Admission requirements
Applicants to the doctoral program must meet requirements for admission to the Toulouse Graduate School. The general requirements for admission are described in the College of Education section.
A completed application for admission to the doctoral program, including the names of three professional references, must be submitted to the program.
Applicants must submit evidence of holding a master’s degree from an accredited college or university and have a grade point average of 3.5 or higher on all graduate credit hours. Applicants are expected to meet requirements of a CACREP-accredited master’s degree in counseling. Applicants who do not meet this criterion must complete deficiency course work to meet CACREP-equivalent standards. Applicants must submit GRE scores and any program-specific admission materials. Contact the academic program for information concerning holistic admissions process including possible deficiency course work.
The admission examination and interview process for the counseling program are administered once each year early in the spring term/semester for acceptance to the doctoral program cohort for the summer semester. All required admission materials must be filed in the program office by the deadline indicated on the department web site, usually November 30. All academic prerequisites must be completed prior to enrolling in the first semester of required doctoral course work. Contact program for specific requirements, deadlines and academic schedules.
Upon successful completion of the admission examination and interview process, applicants will be offered provisional admission pending the Counseling Program’s receipt of a satisfactory Criminal History Background Check (CHBC). Admission to the counseling doctoral program is provisional until the student’s progress is evaluated by the counseling faculty upon completion of the first year of required core courses. The student’s progress is evaluated on the basis of the demonstration of academic performance, professional development and personal development required for success as a professional counselor and counselor educator. After the initial progress review, the counseling faculty will recommend that the student continue or continue with specific conditions attached, or reserves the right to withdraw the student from the program.
Following this initial evaluation, the student will be routinely evaluated on the criteria of academic performance, professional development and personal development to determine of progress is adequate, if remedial work is needed or if the student should be withdrawn from the program.