Graduate Studies
The graduate program in French at the °µÍø½ûÇø offers students the opportunity to pursue their interest in literature and culture, working with faculty members who produce distinguished scholarship in a broad variety of fields. At the MA level, students are encouraged to take courses in many of those fields, and to become acquainted with a diversity of critical and theoretical approaches. At the PhD level, students are able to focus closely upon questions that fuel their intellectual curiosity, and to make their first major statements as young scholars. Entering students will discover in this program a community where the life of the mind is taken seriously, where hard work is valued, and where vigorous, critical inquiry is applauded.
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Masters Degree
For the MA, students compete two years of coursework prior to taking a comprehensive series of written and oral exams. The exams are based on a reading list given to all students upon entry. Check our site for application information.
PhD
For PhD students, an additional year of coursework is followed by a year of reading and study in preparation for the PhD oral and written exams. These exams are based on a personally designed set of questions and interests unique to each student. Students then proceed to the writing of the dissertation, completing the entire program in six years.
Teaching and Financial Support
Students are typically offered a teaching appointment to provide financial support during their studies. This can vary from year to year based on funding levels. Check with the department for more details.
Additional funding sources can also be found on the Graduate School's funding website.
The department provides mandatory seminars on teacher training. In addition to teaching workshops, the program offers the chance to be a lead teacher in the department. The French Department participates in CU’s innovative Graduate Teacher Program, which has been cited as a national model. For advanced students, the program provides the opportunity to visit many other campuses in the state to get a better sense of the academic world and job market.
Employment and Placement
Each year, the department offers a series of employment workshops for advanced students. Since 1993, among the candidates who did national job searches, all were able to find employment at the university level. Job offers were received from institutions such as University of Nevada, Temple University, University of Wyoming, Yale University, Kansas State University, Case Western Reserve University, St. Mary’s College, Lafayette College, Lewis and Clark College, College of Charleston and University of North Carolina.
Student with MAs from the department who have elected to apply elsewhere have gone on to institutions such as University of Pennsylvania, Stanford, Yale, UC-Berkeley, Johns Hopkins and Princeton.
On-Campus Resources
Graduate students are required to take a number of courses outside the department for their degrees, and have wide freedom in choosing these courses (in consultation with the Associate Chair of Graduate Studies).
The department, the Center for Humanities and the Arts and the Graduate School offer many grants and fellowships of various amounts to help fund graduate student travel, conference attendance, and research.
Entering students may also be eligible for a series of fellowships. Nominations are made automatically by the department, with no application required by the student.
Educational Opportunities Abroad
The department has year-long exchange programs in conjunction with French universities. Outside teaching programs such as (Teaching Assistant Program in France) are also encouraged.
University of Colorado
The University enrolls approximately 30,000 students. It was recently named one of the top 10 public universities in the country, and one of the top three up-and-coming public universities. The several-million-volume library is the largest in the region by far, and the university is a leader in adapting the newest advances in technology towards teaching and research. The University has recently made a major commitment to the humanities, including the establishment of the new Center for Humanities and the Arts and the construction of a new high-tech humanities office and classroom building, which the department now occupies.
The Boulder Area
The University is situated in Boulder, a town of 100,000 at the foot of the Rocky Mountains, 30 miles from downtown Denver. As part of the greater Denver metropolitan area, Boulder enjoys the advantages of a nearby large city - symphony, opera, museums, professional sports teams, art cinemas, alternative music, and diverse dining.
Boulder itself lies less than an hour from Rocky Mountain National Park, and is surrounded by an outstanding series of open-space lands and local parks, including both prairies and mountain forests with many trails. Boulder is a center for outdoor sports and recreation, throughout summer and winter. The site of several major research labs and high-tech companies, Boulder has a highly educated population that supports a wide array of restaurants, stores and cultural events. Its excellent public transit system is free to CU students.