Graduate programs

The Department of Chemistry offers graduate work leading to the following degrees: Master of Arts or Master of Science; Master of Arts in Teaching or Master of Science in Teaching (Science); Ph.D. in Chemistry.

The M.S. program is designed for the student who wishes to pursue a career as a professional chemist or a scientist in other allied disciplines. The program involves work in advanced courses with training in research techniques. An integral part of the program is the individual research project and thesis.

The M.A. program is designed for the student who wishes to obtain an advanced degree in chemistry, but for whom the time commitment of a traditional research degree (M.S.) is not feasible, this program involves advanced coursework and a literature project.

The M.A.T./M.S.T. is offered to provide scientific training for teachers in secondary schools. The program is composed of courses intended to increase the sophistication of the student in chemical principles and to acquaint the student with current techniques in teaching methods.

The program leading to the Ph.D. in Chemistry combines original research with advanced coursework in various disciplines of chemistry. Research foci in the department are biological chemistry, materials chemistry, and environmental chemistry. Students that complete the program are prepared to pursue careers in academic, industrial, or government research.

Admission Requirements

Chemistry M.A.

Chemistry M.S.

Chemistry M.A.T./M.S.T.

Chemistry Ph.D.

Chemistry M.A.

Designed for the student who wishes to obtain an advanced degree in chemistry, but for whom the time commitment of a traditional research degree is not feasible, this program involves advanced coursework and a literature project.

The candidate must complete a minimum of 45 credits in approved graduate courses. Of these, 36 credits must be chosen from substantive classes at the graduate level, excluding Chem 501, Chem 503, Chem 505, Chem 507 and Chem 605.

For the M.A., if the student has not successfully completed two academic years of a foreign language at the undergraduate level, the student must show competence by examination.

Students need to complete (on their own timeline):

  • A total of 45 graduate-level credits (foreign languages classes cannot be applied to this requirement)
  • 36 credits of substantive coursework (graduate level: 510+) - up to 8 credits of which may be "approved" graduate-level classes outside Chemistry (e.g. Physics, Biology, System Science)
  • Department seminar (CH507) - offered each FWS term, enrollment required in all FWS terms in which the student is in the program.
  • Complete a 10+ page written report - give to the Chair of the Graduate Affairs Committee (GAC) before the ninth week of the term in which you expect to graduate (will be graded by Chemistry faculty: expect at least one round of revisions)
  • A foreign language requirement - can test out or take classes

An example of an enumeration of credits is as follows:
  • 9 500-level classes at 4 credits each = 36 credits
  • CH507 seminar (Fridays): 1 credit each FWS term enrolled, for 6 terms
  • CH501 research: 1 credit
  • CH505: graded literature paper: 2 credits