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Joint Ph.D. in Management Admission Requirements and Application Procedures
About the Joint Ph.D. in Management
- Ph.D. Program Office
- Desautels Faculty of Management
- 91Ë¿¹ÏÊÓƵ
- 1001 Sherbrooke Street West
- Montreal QC H3A 1G5
- Canada
- Telephone: 514-398-4060
- Fax: 514-398-3876
- Email: phd.mgmt [at] mcgill.ca
- Website: mcgill.ca/desautels/programs/phd
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) Management |
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The Ph.D. Program participates in the Joint Ph.D. Program that brings together the four Montreal universities: Concordia University, the École des Hautes Études Commerciales (affiliated with the Université de Montréal), 91Ë¿¹ÏÊÓƵ, and the Université de Québec à Montréal. The Ph.D. program in Management is intended to educate competent researchers and to stimulate research on management issues. |
The program represents a number of innovations in doctoral work in the field of management. First, by cooperating, the four universities are able to make available to the program's students a diverse pool of approximately 520 professors qualified to direct doctoral-level study and research. Second, the program has been carefully developed to encourage independent, creative work on the part of its students, with close, personal contact with the professors. This program will appeal especially to the mature, experienced candidate with relatively well-defined interests. Across the four member universities, some courses are offered in English and some in French (all papers may, however, be written in English or French).
The program places considerable emphasis on the theoretical foundations of management and its underlying disciplines. Graduates of the program are expected to have: (1) some knowledge of all the main areas of management, (2) a thorough knowledge of one applied area of management, and one support discipline, (3) a complete command of the research methodologies used in management, and (4) some familiarity with modern theories and methods of the pedagogy of management.
The program consists of three phases: preparation, specialization, and dissertation.
Preparation – Phase I
Before entering the program, the student will have selected the area of specialization from the following areas/options:
- Accounting
- Finance
- Information Systems
- Marketing
- Operations Management
- Organizational Behaviour
- Retail Management
- Strategy and Organization
Specialization – Phase II
In Phase II, students probe deeply into their chosen area of specialization. With their Phase II Advisory Committee, students work out an individual program of study, which takes about 18 - 24 months. The phase focuses on a specialization area and a support field. The specialization area could be one of the basic ones listed in Phase I (for example, marketing or operations management), a sub-area within one of these (such as organizational development within organizational behaviour), or an interdisciplinary area that combines two or more of these (such as behaviour aspects of accounting or international marketing).
The support field is selected to help the student develop a foundation of knowledge in a fundamental discipline that underlies the theory in management. For example, a student in marketing might select psychology, sociology, or statistics. One in management policy might select political science or general systems theory, or perhaps even philosophy. Other choices are possible.
Students officially enter Phase II of the program when their Phase II Advisory Committee has been established and, together with the student, formally agrees on a proposal for the work to be done in Phase II. The Phase II Form (Advisory Committee) must be approved by the 91Ë¿¹ÏÊÓƵ and the Joint Doctoral Committees. This includes the following:
- Doctoral seminars in the specialization area; minimum four courses
- Any other existing graduate-level courses in the specialization area and support field deemed appropriate by the Phase II Advisory Committee; minimum two courses in support field
- Seminar on Research Methodology (MGMT 707, 3 credits) or equivalent approved graduate-level course
- Seminar in Pedagogy (MGMT 706, 3 credits) or Teaching and Learning in Higher Education (EDPH 689, 3 credits)
- Comprehensive Examination (MGMT 701, 0 credits)
- A publishable research paper (MGMT 720, 3 credits)
The Phase II Advisory Committee will normally consist of at least three members; a supervisor and others decided upon jointly by the supervisor and the student. One of these members will typically come from the support field. Every student's Phase II Advisory Committee must have representation from at least two universities in the joint program.
Dissertation – Phase III
In the third phase of the program, students research, write, and defend a dissertation that probes deeply into a well-defined research topic. The topic is developed with the Phase III Advisory Committee (at least three members), which may be the same as the Phase II Advisory Committee or may be reconstituted, again with representation from at least one of the other participating universities. The topic is approved formally by the Phase III Advisory Committee and, once the research is completed and the dissertation written, the student publicly defends the completed thesis. The Phase III Form (Phase III Advisory Committee) must be approved by the 91Ë¿¹ÏÊÓƵ and the Joint Doctoral Committees.
Admission Requirements
Admission Requirements
Candidates normally hold a master's-level degree, with a strong academic record from a recognized university.
(or –General Test) results are required for all applications to the doctoral program; this includes 91Ë¿¹ÏÊÓƵ master's students applying to the Ph.D. The minimum GMAT (or GRE–General Test) score required is 70% equivalency. Tests must have been written within the past five years.
Applicants to graduate studies whose mother tongue is not English, and who have not completed an undergraduate or graduate degree from a recognized foreign institution where English is the language of instruction or from a recognized Canadian institution (anglophone or francophone), must submit documented proof of competency in oral and written English. Before acceptance, appropriate exam results must be submitted directly from the (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or (International English Language Testing Systems) Office. Applications will not be considered if a TOEFL or IELTS test result is not available. A minimum score of 100 for the Internet-based test, with each component score not less than 20, is required for admission. A minimum score of 7 for IELTS is required. Tests must have been written within the past two years.
Files will not be considered unless GMAT (or GRE-General Test) and TOEFL scores are received by the Application Deadline.
Application Procedures
Application Procedures
91Ë¿¹ÏÊÓƵ’s online application form for graduate program candidates is available at mcgill.ca/gradapplicants/apply.
See University Regulations & Resources > Graduate > Graduate 91Ë¿¹ÏÊÓƵ and Application Procedures > Application Procedures for detailed application procedures.
Additional Requirements
Additional Requirements
For more information, consult the Desautels Faculty of Management's website.
Application Dates and Deadlines
Application Dates and Deadlines
For application dates and deadlines, please consult the following website: mcgill.ca/desautels/programs/phd/admissions/deadline.