Jump to content

ravanana

Members
  • Posts

    2
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by ravanana

  1. @Dwar Don't let the website dissuade you, the reason they say "many students have previous graduate work or career experience" is more due to the financial structure of the masters programs and the types of students that seek public administration, public policy, and urban planning degrees.-- these degrees are usually terminal, so you're looking at people who are (generally) not academics. To clarify-- Public administration and public policy PhDs are less popular and generally have a higher contextual element/tighter focus than political science degrees. While there's plenty of room for exploration, there is a certain level of assumed knowledge or focus with those degrees-- and it usually has to do with a working knowledge of the field rather than an academic understanding of mechanisms and processes. Unlike poli sci, administration is interested in how things actually work or why things fail where political science's focus on systemic processes and mechanisms (of course poli sci is explored in PA/PP, but usually as a practical guide for making change happen). In any public administration school, you're probably going to be asked for applied knowledge: "how would you or have you used this in the workplace, tell me about a time when...," this is why many programs steer toward working professionals or people who have recently exited the workforce and are looking for a new path or a credential to get a better job. Specific to NYU (why "many students have work experience")- The MPA program features a lot of current working professionals and people who may have worked for a few years (read: peace corps volunteers and political organizers/field teams) before deciding to go back to school. The reason for so many people with work experience is because many organizations foot the bill for their employees' education at Wagner. While PhDs are fully funded by the university, the vast majority of masters-level full-time students are privately funded by external donors/scholarships or personally funded/on loans. Specific to NYU (growing young-20s student base)-Wagner has a growing population of students coming straight from undergrad-- I did when I began in 2017 and a larger proportion of the 2018 cohort came straight from undergrad study than previous cohorts, they also launched a dual degree program for NYU undergrads, so the number of people in their young 20s in the MPA program has definitely grown over the past few years. I can't speak to the experience or CVs of PhD students in the department, but I can tell you that the Wagner community is welcoming to people coming straight out of undergrad. Happy to discuss NYUs program with you further/answer any specific questions you may have. Feel free to DM me!
  2. I don't know of a PhD ranking for public policy and administration programs (for the same reason you mentioned), if I were you, I would look to rankings for MPA/MPP programs and then check the faculty at those institutions to determine research activities and background for the professors. I would also consider relative ranking of other departments at the university as you would benefit from a diversity of courses to broaden your academic study in a PhD program. I can speak to NYU's Public Administration program (offered through NYU Wagner) because I am a current MPA student. At NYU Wagner, the faculty come from a diverse array of academic and career fields (business, government, social sciences, econ, etc), and the curriculum reflects this. A vast majority of the faculty have PhDs and many are very active in research and work closely with students who serve as research assistants. Wagner makes it easy for students to take courses across the university as well, which means that students have access to researchers at the top of their field across many departments (NYU has high rankings across the board). https://wagner.nyu.edu/education/degrees/doctorate-public-administration
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. See our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use