AHA Directory of History Departments and Organizations
Institution Details
Pauli Murray [Hamilton] Hall, CB #3195
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3195
Phone: 919.962.2115
Fax: 919.962.1403
Email: history@unc.edu
Website: https://history.unc.edu/
The Department of History at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill is an open learning community, dedicated to rigorous research and critical inquiry into the whole spectrum of human experiences across time and space.
Director of Graduate Studies: Eren Tasar
Director of Undergraduate Studies: Katherine Turk
Degrees Offered: BA,MA,PHD
Academic Year System: SEM
Areas of Specialization: Africa/ancient/Asia, Europe/global/Latin America, military/Russian and eastern Europe, US, women and gender
In-state: $8980
Out-of-state: $36159
In-state: $12516
Out-of-state: $28764
Admissions: https://admissions.unc.edu/
Financial Aid: https://studentaid.unc.edu/
Admissions: https://gradschool.unc.edu/
Financial Aid: https://gradschool.unc.edu/
Areas of Specialization: Africa/ancient/Asia, Europe/global/Latin America, military/Russian and eastern Europe, US, women and gender
Not applicable
Doctoral Program Information
A. Program Description. The Graduate History program at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill is committed to training professional historians. Our program allows ample choice to students in designing academic programs to fit their particular interests and needs while providing students with rigorous training in US History,African History, European History, Latin American History, Asian History, Global History, Russian and East European History, Women's and Gender History, and Military History. Degree requirements and departmental culture encourage comparative and interdisciplinary study. The program promotes close mentoring relationships with faculty and sustains a lively intellectual, community among the graduate students. In the course of graduate study, our students also receive valuable teaching experience.
B. Special Programs. The resources for historical study at Chapel Hill include excellent libraries at UNC-CH and in the larger Research Triangle community. The department also has close cooperative relationships with neighboring universities including Duke and North Carolina State. Students at UNC can enroll seamlessly in classes at these neighboring schools and faculty members from these schools take an active part in the graduate history program and regularly serve on student advisory committees at Chapel Hill. The graduate program in History at UNC promotes excellence in teaching. Because demonstrated teaching ability is an increasingly important prerequisite for non-academic historians as well as college and university positions, the department provides constructive instruction in teaching. In addition to orientation programs for teaching assistants, the department has a faculty-student Committee on Teaching that hosts programs on creative pedagogy throughout the academic year. A for-credit course, which addresses syllabus planning, assignment planning, and teaching methods, is also regularly offered.
To prepare our graduates for the competitive job market, each year our faculty placement officer organizes regular workshops for graduate students planning to enter the job market covering topics such as writing job application letters, curriculum vitae and resumes, and soliciting letters of recommendation. We conduct mock interviews and encourage students to share their research in mock job talks. The placement officer typically attends the annual meeting of the American Historical Association to provide additional support for any students who have job interviews at the convention. The History Department also hosts a monthly Departmental Research Colloquium at which graduate students can present their work, hear a faculty comment, and answer questions during a discussion period. In addition, the UNC-CH History graduate program is actively helping its students to consider creative careers outside the academy through internships and opportunities to acquire skills in such as areas as the digital humanities and the information sciences. To this end we have introduced a seminar on professional development to our course offerings.
C. Financial Aid. The History Department at Chapel Hill is committed to offering financial aid to as many of the graduate students in our program as possible. Almost all entering History PhD students receive of five years of financial support. These packages include tuition, health insurance, fees, and an annual stipend (to be $15,700 for 2021-22 academic year). The department also supplements this financial support with several years of summer funding. Exceptional applicants may be nominated for one-year and multi-year competitive and prestigious fellowships awarded by the Graduate School. These fellowships either supplement the base stipend or provide full stipend support at a higher level. The department admissions committee nominates accepted students for these fellowships based on their qualifications. To help launch dissertation research, the History Department also supports students with a research fund (currently $2,000) upon passing their comprehensive exams.
Both the department and the Graduate Student Association offer support for graduate student travel to scholarly conferences to present papers. Additional funds have been allocated for graduate students to acquire specialized skills (language skills, paleography training, etc.). In addition, the Graduate School offers funds on a competitive basis for pre-dissertation and dissertation research. Competitive fellowships for students completing their dissertations are awarded by both the Graduate School and the History Department.
D. Degree Requirements. Candidates for the PhD degree who enter with a B.A. typically complete 30 credit hours and write a thesis during their first two years in the program. Those who arrive with an MA must take 15 credit hours minimum by the time they defend their dissertations. Requirements for the MA degree are typically completed by the end of the third semester. Comprehensive exams and the dissertation prospectus defense are completed by the end of the sixth semester of study. For students entering with an MA, comprehensive exams and prospectus defense should occur by the end of the fourth semester. In addition, PhD candidates must also satisfy language and technical competency requirements appropriate to their particular fields of study by the time they take comprehensive exams. Successful completion of these requirements and the comprehensive exams and prospectus defense allows candidates to pursue dissertation research and writing, normally a three-year process.
Directory of History Dissertations
Doctoral Program Statistics 2024-25:
PhD students currently enrolled: 92
PhD applications received: 184
New PhD students: 16
% of students receiving tuition waivers: 0
% of students receiving stipends: 71
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