College of Arts and Sciences
Mary Beth Armstrong, Dean
Hill House, Station 6508
telephone: (205) 665-6508
fax: (205) 665-6503
e-mail: armstrom@montevallo.edu
The College of Arts and Sciences offers the M.A. degree in English and the M.S. degree in Speech Language Pathology. The M.S. degree in Speech-Language Pathology has been approved for Alabama Class A certification under special circumstances. Refer to the Communication Science and Disorders section of this Bulletin for more information. The College also offers various teaching-field courses in support of the M.Ed. in Secondary and P–12 Education.
Admission requirements
In addition to the general requirements for admission to the UM graduate program, students may be required to meet specific requirements which will be listed under the appropriate department.
Behavioral and Social Sciences
Clark Hultquist, Department Chair
Jeter Hall, Extension 6180
e-mail: hultquic@montevallo.edu
There is no graduate major in Social Science or History; however, students pursuing the M.Ed. in Secondary Education with a Social Science or History concentration may take the following courses to fulfill teaching field requirements.
Departmental Courses
Geography (GEOG)
| 505 |
Urban Geography |
3 credit hours |
| 511 |
Selected Topics in Geography |
3 credit hours |
| 566 |
Political Geography |
3 credit hours |
History (HIST)
| 511 |
Selected Topics in History |
3 credit hours |
| 521 |
Seminar in Medieval European History |
3 credit hours |
| 522 |
Seminar in Early Modern European History |
3 credit hours |
| 523 |
Civil Rights Movement |
3 credit hours |
| 532 |
History of French Film |
3 credit hours |
| 533 |
Seminar in Nineteenth-Century European History |
3 credit hours |
| 534 |
Seminar in Twentieth-Century European History |
3 credit hours |
| 535 |
History of Modern Japan |
3 credit hours |
| 536 |
Seminar in American History |
3 credit hours |
| 541 |
History of England I |
3 credit hours |
| 542 |
History of England Since 1688 |
3 credit hours |
| 543 |
Middle East |
3 credit hours |
| 547 |
Medieval European History, 476–1400 |
3 credit hours |
| 548 |
Renaissance and Reformation, 1300–1653 |
3 credit hours |
| 555 |
The French Revolution and the Napoleonic Era, 1789–1815 |
3 credit hours |
| 558 |
History of Germany, 1871–1945 |
3 credit hours |
| 560 |
History of the South |
3 credit hours |
| 561 |
History of Early Modern Europe, up to 1789 |
3 credit hours |
| 565 |
History of France Since 1815 |
3 credit hours |
| 566 |
Political Geography |
3 credit hours |
| 570 |
Colonial America |
3 credit hours |
| 571 |
Revolutionary America |
3 credit hours |
| 572 |
History of Alabama |
3 credit hours |
| 573 |
African American History |
3 credit hours |
| 574 |
Jeffersonian-Jacksonian America |
3 credit hours |
| 575 |
Constitutional Law |
3 credit hours |
| 576 |
Civil War and Reconstruction |
3 credit hours |
| 577 |
The Gilded Age |
3 credit hours |
| 579 |
History of Alabama’s Constitutions |
3 credit hours |
| 580 |
Diplomatic History of the United States |
3 credit hours |
| 581 |
The United States, 1900–1945 |
3 credit hours |
| 582 |
The United States Since 1945 |
3 credit hours |
| 583 |
History of Africa |
3 credit hours |
| 584 |
U.S. Wars—Korea and Vietnam |
3 credit hours |
| 590 |
Directed Reading |
3 credit hours |
| 595 |
Internship in History |
up to 6 credit hours |
Political Science (POS)
| 511 |
Selected Topics in Political Science |
3 credit hours |
| 522 |
American Political Thought |
3 credit hours |
| 523 |
Civil Rights Movement |
3 credit hours |
| 543 |
Middle East |
3 credit hours |
| 544 |
Public Policy |
3 credit hours |
| 550 |
Global Policy Studies |
3 credit hours |
| 555 |
International Relations |
3 credit hours |
| 575 |
Constitutional Law |
3 credit hours |
| 579 |
History of Alabama’s Constitutions |
3 credit hours |
| 584 |
U.S. Wars—Korea and Vietnam |
3 credit hours |
| 590 |
Directed Readings |
3 credit hours |
| 595 |
Government Internship |
3–6 credit hours |
Sociology (SOC)
| 501 |
Social Gerontology |
3 credit hours |
| 502 |
Sociology of Education |
3 credit hours |
| 505 |
Urban Geography |
3 credit hours |
| 511 |
Selected Topics in Sociology |
3 credit hours |
| 545 |
Sex Roles, Gender, and Culture |
3 credit hours |
| 580 |
Development of Sociological Theory |
3 credit hours |
| 590 |
Independent Study in Sociology |
3 credit hours |
Biology, Chemistry, and Mathematics
Houston Byrd, Department Chair
Harman Hall, Extension 6480
e-mail: byrdh@montevallo.edu
There is no graduate major in Biology, Chemistry, Mathematics, or General Science; however, students pursuing the M.Ed. in Secondary Education with Biology, Chemistry, Mathematics, or General Science as the area of concentration may take the courses below to fulfill the teaching field requirements.
The University of Montevallo is a member of the Marine Environmental Sciences Consortium (MESC), a public, non-profit corporation dedicated to providing marine education, research and service to the state of Alabama. These courses are offered during the summer at the Dauphin Island Sea Laboratory, Dauphin Island, Alabama. Students must register and pay tuition for these courses at the University of Montevallo. For more information concerning these courses, see the UM liaison, Dr. Jill Wicknick, Harman Hall, Extension 6458.
Departmental Courses
Biology (BIO)
| 500 |
Basic Principles of Genetics |
3 credit hours |
| 510 |
Histology |
4 credit hours |
| 520 |
Parasitology |
4 credit hours |
| 530 |
Genetics |
4 credit hours |
| 535 |
Developmental Biology |
4 credit hours |
| 540 |
Evolution |
3 credit hours |
| 545 |
Laboratory Instruction in Biology |
1–6 credit hours (maximum 3 credit hours per semester) |
| 550 |
Current Topics in Biology |
3 credit hours |
| 551 |
Current Topics in Cell Biology |
3 credit hours |
| 552 |
Introductory Biology Instrumentation |
1–3 credit hours |
| 554 |
Advanced Biology Instrumentation |
1–3 credit hours |
| 555 |
Histological Techniques |
4 credit hours |
| 560 |
Field Botany |
4 credit hours |
| 570 |
Vertebrate Field Zoology |
4 credit hours |
| 571 |
Plant Physiology |
4 credit hours |
| 572 |
Animal Physiology |
4 credit hours |
| 580 |
Special Problems in Biology |
1-4 credit hours |
Chemistry (CHEM)
| 510 |
Physical Chemistry |
3 credit hours |
| 515 |
Organic Chemistry |
3 credit hours |
| 520 |
Inorganic Chemistry |
3 credit hours |
| 525 |
Analytical Chemistry |
3 credit hours |
| 530 |
Physical Biochemistry |
3 credit hours |
| 535 |
Instrumental Methods of Analysis |
4 credit hours |
| 540 |
Laboratory Instruction in Chemistry |
1–6 credit hours (maximum 3 credit hours per semester) |
| 545 |
Special Topics in Chemistry |
3 credit hours |
| 550 |
Introductory Chemistry Instrumentation |
1–3 credit hours |
| 552 |
Advanced Chemistry Instrumentation |
1–3 credit hours |
| 561 |
History of Chemistry |
3 credit hours |
| 565 |
Chemical Calculations |
3 credit hours |
| 580 |
Special Problems in Chemistry |
1–6 credit hours |
| 581 |
Chemistry in the Community |
3 credit hours |
Marine Science (MSCI)
| 500 |
Marine Vertebrate Zoology |
4 credit hours |
| 501 |
Marine Biology |
4 credit hours |
| 510 |
Marine Invertebrate Zoology |
4 credit hours |
| 520 |
Coastal Ornithology |
4 credit hours |
| 530 |
Marine Botany |
4 credit hours |
| 551 |
Coastal Climatology |
2 credit hours |
| 568 |
Marine Behavioral Ecology |
4 credit hours |
| 570 |
Marine Ecology |
4 credit hours |
| 575 |
Marsh Ecology |
4 credit hours |
| 577 |
Marine Protozoology |
2 credit hours |
| 585 |
Research on Special Topics |
2–6 credit hours |
Mathematics (MATH)
| 501 |
Mathematics for Teachers |
3 credit hours |
| 502 |
Linear Algebra for Teachers |
3 credit hours |
| 505 |
The History and Philosophy of Mathematics |
3 credit hours |
| 510 |
Elementary Function Theory for Teachers |
3 credit hours |
| 521 |
Complex Analysis for Teachers |
3 credit hours |
| 525 |
Differential Geometry for Teachers |
3 credit hours |
| 535 |
Sequences and Series |
3 credit hours |
| 540 |
Abstract Algebra |
3 credit hours |
| 570 |
Real Analysis |
3 credit hours |
| 580 |
Topology |
3 credit hours |
| 590 |
Individual Study |
3 credit hours |
| 595 |
Special Topics |
3 credit hours |
Physics (PHYS)
| 540 |
Laboratory Instruction in Physics |
1–6 credit hours (maximum 3 credit hours per semester) |
| 550 |
Introductory Physics Instrumentation |
1–3 credit hours |
| 552 |
Advanced Physics Instrumentation |
1–3 credit hours |
Communication Science and Disorders
Mary Beth Armstrong, Dean of the College of Arts
and Sciences
George C. Wallace Speech and Hearing Center,
Extension 6508
e-mail:
armstrom@montevallo.edu
Margaret Johnson, Acting Chair and Graduate Program
Coordinator
George C. Wallace Speech and Hearing Center,
Extension 6720
e-mail:
johnsonm@montevallo.edu
The Department of Communication Science and Disorders (CSD) offers the Master of Science Degree in Speech-Language Pathology (SLP). The graduate program is accredited by the Council on Academic Accreditation (CAA) of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA).
There are two options available for graduate students in the Master of Science program:
Option A: Thesis. Students selecting this option will take 3 to 6 credit hours of CSD 500 in addition to the regular coursework in Speech-Language Pathology. Students selecting and completing this option can opt out of the comprehensive examination.
Option B: Non-thesis. Students selecting this option will take the regular curriculum in Speech-Language Pathology, and thus take the comprehensive examination.
The CSD graduate program provides all academic and practicum requirements leading to the Certificate of Clinical Competence (CCC) from ASHA and state licensure by the Alabama Board of Examiners in Speech Pathology and Audiology (ABESPA). Graduates who have an undergraduate degree in speech-language pathology and who have taken an undergraduate or graduate course in introduction to special education and a course in computer technology may obtain the Class A teaching certificate in special education with endorsement in speech-language pathology from the Alabama State Department of Education. At UM the special education course at the undergraduate level is SPED 407 and at the graduate level is SPED 507. Without these courses, a UM M.S. graduate does not meet the state-approved program and cannot receive a teaching certificate from UM. If employed by a school system, the system would need to apply for a temporary or emergency certificate for the student. Upon receiving the CCC and licensure the individual should obtain a certificate. Graduates with an undergraduate major in speech-language pathology or speech and hearing science, but who do not have an undergraduate or graduate course in introduction to special education and educational technology are not eligible for certification through the University. Students who are not eligible for Class A certification through the University of Montevallo would seek certification through the public school system. For information regarding this certification route, contact individual school systems.
Admission requirements
The CSD Department accepts primarily applicants with an undergraduate degree in SLP, Speech and Hearing Science, or a related field. However, a maximum of 3 non-background (non-SLP) undergraduate applicants may be accepted. These applicants must apply and meet the same requirements as the SLP-background students. If a non-background student is accepted and enrolls, the student will be a graduate student and thus subject to all rules and regulations of the graduate school while taking the non-background track of undergraduate courses. The non-background track is a 3-year program containing one (1) year of undergraduate coursework.
Applicants for admission to the CSD graduate program in SLP must meet all admission requirements described in the Admissions Policies and Procedures section of this Bulletin for general unconditional admission to graduate school. The admission test required by the CSD Department is the Graduate Records Examination (GRE). Students must have a competitive GRE score to be considered for entrance into the program. The CSD graduate program does not offer conditional admission to students. The CSD Department admits new full-time graduate students only in the Fall semester and limits enrollment to up to 25 new students each Fall. Applicants are reviewed according to several parameters that include GPA and GRE score.
English Proficiency for Non-Native Speakers
Prospective candidates to the Master’s program in Speech-Language Pathology must meet the graduate school requirement of a minimum score of 525 on the TOEFL. Students must obtain a score of 27 or better on the iBT speaking subtest of the TOEFL, or a 50 or better on the Test of Spoken English. For more information on the TOEFL, visit www.toefl.org.
All application information, including one copy of transcripts for all undergraduate work attempted, should be sent to Graduate Admissions and Records, where it is processed and then forwarded to the CSD Department. Completed applications should be received in Graduate Admissions and Records by March 1 (or the following Monday by 5 p.m. if the first day of March falls on a weekend) to meet the deadline for Fall-term admission consideration. Review of applicants will begin February 15 and will continue until the cohort is filled. Initial acceptance letters will be mailed by early April. Students who are approved will have two weeks in which to notify the Department by letter of their acceptance of a position in the graduate program. If students fail to accept, those open positions will be offered to other applicants, moving down the ranking of admission scores.
CSD Department Policies and Procedures
- All academic and practicum requirements of graduate students meet CAA program accreditation standards. The SLP graduate program involves five semesters of full-time work, including a summer term that includes courses in both Summer I and Summer II. The typical graduation date would be May of the second year.
- Graduate SLP students will complete a minimum of 400 clock hours of clinical practicum (375 in direct clinical contact; 25 in observation), of which a minimum of 325 clock hours will be at the graduate level. Students may bring clinical practicum hours from their undergraduate program if they were properly supervised and meet all other ASHA accreditation standards. Clock hours will be divided into specified amounts of evaluation and treatment with children and adults. Students transferring more than 75 graduate clock hours from another CAA-accredited institution must complete at least 325 graduate clock hours at Montevallo.
- The CSD Department has arrangements with a number of off-campus clinical facilities (e.g., hospitals, rehabilitation centers, nursing homes, public schools, etc.) where students may obtain properly supervised clinical practicum hours. During the first Fall, Spring, and Summer semesters, SLP graduate students obtain practicum experience primarily within the Speech and Hearing Center. During the fall term of the second year, graduate students are assigned part-time to approved off-campus sites. During the Spring term of the second year, graduate students are assigned to approved full-time off-campus externships. Students work in both public schools and medical settings for their externships. Because there are no academic courses during the externship, students may arrange an externship outside the local area with approval of the clinic director. If going outside the local area to supervisors with no previous contracts with the University, the signed contracts must be returned to the department by Oct. 1 prior to the spring externship.
- 4. Each graduate student is assigned to a faculty academic adviser who will guide the student through his/her entire academic and clinical program. However, fulfillment of all requirements for the graduate degree, the ASHA CCC, the state license, and teacher certification is the responsibility of the student.
Degree Requirements for Graduate SLP students
- The Master of Science degree in SLP requires that the student satisfactorily complete an integrated program with a minimum of 75 semester hours (including combined undergraduate and graduate courses). The Master of Science (non-thesis) program includes 41 graduate hours of required coursework plus clinical practicum. (Specific coursework and practicum categories follow.) The Master of Science thesis program includes 41 graduate hours of required coursework, and up to five thesis hours and a clinical practicum.
- Following is a listing of academic coursework and clinical practicum requirements:
Academic Coursework: 75 semester credit hours (SCH)
- Basic Science Coursework/Basic Sciences
Transcript credit for each of the following areas: biological sciences, physical sciences, social/behavioral sciences, and mathematics/statistics
- Basic Human Communication Processes
Must have knowledge of basic human communication and swallowing processes, including their biological, neurological, acoustic, psychological, developmental, and linguistic and cultural bases. Must have undergraduate speech and hearing transcript credit.
- Professional Coursework
Must demonstrate knowledge of the nature of speech, language, hearing, and communication disorders and differences and swallowing disorders, including the etiologies, characteristics, anatomical/physiological, acoustic, psychological, developmental, and linguistic and cultural correlates. Specific knowledge must be demonstrated in the following areas:
• articulation
• fluency
• voice and resonance
• receptive and expressive language in speaking, listening, reading, writing, and manual modalities
• hearing
• swallowing
• cognitive aspects of communication
• social aspects of communication
• communication modalities
Supervised Clinical Observation and Practicum: 400 clock hours (CH)
- Clinical Observation (25 CH)
- Clinical Practicum (400 total CH)
- 325 CH at graduate level in SLP
- Graduate SLP students must pass the departmental comprehensive examination for graduation with the M.S. degree. Students take this examination during the Fall semester of their second year of the program, and a passing score will allow them to meet their expected May graduation date. Students in the thesis program submit a thesis in lieu of taking a comprehensive exam.
Graduate CurriculumSpeech-Language Pathology
The curriculum for the Master of Science in Speech-Language Pathology is designed as a five-semester (including one summer session with two terms; Summer I and Summer II) course of study for full-time students. The course sequence was approved by the CSD graduate faculty and is monitored for the student by the graduate adviser. Students typically have a clinic practice assignment each term. The Spring semester of the second year is a full-time off-campus clinical externship.
Curriculum Outline (41–47 credit hours required)
CSD 500 Thesis
CSD 501 Neuroscience for Speech, Language, and Hearing
CSD 502 Research in Speech-Language Pathology
CSD 511 Language Development and Disorders:
Birth to Five
CSD 512 School Age Language and Literacy
CSD 514 Professional Issues
CSD 530 Introduction to Dysphagia
CSD 534 Motor Speech Disorders
CSD 539 Augmentative and Alternative
Communication
CSD 540 Acquired Cognitive-Communicative Disorders in Adults
CSD 542 Seminar in Cleft Palate and Syndromes
CSD 543 Seminar in Stuttering
CSD 545 Seminar in Voice Disorders
CSD 546 Seminar in Aphasia and Related
Neurogenic Disorders
CSD 547 Speech Sound Disorders
CSD 549 Principles of Assessment and Diagnosis
CSD 579 Advanced Clinical Practice in Speech-Language
Pathology (15 hours, including 9-hour externship)
Departmental Courses
Communication Science and Disorders (CSD)
| 500 |
Thesis |
1–2 credit hours |
| 501 |
Neuroscience for Speech, Language, and Hearing |
3 credit hours |
| 502 |
Research in Speech-Language Pathology |
3 credit hours |
| 511 |
Language Development and Disorders: Birth to Five |
3 credit hours |
| 512 |
School Age Language and Literacy |
3 credit hours |
| 514 |
Professional Issues |
1 credit hour |
| 530 |
Introduction to Dysphagia |
3 credit hours |
| 531 |
Directed Independent Study |
1–3 credit hours |
| 534 |
Motor Speech Disorders |
3 credit hours |
| 539 |
Augmentative and Alternative Communication |
3 credit hours |
| 540 |
Acquired Cognitive-Communicative Disorders in Adults |
3 credit hours |
| 542 |
Seminar in Cleft Palate and Syndromes |
2 credit hours |
| 543 |
Seminar in Stuttering |
3 credit hours |
| 545 |
Seminar in Voice Disorders |
3 credit hours |
| 546 |
Seminar in Aphasia and Related Neurogenic Disorders |
3 credit hours |
| 547 |
Speech Sound Disorders |
3 credit hours |
| 548 |
Seminar in Communication Disorders |
1–2 credit hours |
| 549 |
Principles of Assessment and Diagnosis |
2 credit hours |
| 579 |
Advanced Clinical Practice in Speech-Language Pathology |
1–9 credit hours |
English
Paul D. Mahaffey,Department Chair
Comer Hall, Extension 6420
e-mail:
mahaffey@montevallo.edu
Stephanie L. Batkie, Graduate Coordinator
Comer Hall, Extension 6420
e-mail:
sbatkie@montevallo.edu
The English Department offers the Master of Arts degree, as well as courses for the Language-Arts concentration in the M.Ed. in Secondary Education. In reviewing applicants, the Department’s Graduate Committee seeks to identify students who will be fully engaged in the program and who will contribute actively to the scholarly and creative efforts of the Department and the discipline. In addition to meeting the University’s minimum standards for enrollment in the graduate program (GPA and GRE or MAT scores), the top applicants will hold a B.A. in English (or equivalent credit hours) and will submit two satisfactory letters of reference from current or past professors (or others familiar with the applicant’s scholarly potential) and a thoughtful cover letter (addressed to the Graduate Coordinator) outlining their reasons for pursuing the M.A. in English. Applicants must also submit a writing sample. The Graduate Committee will carefully consider all information when making its decision.
For the Master of Arts in English, a student will select, in consultation with the Graduate Coordinator, a total of 30 semester hours of graduate courses. The courses must be taken in the English department unless deemed appropriate by the Graduate Coordinator, and it is recommended that 6 of these hours be taken in graduate seminars (ENG 590). Additionally, the student must enroll in ENG 500 (Introduction to Graduate Studies) during the first Fall Semester of their graduate study. Any exception must be approved by the department. The remaining 6 hours of the degree are earned by a Master’s Thesis and are directed by the student’s chosen thesis adviser. At the end of the program, the student will present the thesis in a public defense before members of their advising committee and the department at large.
Departmental Courses
English (ENG)
| 500 |
Introduction to Graduate Studies |
3 credit hours |
| 504 |
Literature for Young Adults |
3 credit hours |
| 505 |
Studies in One or Two Authors |
3 credit hours |
| 508 |
Practicum in Writing Center Tutoring |
1–3 credit hours |
| 511 |
Studies in Drama |
3 credit hours |
| 512 |
Studies in Poetry |
3 credit hours |
| 513 |
Studies in the Novel |
3 credit hours |
| 514 |
Studies in Short Fiction |
3 credit hours |
| 515 |
Studies in Non-Fiction |
3 credit hours |
| 519 |
Special Topics in Genre |
3 credit hours |
| 523 |
Medieval Literature |
3 credit hours |
| 524 |
Early Modern Literature |
3 credit hours |
| 525 |
Restoration and 18th-Century Literature |
3 credit hours |
| 526 |
The Romantic Period |
3 credit hours |
| 527 |
The Victorian Period |
3 credit hours |
| 528 |
Modern Literature |
3 credit hours |
| 531 |
American Literature to 1865 |
3 credit hours |
| 532 |
American Literature After 1865 |
3 credit hours |
| 539 |
Special Topics in Literature |
3 credit hours |
| 552 |
Studies in Critical Theory |
3 credit hours |
| 554 |
Studies in Composition and Rhetoric |
3 credit hours |
| 555 |
Advanced English Grammar |
3 credit hours |
| 561 |
Advanced Creative Writing |
3 credit hours |
| 571 |
African American Literature |
3 credit hours |
| 572 |
Literature of Plural America |
3 credit hours |
| 573 |
Post-Colonial Literature |
3 credit hours |
| 574 |
Anglophone Literature |
3 credit hours |
| 575 |
Literature by Women |
3 credit hours |
| 589 |
Selected Topics in Literature and Language |
1–6 credit hours |
| 590 |
Graduate Seminar |
3 credit hours |
| 599 |
Independent Study |
3–6 credit hours |
| 699 |
Thesis |
3–6 credit hours |
Departmental Courses
Philosophy (PHIL)
| 565 |
Special Topics in Aesthetics |
3 credit hours |
Updated January 31, 2013: Text in the English Proficiency for Non-Native Speakers section of Communication Science and Disorders has been changed to reflect the need for one transcript. Previously, two transcripts were required.