia the licentiate is usually a lower level qualification In Belgium the licentiate was the basic university degree prior to the Bologna Process and was equivalent to a bachelor s degree 42 43 In France and other countries it is the bachelor s level qualification in the Bologna process 44 In the Pontifical system the Licentiate in Sacred Theology STL is equivalent to an advanced master s degree or the post master s coursework required in preparation for a doctorate i e similar in level to the Swedish Finnish licentiate degree While other licences such as the Licence in Canon Law are at the level of master s degrees 45 Higher doctorate and post doctoral degrees Edit Post doctoral degree redirects here Not to be confused with Postdoctoral researcher A higher tier of research doctorates may be awarded based on a formally submitted portfolio of published research of an exceptionally high standard Examples include the Doctor of Science DSc or ScD Doctor of Divinity DD Doctor of Letters DLitt or LittD Doctor of Law or Laws LLD and Doctor of Civil Law DCL degrees found in the UK Ireland and some Commonwealth countries and the traditional doctorates in Scandinavia The habilitation teaching qualification facultas docendi or faculty to teach under a university procedure with a thesis and an exam is commonly regarded as belonging to this category in Germany Austria France Liechtenstein Switzerland Poland etc The degree developed in Germany in the 19th century when holding a doctorate seemed no longer sufficient to guarantee a proficient transfer of knowledge to the next generation 46 In many federal states of Germany the habilitation results in an award of a formal Dr habil degree or the holder of the degree may add habil to their research doctorate such as Dr phil habil or Dr rer nat habil In some European universities especially in German speaking countries the degree is insufficient to have teaching duties without professor supervision or teaching and supervising PhD students independently without an additional teaching title such as Privatdozent In Austria the habilitation bestows the graduate with the facultas docendi venia legendi Since 2004 the honorary title of Privatdozent before this completing the habilitation resulted in appointment as a civil servant In many Central and Eastern Europe countries the degree gives venia legendi Latin for the permission to lecture or ius docendi the right to teach a specific academic subject at universities for a lifetime The French academic system used to have a higher doctorate called the state doctorate doctorat d Etat but in 1984 it was superseded by the habilitation Habilitation a diriger des recherches habilitation to supervise doctoral and post doctoral research abbreviated HDR which is the prerequisite to supervise PhDs and to apply to Full Professorships While this section has focused on earned qualifications conferred in virtue of published work or the equivalent a higher doctorate may also be presented on an honorary basis by a university at its own initiative or after a nomination in recognition of public prestige institutional service philanthropy or professional achievement In a formal listing of qualifications and often in other contexts an honorary higher doctorate will be identified using language like DCL honoris causa HonLLD or LittD h c Professional doctorate Edit See also Professional degree and List of doctoral degrees in the US Depending on the country professional doctorates may also be research degrees at the same level as PhDs The relationship between research and practice is considered important and professional degrees with little or no research content are typically aimed at professional performance Many professional doctorates are named Doctor of subject name and abbreviated using the form D subject abbreviation or subject abbreviation D 29 or may use the more generic titles Professional Doctorate abbreviated ProfDoc or DProf 29 Doctor of Professional Studies DPS 47 48 or Doctor of Professional Practice DPP 49 50 In the US professional doctorates formally doctor s degree professional practice in government classifications are defined by the US Department of Education s National Center for Educational Statistics as degrees that require a minimum of six years of university level study including any pre professional bachelor s or associate degree and meet the academic requirements for professional licensure in the discipline The definition for a professional doctorate does not include a requirement for either a dissertation or study beyond master s level in contrast to the definition for research doctorates doctor s degree research scholarship However individual programs may have different requirements 51 52 There is also a category of doctor s degree other for doctorates that do not fall into either the professional practice or research scholarship categories 53 All of these are considered doctoral degrees 54 In contrast to the US many countries reserve the term doctorate for research degrees If as in Canada and Australia professional degrees bear the name Doctor of etc it is made clear that these are not doctorates Examples of this include Doctor of Pharmacy PharmD Doctor of Medicine MD Doctor of Dental Surgery DDS Doctor of Nursing Practice DNP and Juris Doctor JD Contrariwise for example research doctorates like Doctor of Business Administration DBA Doctor of Education EdD and Doctor of Social Science DSS qualify as full academic doctorates in Canada though they normally incorporate aspects of professional practice in addition to a full dissertation 55 56 In the Philippines the University of the Philippines Open University offers a Doctor of Communication DComm professional doctorate 57 All doctorates in the UK and Ireland are third cycle qualifications in the Bologna Process comparable to US research doctorates Although all doctorates are research degrees professional doctorates normally include taught components while the name PhD DPhil is normally used for doctorates purely by thesis Professional practitioner or practice based doctorates such as the DClinPsy MD DHSc EdD DBA EngD and DAg 58 are full academic doctorates They are at the same level as the PhD in the national qualifications frameworks they are not first professional degrees but are often post experience qualifications in which practice is considered important in the research context 27 29 35 59 In 2009 there were 308 professional doctorate programs in the UK up from 109 in 1998 with the most popular being the EdD 38 institutions DBA 33 EngD DEng 22 MD DM 21 and DClinPsy DClinPsych ClinPsyD 17 60 Similarly in Australia the term professional doctorate is sometimes applied to the Scientiae Juridicae Doctor SJD 61 62 which like the UK professional doctorates is a research degree 63 64 Honorary doctorate Edit Main article Honorary degree When a university wishes to formally recognize an individual s contributions to a particular field or philanthropic efforts it may choose to grant a doctoral degree honoris causa for the sake of the honor waiving the usual requirements for granting the degree 65 66 Some universities do not award honorary degrees for example Cornell University 67 the University of Virginia 68 and Massachusetts Institute of Technology 69 National variations EditMain article List of doctoral degrees awarded by country See also Doctor title Worldwide usage and Doctor of Philosophy Degrees around the globe This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Argentina Edit In Argentina the doctorate doctorado 70 is the highest academic degree The intention is that candidates produce original contributions in their field knowledge within a frame of academic excellence 71 A dissertation or thesis is prepared under the supervision of a tutor or director It is reviewed by a Doctoral Committee composed of examiners external to the program and at least one examiner external to the institution The degree is conferred after a successful dissertation defence 72 In 2006 there were approximately 2 151 postgraduate careers in the country of which 14 were doctoral degrees 71 Doctoral programs in Argentina are overseen by the National Commission for University Evaluation and Accreditation 73 failed verification an agency in Argentina s Ministry of Education Science and Technology 74 Brazil Edit Doctoral candidates are normally required to have a master s degree in a related field Exceptions are based on their individual academic merit A second and a third foreign language are other common requirements although the requirements regarding proficiency commonly are not strict The admissions process varies by institution Some require candidates to take tests while others base admissions on a research proposal application and interview only In both instances however a faculty member must agree prior to admission to supervise the applicant Requirements usually include satisfactory performance in advanced graduate courses passing an oral qualifying exam and submitting a thesis that must represent an original and relevant contribution to existing knowledge The thesis is examined in a final public oral exam administered by at least five faculty members two of whom must be external After completion which normally consumes 4 years the candidate is commonly awarded the degree of Doutor Doctor followed by the main area of specialization e g Doutor em Direito Doctor of Laws Doutor em Ciencias da Computacao Doctor of Computer Sciences Doutor em Filosofia Doctor of Philosophy Doutor em Economia Doctor of Economics Doutor em Engenharia Doctor of Engineering or Doutor em Medicina Doctor of Medicine The generic title of Doutor em Ciencias Doctor of Sciences is normally used to refer collectively to doctorates in the natural sciences i e Physics Chemistry Biological and Life Sciences etc All graduate programs in Brazilian public universities are tuition free mandated by the Brazilian constitution Some graduate students are additionally supported by institutional scholarships granted by federal government agencies like CNPq Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico and CAPES Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento do Pessoal de Ensino Superior Personal scholarships are provided by the various FAP s Fundacoes de Amparo a Pesquisa at the state level especially FAPESP in the state of Sao Paulo FAPERJ in the state of Rio de Janeiro and FAPEMIG in the state of Minas Gerais Competition for graduate financial aid is intense and most scholarships support at most 2 years of Master s studies and 4 years of doctoral studies The normal monthly stipend for doctoral students in Brazil is between US 500 and 1000 A degree of Doutor usually enables an individual to apply for a junior faculty position equivalent to a US assistant professor Progression to full professorship known as Professor Titular requires that the candidate be successful in a competitive public exam and normally takes additional years In the federal university system doctors who are admitted as junior faculty members may progress usually by seniority to the rank of associate professor then become eligible to take the competitive exam for vacant full professorships In Sao Paulo state universities associate professorships and subsequent eligibility to apply for a full professorship are conditioned on the qualification of Livre docente and requires in addition to a doctorate a second thesis or cumulative portfolio of peer reviewed publications a public lecture before a panel of experts including external members from other universities and a written exam In recent years some initiatives as jointly supervised doctorates e g cotutelles have become increasingly common in the country as part of the country s efforts to open its universities to international students 75 Denmark Edit Denmark offers four levels of degrees A three year bachelor s degree e g Bachelor of Arts degree A cand mag a five year candidate s degree e g Candidatus Candidata Magisterii generally compared to a master s degree A ph d degree which replaced the licentiate in 1988 and does not grant the holder the right to the title dr or doktor 76 A doctor s degree e g Doctor Philosophiae which is the higher doctorate It can take the forms dr phil for humanistic and STEM subjects dr jur in law or dr theol in theology 76 A three year extended research program leading to the magister s degree was phased out to meet the international standards of the Bologna Process For the ph d degree the candidate writes a thesis and defends it orally at a formal disputation The candidate a ph d student or fellow will enroll at a ph d school at a university In the disputation the candidate defends their thesis against three official opponents and may take opponents or questions from those present in the auditorium ex auditorio For the higher doctorate the candidate writes a major thesis and has to defend it orally in which the candidate called praeses defends this thesis against two official opponents as well as opponents from the auditorium ex auditorio The opponents are required to be full professors The higher doctorate was introduced as a separate degree from the ph d in 1989 as part of the transition to a new degree structure since the changes in the degree system would leave people without recognized qualifications Many Danish academics with permanent positions thus made a doctoral dissertations in the 90s when the system was new The original intention was to phase out or merge the higher doctorate in favor of the ph d but this has not yet happened 76 A ph d degree or equivalent qualifications are required for certain academic positions in Denmark but the higher doctorate is never required for any positions but may be considered equivalent qualifications to the ph d Egypt Edit In Egypt the highest degree doctorate is awarded by Al Azhar University est 970 which grants العالمية Alimiyya Habilitation The Medical doctorate abbreviated as M D is equivalent to the Ph D degree 77 To earn an M D in a science specialty one must have a master s degree M Sc or two diplomas before the introduction of M Sc degree in Egypt before applying The M D degree involves courses in the field and defending a dissertation It takes on average three to five years Many postgraduate medical and surgical specialties students earn a doctorate After finishing a 6 year medical school and one year internship house officer physicians and surgeons earn the M B B Ch degree which is equivalent to a US MD degree They can then apply to earn a master s degree or a speciality diploma then an MD degree in a specialty The Egyptian M D degree is written using the name of one s specialty For example M D Geriatrics means a doctorate in Geriatrics which is equivalent to a Ph D in Geriatrics Finland Edit The Finnish requirement for the entrance into doctoral studies is a master s degree or equivalent All universities have the right to award doctorates 78 The ammattikorkeakoulu institutes institutes of higher vocational education that are not universities but often called Universities of Applied Sciences in English do not award doctoral or other academic degrees The student must Demonstrate understanding of their field and its meaning while preparing to use scientific or scholarly study in their field creating new knowledge Obtain a good understanding of development basic problems and research methods Obtain such understanding of the general theory of science and letters and such knowledge of neighbouring research fields that they are able to follow the development of these fields The way to show that these general requirements have been met is Complete graduate coursework Demonstrate critical and independent thought Prepare and publicly defend a dissertation a monograph or a compilation thesis of peer reviewed articles In fine arts the dissertation may be substituted by works and or performances as accepted by the faculty Entrance to a doctoral program is available only for holders of a master s degree there is no honors procedure for recruiting Bachelors Entrance is not as controlled as in undergraduate studies where a strict numerus clausus is applied Usually a prospective student discusses their plans with a professor If the professor agrees to accept the student the student applies for admission The professor may recruit students to their group 79 Formal acceptance does not imply funding The student must obtain funding either by working in a research unit or through private scholarships Funding is more available for natural and engineering sciences than in letters Sometimes normal work and research activity are combined 80 Prior to introduction of the Bologna process Finland required at least 42 credit weeks 1 800 hours of formal coursework The requirement was removed in 2005 leaving the decision to individual universities which may delegate the authority to faculties or individual professors In Engineering and Science required coursework varies between 40 and 70 ECTS The duration of graduate studies varies It is possible to graduate three years after the master s degree while much longer periods are not uncommon The study ends with a dissertation which must present substantial new scientific scholarly knowledge The dissertation can either be a monograph or it an edited collection of 3 to 7 journal articles Students unable or unwilling to write a dissertation may qualify for a licentiate degree by completing the coursework requirement and writing a shorter thesis usually summarizing one year of research When the dissertation is ready the faculty names two expert pre examiners with doctoral degrees from the outside the university During the pre examination process the student may receive comments on the work and respond with modifications 81 After the pre examiners approve the doctoral candidate applies the faculty for permission to print the thesis When granting this permission the faculty names the opponent for the thesis defence who must also be an outside expert with at least a doctorate In all Finnish universities long tradition requires that the printed dissertation hang on a cord by a public university noticeboard for at least ten days prior to for the dissertation defence 82 The doctoral dissertation takes place in public The opponent and the candidate conduct a formal debate usually wearing white tie under the supervision of the thesis supervisor Family friends colleagues and the members of the research community customarily attend the defence After a formal entrance the candidate begins with an approximately 20 minute popular lecture lectio praecursoria that is meant to introduce laymen to the thesis topic The opponent follows with a short talk on the topic after which the pair critically discuss the dissertation The proceedings take two to three hours At the end the opponent presents their final statement and reveals whether he she will recommend that the faculty accept it Any member of the public then has an opportunity to raise questions although this is rare Immediately after the defence the supervisor the opponent and the candidate drink coffee with the public Usually the attendees of the defence are given the printed dissertation 83 In the evening the passed candidate hosts a dinner Finnish karonkka in honour of the opponent Usually the candidate invites their family colleagues and collaborators 84 Doctoral graduates are often Doctors of Philosophy filosofian tohtori but many fields retain their traditional titles Doctor of Medicine laaketieteen tohtori Doctor of Science in Technology tekniikan tohtori Doctor of Science in Arts Art and Design etc The doctorate is a formal requirement for a docenture or professor s position although these in practice require postdoctoral research and further experience Exceptions may be granted by the university governing board but this is uncommon and usually due to other work and expertise considered equivalent France Edit HistoryBefore 1984 three research doctorates existed in France the State doctorate doctorat d Etat DrE the old doctorate introduced in 1808 the third cycle doctorate Doctorat de troisieme cycle also called doctorate of specialty Doctorat de specialite created in 1954 and shorter than the State doctorate and the diploma of doctor engineer diplome de docteur ingenieur created in 1923 for technical research During the first half of the 20th century following the submission of two theses primary thesis these principale and secondary thesis these complementaire to the Faculty of Letters in France letters is equivalent to humanities at the University of Paris the doctoral candidate was awarded the Doctorat es lettres There was also the less prestigious university doctorate Doctorat d universite which could be received for the submission of a single thesis In the 1950s the Doctorat es lettres was renamed to Doctorat d Etat 85 In 1954 for the sciences and 1958 for letters and human sciences the less demanding Doctorat de troisieme cycle degree was created on the model of the American Ph D with the purpose to lessen what had become an increasingly long period of time between the typical students completion of their Diplome d etudes superieures roughly equivalent to a Master of Arts and their Doctorat d Etat 85 After 1984 only one type of doctoral degree remained the doctorate Doctorat A special diploma was created called the accreditation to supervise research Habilitation a diriger des recherches a professional qualification to supervise doctoral work This diploma is similar in spirit to the older State doctorate and the requirements for obtaining it are similar to those necessary to obtain tenure in other systems Before only professors or senior full researchers of similar rank were normally authorized to supervise a doctoral candidate s work 86 Now habilitation is a prerequisite to the title of professor in university Professeur des universites and to the title of Research Director Directeur de recherche in national public research agency such as CNRS INRIA or INRAE AdmissionToday the doctorate doctorat is a research only degree It is a national degree and its requirements are fixed by the minister of higher education and research Only public institutions award the doctorate It can be awarded in any field of study The master s degree is a prerequisite The normal duration is three years The writing of a comprehensive thesis constitutes the bulk of the doctoral work While the length of the thesis varies according to the discipline it is rarely less than 150 pages and often substantially more Some 15 000 new doctoral matriculations occur every year and 10 000 doctorates are awarded 87 Doctoral candidates can apply for a three year fellowship The most well known is the Contrat Doctoral 4 000 granted every year with a gross salary of 1758 euros per month as of September 2016 update Since 2002 candidates follow in service training but there is no written examination for the doctorate The candidate has to write a thesis that is read by two external reviewers The head of the institution decides whether the candidate can defend the thesis after considering the external reviews The jury members are designated by the head of the institution The candidate s supervisor and the external reviewers are generally jury members The maximum number of jury members is 8 The defense generally lasts 45 minutes in scientific fields followed by 1 2 and a half hours of questions from the jury or other doctors present The defense and questions are public The jury then deliberates in private and then declares the candidate admitted or postponed The latter is rare New regulations were set in 2016 and do not award distinctions The title of doctor docteur can also be used by medical and pharmaceutical practitioners who hold a doctor s State diploma diplome d Etat de docteur distinct from the doctorat d Etat mentioned above The diploma is a first degree A guidelines with good practices and legal analysis has been published in 2018 by Association nationale des docteurs ANDes amp Confederation des Jeunes Chercheurs CJC with funding of french Ministry of research 88 Germany Edit Doctoral degrees in Germany are research doctorates and are awarded by a process called Promotion The concept of a US style professional doctorate as an entry level professional qualification does not exist Most doctorates are awarded with specific Latin designations for the field of research except for engineering where the designation is German instead of a general name for all fields such as the Ph D The most important degrees are Dr rer nat rerum naturalium natural and formal sciences i e physics chemistry biology mathematics computer science and information technology or psychology Dr phil philosophiae humanities such as philosophy philology history and social sciences such as sociology political science or psychology as well Dr iur iuris law Dr oec oeconomiae economics Dr rer pol rerum politicarum economics business administration political science Dr theol theologiae theology Dr med medicinae medicine Dr med dent medicinae dentariae dentistry Dr med vet medicinae veterinariae veterinary medicine Dr Ing engineering In medicine doctoral dissertations are often written alongside undergraduate study therefore European Research Council decided in 2010 that such Dr med degrees do not meet the international standards of a Ph D research degree 89 90 The duration of the doctorate depends on the field a doctorate in medicine may take less than a full time year to complete those in other fields two to six years Over fifty doctoral designations exist many of them rare or no longer in use As a title the degree is commonly written in front of the name in abbreviated form e g Dr rer nat Max Mustermann or Dr Max Mustermann dropping the designation entirely However leaving out the designation is only allowed when the doctorate degree is not an honorary doctorate which must be indicated by Dr h c from Latin honoris causa Although the honorific does not become part of the name holders can demand that the title appear in official documents The title is not mandatory The honorific is commonly used in formal letters For holders of other titles only the highest title is mentioned Multiple holders of doctorate degrees can be addressed as Dres from Latin doctores Professional doctorates obtained in other countries not requiring a thesis or not being third cycle qualifications under the Bologna process can only be used postnominally e g Max Mustermann MD and do not allow the use of the title Dr 91 In contrast to English in which a person s name is preceded by at most one title except in very ceremonious usage the formal German mode of address permits several titles in addition to Herr or Frau which unlike Mr or Ms is not considered a title at all but an Anrede or address including repetitions in the case of multiple degrees as in Frau Prof Dr Dr Schmidt 92 for a person who would be addressed as Prof Schmidt in English In the German university system it is common to write two doctoral theses the inaugural thesis Inauguraldissertation completing a course of study and the habilitation thesis Habilitationsschrift which opens the road to a professorship 93 Upon completion of the habilitation thesis a Habilitation is awarded which is indicated by appending habil habilitata habilitatus to the doctorate e g Dr rer nat habil Max Mustermann It is considered as an additional academic qualification rather than an academic degree formally It qualifies the owner to teach at German universities facultas docendi The holder of a Habilitation receives the authorization to teach a certain subject venia legendi This has been the traditional prerequisite for attaining Privatdozent PD and employment as a full university professor With the introduction of Juniorprofessuren around 2005 as an alternative track towards becoming a professor at universities with tenure Habilitation is no longer the only university career track India Edit In India doctorates are offered by universities Entry requirements include master s degree Some universities consider undergraduate degrees in professional areas such as engineering medicine or law as qualifications for pursuing doctorate level degrees Entrance examinations are held for almost all programs In most universities coursework duration and thesis is 5 6 years The most common doctoral degree is Ph D Italy Edit Until the introduction of the dottorato di ricerca in the mid 1980s the laurea generally constituted the highest academic degree obtainable in Italy The first institution in Italy to create a doctoral program was Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa in 1927 under the historic name Diploma di Perfezionamento 94 95 Further the dottorato di ricerca was introduced by law and presidential decree in 1980 96 97 in a reform of academic teaching training and experimentation in organisation and teaching methods 98 99 Italy uses a three level degree system following the Bologna Process The first level degree called a laurea Bachelor s degree requires three years and a short thesis The second level degree called a laurea magistrale Master s degree is obtained after two additional years specializing in a branch of the field This degree requires more advanced thesis work usually involving academic research or an internship The final degree is called a dottorato di ricerca Ph D and is obtained after three years of academic research on the subject and a thesis Alternatively after obtaining the laurea or the laurea magistrale one can complete a Master s first level Master s after the laurea second level Master s after the laurea magistrale of one or two years usually including an internship An Italian Master s is not the same as a master s degree it is intended to be more focused on professional training and practical experience Regardless of the field of study the title for Bachelors Graduate students is Dottore Dottoressa abbrev Dott Dott ssa or as Dr not to be confused with the title for the Ph D which is instead Dottore Dottoressa di Ricerca A laurea magistrale grants instead the title of Dottore Dottoressa magistrale Graduates in the fields of Education Art and Music are also called Dr Prof or simply Professore or Maestro Many professional titles such as ingegnere engineer are awarded only upon passing a post graduation examination esame di stato and registration in the relevant professional association The Superior Graduate Schools in Italy 100 Italian Scuola Superiore Universitaria 101 also called Schools of Excellence Italian Scuole di Eccellenza 100 102 such as Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa and Sant Anna School of Advanced Studies keep their historical Diploma di Perfezionamento title by law 95 103 and MIUR Decree 104 105 Japan Edit Dissertation only Edit Until the 1990s most natural science and engineering doctorates in Japan were earned by industrial researchers in Japanese companies These degrees were awarded by the employees former university usually after years of research in industrial laboratories The only requirement is submission of a dissertation along with articles published in well known journals This program is called ronbun hakase 論文博士 It produced the majority of engineering doctoral degrees from national universities University based doctoral programs called katei hakase 課程博士 are gradually replacing these degrees By 1994 more doctoral engineering degrees were earned for research within university laboratories 53 than industrial research laboratories 47 106 Since 1978 Japan Society for the Promotion of Science JSPS has provided tutorial and financial support for promising researchers in Asia and Africa The program is called JSPS RONPAKU 107 Professional degree Edit The only professional doctorate in Japan is the Juris Doctor known as Hōmu Hakushi 法務博士 108 The program generally lasts two or three years This curriculum is professionally oriented 109 but unlike in the US the program does not provide education sufficient for a law license All candidates for a bar license must pass the bar exam Shihou shiken attend the Legal Training and Research Institute and pass the practical exam Nikai Shiken or Shihou Shushusei koushi 110 Netherlands and Flanders Edit The traditional academic system of the Netherlands provided basic academic diploma propaedeuse and three academic degrees kandidaat the lowest degree depending on gender doctorandus or doctoranda drs with equivalent degrees in engineering ir and law mr and doctor dr After successful completion of the first year of university the student was awarded the propaedeutic diploma not a degree In some fields this diploma was abolished in the 1980s In physics and mathematics the student could directly obtain a kandidaats candidate diploma in two years The candidate diploma was all but abolished by 1989 It used to be attained after completion of the majority of courses of the academic study usually after completion of course requirements of the third year in the program after which the student was allowed to begin work on their doctorandus thesis The successful completion of this thesis conveyed the doctoranda us title implying that the student s initial studies were finished In addition to these general degrees specific titles equivalent to the doctorandus degree were awarded for law meester master mr and for engineering ingenieur engineer ir Following the Bologna protocol the Dutch adopted the Anglo Saxon system of academic degrees The old candidate s degree was revived to become the bachelor s degree and the doctorandus mr and ir degree were replaced by master s degrees Students can only enroll in a doctorate system after completing a research university level master s degree although dispensation can be granted on a case by case basis after scrutiny of the individual s portfolio The most common way to conduct doctoral studies is to work as promovendus assistent in opleiding aio onderzoeker in opleiding oio research assistant with additional courses and supervision perform extensive research and write a dissertation consisting of published articles over a period of four or more years averaging about 5 5 to 6 Research can also be conducted without official research assistant status for example through a business sponsored research laboratory Every Ph D thesis has to be promoted by a full university professor or an associate professor 111 who has the role of principal advisor and holds the right to do so ius promovendi The promotor professor determines whether the thesis quality suffices and can be submitted to the committee of experts A committee of experts in the field review the thesis Failures at this stage are rare because supervisors withhold inadequate work The supervisors and promotor lose prestige among their colleagues should they allow a substandard thesis to be submitted After reviewer approval the candidate publishes the thesis generally more than 100 copies and sends it to colleagues friends and family with an invitation to the public defense The degree is awarded in a formal public defense session in which the thesis is defended against critical questions of the opposition the review committee Failure during this session is possible but rare Before the defense there may or may not be a public presentation lasting 10 minutes e g Eindhoven University of Technology to exactly half hour e g Delft University of Technology The actual defense lasts exactly the assigned time slot 45 minutes to 1 hour exactly depending on the university after which the defense is stopped by the bedel who closes the process The doctor s title is the highest academic title in the Netherlands In research doctorates the degree is always Ph D or dr with no distinction between disciplines Three Dutch universities of technology Eindhoven University of Technology Delft University of Technology and University of Twente also award a 2 year industry oriented Professional Doctorate in Engineering PDEng named EngD from September 2022 onwards 112 Those who obtained a degree in a foreign country can only use one of the Dutch titles drs mr ir or dr if approved by the Dienst Uitvoering Onderwijs 113 though according to the opportunity principle little effort monitors such frauds Dutch doctors may use PhD behind their name instead of the uncapitalized shortcut dr before their name 114 Those who have multiple doctor dr titles may use the title dr mult 114 Those who have received honoris causa doctorates may use dr h c before their own name 114 In Belgium s Flemish Community the doctorandus title was only used by those who actually started their doctoral work Doctorandus is still used as a synonym for a Ph D student The licentiaat licensee title was in use for a regular graduate until the Bologna reform changed the licentiaat degree to the master s degree the Bologna reform abolished the two year kandidaat degree and introduced a three year academic bachelor s degree instead Russia Edit In the Russian Empire the academic degree doctor of the sciences doktor nauk marked the highest academic degree that can be achieved by an examination The doctor nauk degree was introduced in Russia in 1819 abolished in 1917 and revived in the USSR in 1934 115 This system was generally adopted by the USSR Russia and many post Soviet countries A lower degree candidate doctor of the sciences kandidat nauk first introduced in the USSR on January 13 1934 by a decision of the Council of People s Commissars of the USSR is roughly the Russian equivalent to the research doctorate in other countries Spain Edit The ancient ceremony of bestowing Complutense s Doctoral biretta Doctoral degrees are regulated by Royal Decree R D 778 1998 116 Real Decreto in Spanish They are granted by the university on behalf of the king Its diploma has the force of a public document The Ministry of Science keeps a national registry of theses called TESEO 117 According to the National Institute of Statistics INE fewer than 5 of M Sc degree holders are admitted to Ph D programmes Traditionally the friends of a new doctor honored him painting a victor on the walls in this case the Seville Cathedral All doctoral programs are research oriented A minimum of 4 years of study is required divided into 2 stages A 2 year or longer period of studies concludes with a public dissertation presented to a panel of 3 Professors Upon approval from the university the candidate receives a Diploma de Estudios Avanzados part qualified doctor equivalent to M Sc From 2008 it is possible to substitute the former diploma by a recognized master program A 2 year or longer research period includes extensions for up to 10 years The student must present a thesis describing a discovery or original contribution If approved by their thesis director the study is presented to a panel of 5 distinguished scholars Any Doctor attending the public defense is allowed to challenge the candidate with questions If approved the candidate receives the doctorate Four marks used to be granted Unsatisfactory Suspenso Pass Aprobado Remarkable Notable Cum laude Sobresaliente and Summa cum laude Sobresaliente Cum Laude Those Doctors granted their degree Summa Cum Laude were allowed to apply for an Extraordinary Award Since September 2012 and regulated by Royal Decree R D 99 2011 in Spanish 118 three marks can be granted Unsatisfactory No apto Pass Apto and Cum laude Apto Cum Laude as maximum mark In the public defense the doctor is notified if the thesis has passed or not passed The Apto Cum Laude mark is awarded after the public defense as the result of a private anonymous vote Votes are verified by the university A unanimous vote of the reviewers nominates Doctors granted Apto Cum Laude for an Extraordinary Award Premio Extraordinario de Doctorado In the same Royal Decree the initial 3 year study period was replaced by a Research master s degree one or two years Professional master s degrees do not grant direct access to Ph D Programs that concludes with a public dissertation called Trabajo de Fin de Master or Proyecto de Fin de Master An approved project earns a master s degree that grants access to a Ph D program and initiates the period of research A doctorate is required in order to teach at the university 119 Only Ph D holders Grandees and Dukes can sit and cover their heads in the presence of the King 120 From 1857 Complutense University was the only one in Spain authorised to confer the doctorate This law remained in effect until 1954 when the University of Salamanca joined in commemoration of its septcentenary In 1970 the right was extended to all Spanish universities 121 All doctorate holders are reciprocally recognised as equivalent in Germany and Spain according to the Bonn Agreement of November 14 1994 122 United Kingdom Edit History of the UK doctorate Edit The doctorate has long existed in the UK as originally the second degree in divinity law medicine and music But it was not until the late 19th century that the research doctorate now known as the higher doctorate was introduced The first higher doctorate was the Doctor of Science at Durham University introduced in 1882 22 This was soon followed by other universities including the University of Cambridge establishing its ScD in the same year the University of London transforming its DSc from an advanced study course to a research degree in 1885 and the University of Oxford establishing its Doctor of Letters DLitt in 1900 123 124 Ph D Gown University of Cambridge The PhD was adopted in the UK following a joint decision in 1917 by British universities although it took much longer for it to become established Oxford became the first university to institute the new degree although naming it the DPhil 123 The PhD was often distinguished from the earlier higher doctorates by distinctive academic dress At Cambridge for example PhDs wear a master s gown with scarlet facings rather than the full scarlet gown of the higher doctors while the University of Wales gave PhDs crimson gowns rather than scarlet 125 Professional doctorates were introduced in Britain in the 1980s and 1990s The earliest professional doctorates were in the social sciences including the Doctor of Business Administration DBA Doctor of Education EdD and Doctor of Clinical Psychology DClinPsy 126 British doctorates today Edit Today except for those awarded honoris causa honorary degrees all doctorates granted by British universities are research doctorates in that their main and in many cases only component is the submission of an extensive and substantial thesis or portfolio of original research examined by an expert panel appointed by the university UK doctorates are categorised as 29 Junior doctorates Subject specialist doctorates normally PhD DPhil the most common form of doctorate Integrated subject specialist doctorates integrated PhDs including teaching at master s level Doctorates by publication PhD by Published Works only awarded infrequently Professional practice based practitioner doctorates e g EdD ProfDoc DProf EngD etc usually include taught elements and have an orientation that combines professional and academic aspectsHigher doctorates e g DD LLD DSc DLitt higher level than junior doctorates usually awarded either for a substantial body of work over an extended period or as honorary degrees The Quality Assurance Agency states in the Framework for Higher Education Qualifications of UK Degree Awarding Bodies which covers junior doctorates but not higher doctorates that 27 Doctoral degrees are awarded to students who have demonstrated the creation and interpretation of new knowledge through original research or other advanced scholarship of a quality to satisfy peer review extend the forefront of the discipline and merit publication a systematic acquisition and understanding of a substantial body of knowledge which is at the forefront of an academic discipline or area of professional practice the general ability to conceptualise design and implement a project for the generation of new knowledge applications or understanding at the forefront of the discipline and to adjust the project design in the light of unforeseen problems a detailed understanding of applicable techniques for research and advanced academic enquiry In the UK the junior doctorate is a qualification awarded at FHEQ level 8 level 12 of the FQHEIS on the national qualifications frameworks 27 29 127 The higher doctorates are stated to be A higher level of award which is not covered by the qualifications frameworks 29 Subject specialist doctorates Edit These are the most common doctorates in the UK and are normally awarded as PhDs While the master apprentice model was traditionally used for British PhDs since 2003 courses have become more structured with students taking courses in research skills and receiving training for professional and personal development However the assessment of the PhD remains based on the production of a thesis or equivalent and its defence at a viva voce oral examination normally held in front of at least two examiners one internal and one external 29 Access to PhDs normally requires an upper second class or first class bachelor s degree or a master s degree Courses normally last three years although it is common for students to be initially registered for MPhil degrees and then formally transferred onto the PhD after a year or two Students who are not considered likely to complete a PhD may be offered the opportunity to complete an MPhil instead 128 Integrated doctorates originally known as New Route PhDs were introduced from 2000 onwards These integrate teaching at master s level during the first one or two years of the degree either alongside research or as a preliminary to starting research These courses usually offer a master s level exit degree after the taught courses are completed While passing the taught elements is often required examination of the final doctorate is still by thesis or equivalent alone 29 The duration of integrated doctorates is a minimum of four years with three years spent on the research component 129 In 2013 Research Councils UK issued a Statement of Expectations for Postgraduate Training which lays out the expectations for training in PhDs funded by the research councils 130 In the latest version 2016 issued together with Cancer Research UK the Wellcome Trust and the British Heart Foundation these include the provision of careers advice in depth advanced training in the subject area provision of transferable skills training in experimental design and statistics training in good research conduct and training for compliance with legal ethical and professional frameworks The statement also encourages peer group development through cohort training and or Graduate schools 131 Higher doctorates Edit Higher doctorates are awarded in recognition of a substantial body of original research undertaken over the course of many years Typically the candidate submits a collection of previously published peer refereed work which is reviewed by a committee of internal and external academics who decide whether the candidate deserves the doctorate The higher doctorate is similar in some respects to the habilitation in some European countries However the purpose of the award is significantly different While the habilitation formally determines whether an academic is suitably qualified to be a university professor the higher doctorate does not qualify the holder for a position but rather recognises their contribution to research 22 Higher doctorates were defined by the UK Council for Graduate Education UKCGE in 2013 as 22 an award that is at a level above the PhD or equivalent professional doctorate in the discipline and that is typically gained not through a defined programme of study but rather by submission of a substantial body of research based work In terms of number of institutions offering the awards the most common doctorates of this type in UKCGE surveys carried out in 2008 and 2013 were the Doctor of Science DSc Doctor of Letters DLitt Doctor of Law LLD Doctor of Music DMus and Doctor of Divinity DD in the 2008 survey the Doctor of Technology DTech tied with the DD 22 The DSc was offered by all 49 responding institutions in 2008 and 15 out of 16 in 2013 and the DLitt by only one less in each case while the DD was offered in 10 responding institutions in 2008 and 3 in 2013 In terms of number of higher doctorates awarded not including honorary doctorates the DSc was most popular but the number of awards was very low the responding institutions had averaged an award of at most one earned higher doctorate per year over the period 2003 2013 22 Honorary degrees Edit Most British universities award degrees honoris causa to recognise individuals who have made a substantial contribution to a particular field Usually an appropriate higher doctorate is used in these circumstances depending on the candidate s achievements However some universities differentiate between honorary and substantive doctorates using the degree of Doctor of the University D Univ for these purposes and reserve the higher doctorates for formal academic research United States Edit In 1861 Yale University awarded the first Doctor of Philosophy Ph D degree in the United States U S research doctorates are awarded for advanced study followed by successfully completing and defending independent research presented in the form of a dissertation Professional degrees may use the term doctor in their titles such as Juris Doctor and Doctor of Medicine but these degrees rarely contain an independent research component and are not research doctorates 132 Law school graduates although awarded the J D degree are not normally addressed as doctor In legal studies the Doctor of Juridical Science is considered the equivalent to a Ph D Many universities offer Ph D D Phil followed by a professional doctorate or joint Ph D D Phil with a professional degree Often Ph D work is sequential to the professional degree e g Ph D D Phil in law after a J D or equivalent 133 134 135 136 in physical therapy after DPT 137 138 in pharmacy after Pharm D 139 140 Such professional degrees are referred to as an entry level doctorate program 141 142 143 and Ph D as a post professional doctorate 138 Research degrees Edit Main articles Graduate science education in the United States and List of doctoral degrees in the US The most common research doctorate is the Doctor of Philosophy Ph D or D Phil This degree was first awarded in the U S at the 1861 Yale University commencement 144 The University of Pennsylvania followed in 1871 145 with Cornell 1872 146 Harvard 1873 147 Michigan 1876 148 and Princeton 1879 149 following suit Controversy and opposition followed the introduction of the Ph D into the U S educational system lasting into the 1950s as it was seen as an unnecessary artificial transplant from a foreign Germany educational system which corrupted a system based on England s Oxbridge model 150 Ph D s and other research doctorates in the U S typically entail successful completion of coursework passing a comprehensive examination and defending a dissertation 151 The median number of years for completion of U S doctoral degrees is seven 38 Doctoral applicants were previously required to have a master s degree but many programs accept students immediately following undergraduate studies 152 153 Many programs gauge the potential of applicants to their program and grant a master s degree upon completion of the necessary course work When so admitted the student is expected to have mastered the material covered in the master s degree despite not holding one though this tradition is under heavy criticism 154 Successfully finishing Ph D qualifying exams confers Ph D candidate status allowing dissertation work to begin The International Affairs Office of the U S Department of Education has listed 18 frequently awarded research doctorate titles identified by the National Science Foundation NSF as representing degrees equivalent in research content to the Ph D 155 156 157 Professional degrees Edit Main article List of doctoral degrees in the US Many fields offer professional doctorates or professional master s such as engineering pharmacy medicine public health dentistry optometry psychology speech language pathology physical therapy occupational therapy health science advanced practice registered nurse chiropractic naturopathic medicine law architecture education teaching business management and others that require such degrees for professional practice or licensure Some of these degrees are also termed first professional degrees since they are the first field specific master s or doctoral degrees A Doctor of Engineering DEng is a professional degree In contrast to a PhD in Engineering where students usually conduct original theory based research DEng degrees are built around applied coursework and a practice led project and thus designed for working engineers in the industry DEng students defend their thesis at the end of their study before a thesis committee in order to be conferred a degree A Doctor of Pharmacy is awarded as the professional degree in pharmacy replacing a bachelor s degree It is the only professional pharmacy degree awarded in the US Pharmacy programs vary in length between 4 years for matriculants with a B S B A to 6 years for others In the twenty first century professional doctorates appeared in other fields such as the Doctor of Audiology in 2007 Advanced Practice Registered Nurses were expected to completely transition to the Doctor of Nursing Practice by 2015 and physical therapists to the Doctor of Physical Therapy by 2020 Professional associations play a central role in this transformation amid criticisms on the lack of proper criteria to assure appropriate rigor In many cases Masters level programs were relabeled as doctoral programs 158 Revocation EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2018 A doctoral degree can be revoked or rescinded by the university that awarded it Possible reasons include plagiarism criminal or unethical activities of the holder or malfunction or manipulation of academic evaluation processes 159 See also EditPostdoctoral researcher Compilation thesis Habilitation thesis Doctor title Eurodoctorate List of fields of doctoral studiesReferences Edit a b Verger J 1999 Doctor doctoratus Lexikon des Mittelalters vol 3 Stuttgart J B Metzler pp 1155 1156 a b c Verger J 1999 Licentia Lexikon des Mittelalters vol 5 Stuttgart J B Metzler pp 1957 1958 Keith Allan Noble Changing doctoral degrees an international perspective Society for Research into Higher Education 1994 p 8 Makdisi George April June 1989 Scholasticism and Humanism in Classical Islam and the Christian West Journal of the American Oriental Society 109 2 175 182 175 77 doi 10 2307 604423 JSTOR 604423 Devin J Stewart Josef W Meri 2005 Degrees or Ijazah Medieval Islamic Civilization An Encyclopedia Routledge pp 201 203 ISBN 9781135455965 Al Attas Syed Farid 1 January 2006 From Jami ah to University Multiculturalism and Christian Muslim Dialogue Current Sociology 54 1 112 132 doi 10 1177 0011392106058837 ISSN 0011 3921 S2CID 144509355 In the 1930s the renowned Orientalist Alfred Guillaume noted strong resemblances between Muslim and Western Christian institutions of higher learning An example he cited is the ijazah which he recognized as being akin to the medieval licentia docendi the precursor of the modern university degree Huff Toby E 2007 The rise of early modern science Islam China and the West 2 ed repr ed Cambridge u a Cambridge University Press p 155 ISBN 978 0521529945 It remains the case that no equivalent of the bachelor s degree the licentia docendi or higher degrees ever emerged in the medieval or early modern Islamic madrasas Verger J 1999 Doctor doctoratus Lexikon des Mittelalters vol 3 Stuttgart J B Metzler cols 1155 1156 Ruegg Walter Foreword The University as a European Institution in A History of the University in Europe Vol 1 Universities in the Middle Ages Cambridge University Press 1992 ISBN 0 521 36105 2 pp XIX No other European institution has spread over the entire world in the way in which the traditional form of the European university has done The degrees awarded by European universities the bachelor s degree the licentiate the master s degree and the doctorate have been adopted in the most diverse societies throughout the world Norman Daniel Review of The Rise of Colleges Institutions of Learning in Islam and the West by George Makdisi Journal of the American Oriental Society Vol 104 No 3 Jul Sep 1984 pp 586 588 587 Devin J Stewart 2005 Degrees or Ijazah In Josef W Meri ed Medieval Islamic Civilization An Encyclopedia Routledge pp 201 203 ISBN 9781135455965 The license to teach law and issue legal opinions is the type of ijazah that resembles the medieval European university degree most closely The main difference between the two is that the granting authority is an individual professor in the Islamic case rather than a corporate institution in the case of the university Despite this point Makdisi has likened the ijazat al ifta wa l tadris to the medieval Latin licentia docendi and suggests that it served as a model for that degree Erhard Weigel Gesellschaft Biographie Weigels Erhard weigel gesellschaft de Archived from the original on 2016 11 14 Retrieved 2016 10 29 Sooyoung Chang Academic Genealogy of Mathematicians World Scientific 2010 p 183 Park C 2007 Redefining the Doctorate Archived 2016 10 06 at the Wayback Machine York UK The Higher Education Academy p 4 Juliana Morell Catholic Encyclopaedia 1913 Archived from the original on 2016 10 18 Retrieved 2016 10 14 Universidad de Alcala UAH Madrid Universidad de Alcala uah es Archived from the original on 2012 10 07 Retrieved 2012 11 23 A Brief History of Columbia columbia edu Archived from the original on 2016 05 17 Retrieved 2016 05 14 History of the College of Physicians and Surgeons Columbia University Archived from the original on 5 October 2016 Retrieved 7 October 2016 King s College organized a medical faculty in 1767 and was the first institution in the North American Colonies to confer the degree of Doctor of Medicine The first graduates in medicine from the College were Robert Tucker and Samuel Kissarn who received the degree of Bachelor of Medicine in May 1769 and that of Doctor of Medicine in May 1770 and May 1771 respectively Reed A 1921 Training for the Public Profession of the Law Carnegie s Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching Bulletin 15 Boston Merrymount Press pp 162 164 Doctor of medicine profession MD Medical Encyclopedia MedlinePlus Archived from the original on 9 October 2016 Retrieved 7 October 2016 Landmarks in Yale s history yale edu 3 August 2015 a b c d e f Tina Barnes 2013 Higher Doctorates in the UK 2013 PDF UK Council for Graduate Education p 6 ISBN 978 0 9563812 7 9 The UK higher doctorate has a long history with the first a DSc being offered by Durham University in 1882 H Perraton 17 June 2014 A History of Foreign Students in Britain Springer ISBN 9781137294951 Doctoral degree characteristics PDF Quality Assurance Agency September 2011 p 12 Archived from the original PDF on 18 September 2017 Retrieved 18 June 2017 The first Doctor of Philosophy DPhil in the UK was awarded by the University of Oxford in 1917 Kenneth K Mwenda 2007 Comparing American and British Legal Education Systems Lessons for Commonwealth African Law Schools Cambria Press pp 20 25 ISBN 9781621969594 David Perry June 2012 HOW DID LAWYERS BECOME DOCTORS FROM THE LL B TO THE J D PDF New York State Bar Association Journal New York State Bar Association Archived PDF from the original on 2017 01 03 Retrieved 2016 10 13 a b c d The Frameworks for Higher Education Qualifications of UK Degree Awarding Bodies PDF Quality Assurance Agency November 2014 pp 16 17 30 36 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 05 Retrieved 2016 09 19 doctoral degree is used only in respect of qualifications at level 8 on the FHEQ SCQF level 12 on the FQHEIS a b c d e f g h i j k l Structure of the U S Education System Research Doctorate Degrees U S Department of Education Archived from the original on 27 January 2012 Retrieved 1 October 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Characteristics Statement Doctoral Degree PDF Quality Assurance Agency September 2015 Archived from the original PDF on 6 October 2016 Retrieved 16 September 2016 University of Oxford answers University of Oxford Archived from the original on 2015 10 17 BUCSIS Research Programme University of Buckingham Archived from the original on 22 June 2016 Retrieved 1 October 2016 We offer research degrees both at Master s level represented by the two year MPhil programme and at DPhil PhD level DPhil in Economics University of Oxford Department of Economics Archived from the original on 6 October 2016 Retrieved 1 October 2016 The DPhil is the name Oxford gives to its doctoral degree rather than the more familiar name PhD used in most other universities but the structure of the degree is identical to that of the PhD at leading economics graduate schools worldwide NSF Survey of Earned Doctorates 2017 permanent dead link http ijds org Volume10 IJDSv10p257 278Grabowski0957 pdf bare URL PDF a b Status of the Doctorate of Business Administration DBA in the UK PDF Quality Assurance Agency 2016 Archived from the original PDF on 17 September 2016 Retrieved 16 September 2016 Research degrees Doctoral College University of Hertfordshire Archived from the original on 4 October 2016 Retrieved 4 October 2016 Engineering doctorate epsrc ac uk Archived from the original on 2016 06 04 Retrieved 2016 04 06 a b Research Doctorate Programs americangraduateeducation com Archived from the original on 2008 05 03 Retrieved 2008 04 20 National Qualifications Framework PDF Swedish National Agency for Higher Education May 2011 pp 14 15 26 Archived PDF from the original on 6 October 2016 Retrieved 1 October 2016 Helena Mahler 2004 Jan Sadlak ed Sweden PDF Doctoral Studies and Qualifications in Europe and the United States Status and Prospects UNESCO p 202 ISBN 92 9069 179 4 Archived PDF from the original on 2 October 2016 Retrieved 1 October 2016 University Degrees Finnish National Board of Education Archived from the original on 6 October 2016 Retrieved 1 October 2016 University Education Fulbright Commission Belgium and Luxembourg Archived from the original on 2 October 2016 Retrieved 1 October 2016 American Studies Embassy of the United States Brussels Retrieved 1 October 2016 The degree is open to everyone including non Belgians who has earned the B A in Belgium licentiaat or licence or an equivalent degree permanent dead link Licence Master s Doctorate and Other Academic Programs Campus France Archived from the original on 6 October 2016 Retrieved 1 October 2016 Quadro Nazionale delle Qualifiche della Santa Sede National Qualifications Framework of the Holy See Congregazione per l Educazione Cattolica Archived from the original on 5 October 2016 Retrieved 1 October 2016 Christian Fleck Sociology in Austria Palgrave Macmillan 2015 Doctor of Professional Studies Program Gabelli School of Business Fordham University Archived from the original on 17 October 2016 Retrieved 5 November 2016 Homeland Security Doctor of Professional Studies St John s University www stjohns edu Archived from the original on 2018 08 23 Retrieved 2018 08 23 Doctorate of Professional Practice Robert Gordon University Archived from the original on 17 October 2016 Retrieved 5 November 2016 Doctor of Professional Practice Carnegie Mellon University Archived from the original on 8 October 2016 Retrieved 5 November 2016 Doctor s degree professional practice National Center for Educational Statistics US Department of Education Archived from the original on 2 September 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Doctor s degree research scholarship National Center for Educational Statistics US Department of Education Archived from the original on 2 September 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Doctor s degree other National Center for Educational Statistics US Department of Education Archived from the original on 2 September 2018 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Glossary National Center for Educational Statistics US Department of Education Archived from the original on 2 September 2018 Retrieved 2 September 2018 Doctor s degree The highest award a student can earn for graduate study The doctor s degree classification includes such degrees as Doctor of Education Doctor of Juridical Science Doctor of Public Health and the Doctor of Philosophy degree in any field such as agronomy food technology education engineering public administration ophthalmology or radiology The doctor s degree classification encompasses three main subcategories research scholarship degrees professional practice degrees and other degrees which are described below Doctor s degree research scholarship A Ph D or other doctor s degree that requires advanced work beyond the master s level including the preparation and defense of a dissertation based on original research or the planning and execution of an original project demonstrating substantial artistic or scholarly achievement Examples of this type of degree may include the following and others as designated by the awarding institution the Ed D in education D M A in musical arts D B A in business administration D Sc in science D A in arts or D M in medicine Doctor s degree professional practice A doctor s degree that is conferred upon completion of a program providing the knowledge and skills for the recognition credential or license required for professional practice The degree is awarded after a period of study such that the total time to the degree including both preprofessional and professional preparation equals at least 6 full time equivalent academic years Some doctor s degrees of this type were formerly classified as first professional degrees Examples of this type of degree may include the following and others as designated by the awarding institution the D C or D C M in chiropractic D D S or D M D in dentistry L L B or J D in law M D in medicine O D in optometry D O in osteopathic medicine Pharm D in pharmacy D P M Pod D or D P in podiatry or D V M in veterinary medicine Doctor s degree other A doctor s degree that does not meet the definition of a doctor s degree research scholarship or a doctor s degree professional practice Canadian Degree Qualifications Framework PDF Ministerial Statement on Quality Assurance of Degree Education in Canada Council of Ministers of Education Canada Archived PDF from the original on 14 March 2016 Retrieved 3 October 2016 Though considered to be bachelor s programs in academic standing some professional programs yield degrees with other nomenclature Examples DDS Dental Surgery MD Medicine LLB or JD Juris Doctor AQF qualification titles PDF Australian Qualifications Framework Council June 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 13 December 2016 Retrieved 3 October 2016 Doctor of Communication Faculty of Information and Communication Studies Retrieved 2019 01 18 Aberystwyth University Professional Doctorate in Agriculture D4201 DAg Aberystwyth University Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 11 January 2022 Review of Professional Doctorates PDF European 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