There are three ways to fulfill the capstone requirement for the Master of Arts with a concentration in International Development Studies: a thesis, a grant proposal for a development project, or a comprehensive exam. Program guidelines for each option are listed below.
The M.A. thesis consists of original research on a topic relevant to development studies. Thesis guidelines are published by the Center for International Studies (CIS) and must be followed by students wishing to complete a thesis in any program at the CIS. For additional information, it is imperative that students download the CIS’ Guidelines from
The M.A. thesis must conform to University and Center for International Studies requirements found below:
1. Committee. According to university rules, a thesis requires a three person advisory committee that includes a primary thesis director and two other faculty members. Often, one of the members of the advisory committee will be the Director of International Development Studies. The thesis director should be a faculty member with interest and expertise in the area to be researched. Students are responsible for identifying committee members and securing their agreement to serve in this capacity. Please note the students must have a tentative committee selected by the end of their second quarter of study, generally winter quarter of the student’s first year. Although the committee members may be changed later, this is a CIS-wide regulation.
2. Proposal. A proposal for the M.A. thesis outlining the problem, theory, and methods, must be approved by the student’s advisor and committee prior to undertaking the research. The exact format of the proposal will be determined by the research director, but minimally should include a problem statement, literature review of past and related research, relevant theory, proposed methods, significance, timetable for conducting research and completing the thesis, and list of references. The decision to do a thesis should be determined during the first year of study, and a proposal should be approved by the student’s committee by the end of the third quarter and no later than the 4th quarter of study.
3. Human Subjects. All research that involves human subjects in any way, whether in the U.S. or abroad, requires prior Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval. See guidelines under the University IRB website (http://www.ohiou.edu/research/compliance/) for details.
4. Dual Degree Option. Students must complete the capstone requirements for each of the two degree programs.
a. Select three faculty members who will provide guidance, a reading list, and exam questions. Faculty should be experts in the focus area for which they are responsible. The student and his or her comprehensive exam committee should fill out the Comprehensive Exam Faculty Selection form by the end of the spring quarter of the first year.
b. Submit a Comprehensive Exam Intent Form to the International Development Studies director during the second week of the quarter in which the exam will be taken.
c. Verify that committee members have submitted questions to the director before the fifth week of classes of the quarter in which the exam will be taken.
d. Appear at the designated time and place to take the exam.
3. Comprehensive exam faculty will each prepare an interdisciplinary essay question that attempts to draw connections between the student's area of concentration and the faculty member's exam focus (development core, method core, or concentration). The faculty will submit their essay questions to the International Development Studies director by the fifth week of classes in which the exam is going to be taken.
4. The International Development Studies director will prepare the comprehensive exam using the submitted questions. The student will generally be expected to respond to three essay prompts, including a two-hour concentration-focus essay, a one-hour development-focus essay and a one-hour methods-focus essay.
5. Faculty members will comment on answers to their own questions, giving the student either a satisfactory or an unsatisfactory grade.
6. The International Development Studies director will assign one of three outcomes:
Pass: If the student receives a satisfactory for all three sections of the comprehensive exam, he or she will receive a pass grade.
No Pass: If the student receives an unsatisfactory in one or more sections of the comprehensive exam, he or she might receive a no pass grade. The student may retake the sections he or she did not pass one time only, at a date determined by the exam committee.
Fail: If the student receives an unsatisfactory in all three sections, he or she will receive a fail grade. After completing additional remedial work determined by the examining committee, the student may retake the exam one time. Failure to pass the reexamination will result in the student being dropped from the program.
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