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The DPhil in Education is intended to provide graduates with a wide range of research skills, as well as in-depth knowledge, understanding and expertise in their chosen field of research.
The most recent Oxford University Destination of Leavers from Higher Education Survey made contact with 635 master's course students who graduated from the Department of Education between 2012 and 2014. Fully 90.2% of alumni were in work and 5.8% in further study with only 2.0% looking for work, ranking the department in the best 3 of the 20 departments in Oxford's Social Sciences Division.
Past DPhil students from the Department of Education have gone on to academic and research careers at universities in the UK (eg Oxford, Edinburgh, Warwick, UCL, King's College, St. Mary's, Liverpool) and across the world (eg Stanford, Princeton, MIT, Hong Kong, Chile), or are employed across a wide range of other sectors such as policy for government departments or NGOs, international organisations such as OECD, think tanks and administration at local and national levels. The department’s ‘Conversations with Alumni’ feature includes interviews with two DPhil alumni on their career paths after Oxford.
There are full-time and part-time routes available. Currently the overall expected contact time for the part-time route is thirty days at Oxford per year, but the majority of this will take place across the three eight week terms, and will include supervision meetings and core research training. In the first year, part-time students will normally be expected to be in department every Thursday during term time. In later years there is greater flexibility and contact time will be agreed between the student and their supervisor.
The department's doctoral students develop their skills through a range of research methods and skills training courses in their first year. At the heart of the skills provision is the Research Training Seminar, where students present and develop their research ideas and proposals with the benefit of feedback and support from their peers.
You will work closely with supervisors on literature review and study design for the thesis, and you are encouraged to make the most of the doctoral training and research methods provision available across the Social Sciences Division.
You can also join one or more of the department's research groups, becoming part of a vibrant educational research community with an active set of doctoral student-led events, seminars and conferences. All DPhil students are given opportunities to present their work at a variety of seminars and sessions in the department.
You will complete appropriate coursework tasks, and your academic progress is assessed at an interview at the end of the first year.
Applicants are normally expected to be predicted or have achieved a first-class or strong upper second-class undergraduate degree with honours (or equivalent international qualifications), as a minimum, in a relevant subject, preferably in the social sciences.
For applicants with a degree from the USA, the minimum GPA sought is 3.6 out of 4.0.
You will have achieved or be on course to achieve a master's degree (normally a mark of at least 68 or a GPA of 3.6 or equivalent and at least 68 in your dissertation) in a relevant subject.
If you hold non-UK qualifications and wish to check how your qualifications match these requirements, you can contact the National Recognition Information Centre for the United Kingdom (UK NARIC).
No Graduate Record Examination (GRE) or GMAT scores are sought.
- Official transcript(s)
- CV/résumé
- Personal statement and research proposal:Statement of one to two pages and proposal of 2,500 words
- Written work:Two essays of 2,000 words each
- References/letters of recommendation:Three overall, generally academic
ENGLISH LANGUAGE REQUIREMENTS
Higher level
est |
Standard level scores |
Higher level scores |
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IELTS Academic |
7.0 | Minimum 6.5 per component | 7.5 | Minimum 7.0 per component |
TOEFL iBT |
100 |
Minimum component scores:
|
110 |
Minimum component scores:
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Cambridge Certificate of Proficiency in English (CPE) | 185 |
Minimum 176 per component |
191 |
Minimum 185 per component |
Cambridge Certificate of Advanced English (CAE) | 185 |
Minimum 176 per component |
191 |
Minimum 185 per component |
- Global Education
- Hill Foundation Scholarships
- A number of Research Council awards are available each year from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), and Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC).