Doctoral Program
Developing Leaders of Tomorrow
The School of Social Work’s doctoral program, established in 1986, extends the tradition of educating students skilled in clinical research, scholarship, and teaching with the Jesuit ideals of service to others and commitment to social justice as its foundation. The doctoral program prepares students for leadership roles in diverse practice and academic areas.

News
Ph.D. Student Named Health Policy Research Scholar
Loyola University Chicago School of Social Work Ph.D. candidate Leo Davis was recently selected as a Health Policy Research Scholar by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Learn MoreCurriculum
Our 2-year, 48-credit hour model is designed to help you select your professional focus and build the skills and knowledge needed to excel in it. By integrating research, theory, history, and practical considerations of organizational practice and teaching, our program enables you to qualify for a range of career options.
There are no summer classes required. Students will take two electives, the first in the Fall semester of Year 2 and the second in the Spring of Year 2 in order to strengthen quantitative and qualitative analytical skills and interdisciplinary expertise. This will ensure that students are better prepared for comprehensive exams and exposed to methodology and ideology from other disciplines. The goal of elective courses is to enhance the quality and scholarship of the dissertation. These elective courses can be taken at Loyola and therefore covered by students' tuition stipend, or courses can be taken at other institutions with credit transferred. However, courses taken outside Loyola University cannot be covered by tuition credits at this time. The Director of the Doctoral Program is available and should be consulted to provide advising about potential elective courses.
In Year 3, a student is considered full-time in the Ph.D. program if they are registered for either SOWK 827: Doctoral Study or SOWK 600: Dissertation Supervision. It is not necessary for students to register for either of these courses during the summer term, but it is imperative that they register for either of these two courses every fall and spring term until graduation. If not, students are terminated from the program and must reapply. If there is an emergency requiring studies to be suspended, a leave of absence is a possibility.
As with other policies, announcements and reminders will be sent to students by the Director of the Doctoral Program and the Graduate School as appropriate.
Students must complete all Ph.D. degree requirements, including the dissertation, within eight years of beginning the first course at Loyola University Chicago applicable toward the doctoral degree. However, students who completed a relevant master's degree (or a significant amount of relevant graduate coursework) at another institution prior to entering the doctoral program must complete all Ph.D. requirements, including the dissertation, within six years of beginning the first course at Loyola University Chicago applicable toward the doctoral degree.
The requirements for doctoral candidacy are: 1) successful completion of all specifically required coursework; 2) fulfillment of all research tool requirements; 3) successful completion of all comprehensive examinations; 4) approval of the dissertation proposal by the approved dissertation committee, the IRB and/or the IACUC (if necessary) and the Graduate School.
Students have five years after admission to doctoral candidacy to complete all of their remaining degree requirements, including all dissertation requirements. If a doctoral candidate does not successfully defend and submit the dissertation within five years after becoming a doctoral candidate (by approval of the dissertation proposal), the student will be dropped from candidacy. The student must then pass a second comprehensive examination or program-specific equivalent to being reinstated as a doctoral candidate, and the time limit for submitting the dissertation will be determined by the Dean of the Graduate School and the candidate's committee. Exceptions to the five-year time limit require a petition to the dissertation chair, who forwards the petition to the Graduate Program Director and then the Graduate School.
Curriculum
Our 2-year, 48-credit hour model is designed to help you select your professional focus and build the skills and knowledge needed to excel in it. By integrating research, theory, history, and practical considerations of organizational practice and teaching, our program enables you to qualify for a range of career options.
There are no summer classes required. Students will take two electives, the first in the Fall semester of Year 2 and the second in the Spring of Year 2 in order to strengthen quantitative and qualitative analytical skills and interdisciplinary expertise. This will ensure that students are better prepared for comprehensive exams and exposed to methodology and ideology from other disciplines. The goal of elective courses is to enhance the quality and scholarship of the dissertation. These elective courses can be taken at Loyola and therefore covered by students' tuition stipend, or courses can be taken at other institutions with credit transferred. However, courses taken outside Loyola University cannot be covered by tuition credits at this time. The Director of the Doctoral Program is available and should be consulted to provide advising about potential elective courses.
In Year 3, a student is considered full-time in the Ph.D. program if they are registered for either SOWK 827: Doctoral Study or SOWK 600: Dissertation Supervision. It is not necessary for students to register for either of these courses during the summer term, but it is imperative that they register for either of these two courses every fall and spring term until graduation. If not, students are terminated from the program and must reapply. If there is an emergency requiring studies to be suspended, a leave of absence is a possibility.
As with other policies, announcements and reminders will be sent to students by the Director of the Doctoral Program and the Graduate School as appropriate.
Students must complete all Ph.D. degree requirements, including the dissertation, within eight years of beginning the first course at Loyola University Chicago applicable toward the doctoral degree. However, students who completed a relevant master's degree (or a significant amount of relevant graduate coursework) at another institution prior to entering the doctoral program must complete all Ph.D. requirements, including the dissertation, within six years of beginning the first course at Loyola University Chicago applicable toward the doctoral degree.
The requirements for doctoral candidacy are: 1) successful completion of all specifically required coursework; 2) fulfillment of all research tool requirements; 3) successful completion of all comprehensive examinations; 4) approval of the dissertation proposal by the approved dissertation committee, the IRB and/or the IACUC (if necessary) and the Graduate School.
Students have five years after admission to doctoral candidacy to complete all of their remaining degree requirements, including all dissertation requirements. If a doctoral candidate does not successfully defend and submit the dissertation within five years after becoming a doctoral candidate (by approval of the dissertation proposal), the student will be dropped from candidacy. The student must then pass a second comprehensive examination or program-specific equivalent to being reinstated as a doctoral candidate, and the time limit for submitting the dissertation will be determined by the Dean of the Graduate School and the candidate's committee. Exceptions to the five-year time limit require a petition to the dissertation chair, who forwards the petition to the Graduate Program Director and then the Graduate School.