PhD Admissions
***NEW***
PLEASE NOTE: Admissions Application Deadline for AY 2008-2009 is January 15, 2008.
Any student with a bachelor's or master's degree and with a substantial background in the humanities, social sciences, or physical sciences is eligible to apply to the doctoral program. All candidates for admission must submit an application for admission along with a $60 ($75 for international applicants) credentials fee, transcripts of all undergraduate and graduate courses taken and grades earned, three letters of recommendation, and Graduate Record Examination scores.
Our application process is now conducted primarily via the world wide web, using the University of Illinois' web-based application through the
Graduate College website.
Foreign students from non-English-speaking countries are required to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) before they come to the University. Depending on the results, they may be required to take further instruction in English after their arrival.
Students are normally admitted to start the program only during the fall term. Only under exceptional circumstances are they allowed to begin it in the spring or summer term. All material for fall admission should be submitted by January 15, 2008.
Important information for applicants to the doctoral program in Communications
The admissions process in the Institute of Communications Research is competitive; that is, all applications are considered at the same time for fall admission (the Institute does not ordinarily admit students at the Spring term). The Admissions Committee members typically begin individually reviewing application files after January 1. Several University of Illinois fellowship deadlines occur in January. Therefore, applications should be received before the January 15 deadline for consideration with regards to these lucrative scholarships. The Committee strives to notify applicants by March 1 of their decisions. Since we do not have a rolling admissions process, it is very important that applicants adhere to the January 15, 2008 application deadline.
Applications submitted electronically at the aforementioned website are accessible by ICR as soon as the application fee has been paid. Applications for which the fee has not been paid, whether paper or electronic, are not released to ICR by the Office of Admissions and Records.
A complete application consists of:
* Completed application form (submit electronically)
* Application fee ($60 domestic; $75 international) (pay by credit card if applying electronically or mail to OAR with your paper application form)
* Statement of plans, including relevant education, experience, research interests, goals and career plans (mail to ICR)
* Transcripts from all previous colleges/universities attended. Two official transcripts are required from each institution the applicant has attended (mail to ICR)
* Letters of recommendation. Three confidential letters are required from persons who can evaluate the applicant's academic ability and prospects for success in graduate study (mail to ICR)
* GRE scores (institution code 1836)
Writing samples are not required.
ICR's mailing address is:
University of Illinois
Institute of Communications Research
810 S. Wright Street, Suite 228
Urbana, IL 61801
OAR's mailing address is:
University of Illinois
Office of Admissions and Records
901 W. Illinois Street
Urbana, IL 61801
ICR does not have the resources to send periodic notices of the status of applications. Please feel free to contact us to check the status of your application file.
Telephone: (217)333-1549
Fax: (217)244-7695
E-mail: icr@uiuc.edu
Financial Aid
Financial aid is available in the form of assistantships, fellowships, and tuition and fee waivers. Students of color underrepresented in communications research are eligible for University fellowships. Most Institute students eventually receive some kind of financial support. The application for admission includes a section to be completed if you wish to be considered for financial aid. Insofar as possible, the Institute makes financial aid and admission decisions simultaneously.
Teaching assignments are also periodically available in other University departments or programs - for example, Advertising, Journalism, Speech, English, Business and Technical Writing, Unit for Cinema Studies, and Agricultural Communications - and in the communications program at Parkland College. Students with editing, writing, computer programming, keypunching, tutoring, or other skills often can find support in other units of the University. Usually these positions must be obtained once you are on campus and can arrange interviews. A few students also find part-time employment with the local media.
See also UIUC Graduate College
Financial Aid and
Fellowship Office
Residency
The doctoral degree requires a minimum of 96 hours of credit: 64 course-work hours and 32 thesis hours. At least 64 of these hours must be earned as a graduate student in courses meeting on the Urbana-Champaign campus. After the residency requirement has been fulfilled, a student may petition the Graduate College for permission to register in absentia for thesis credit. Students entering with a master's degree (or it's equivalent in graduate course work) may be given credit for part of it in completing the required 96 hours, but this does not waive the residency requirement.
Housing
The two residence halls for unmarried graduate students are Sherman and Daniels. In addition, there are University-approved residences as well as private apartments and houses in Champaign-Urbana. For further information, write to the Housing Information Office, 2 Fred H. Turner Student Services Building, 610 East John Street, Champaign, Illinois 61820, and the Champaign-Urbana Tenant Union, Room 298A Illini Union, 1401 West Green Street, Urbana, Illinois 61801.
For married students, with or without children, the University has a number of apartments available. Write to the apartments manager, 1842A Orchard Place, Urbana, Illinois 61801.
See Champaign Urbana
local media for housing classifieds.
Health Services and Insurance
As a student at the University of Illinois, you pay two fees at registration which cover services that should meet many of your health care needs:
The Health Service Fee is pre-payment for services provided by McKinley Health Center and the Counseling Center. This fee is mandatory for most students and optional for several categories of part-time students. The 2003-2004 Fee is $179.00 per semester.
The Student Health Insurance Fee pays for the University sickness and accident insurance program for health care received outside of McKinley Health Center. Students are required either to pay this fee or to document that they have other health insurance coverage equivalent to the University plan. The 2003-2004 Fee is $214.00 per semester.
Tuition and service fee waivers that accompany Teaching and Research Assistant appointments do not cover the Health Service Fee or the Student Health Insurance Fee.
For more information, visit the Office of Student Insurance website at
http://www.si.uiuc.edu/