• Request Info
  • Visit
  • Apply
  • Give
  • Request Info
  • Visit
  • Apply
  • Give

Search

  • A-Z Index
  • Map

School of Information Sciences

  • Undergraduate Programs
    • Major & Concentrations
    • Minors
    • Online Major
    • Transfer Students
    • Financial Support
  • Graduate Programs
    • Master’s Programs
    • Doctoral Program
    • Certificate Programs
    • School Library Media Licensure
    • Graduate Financial Support
  • Student Experience
    • Undergraduate Career Development
    • Graduate Career Development
    • Student Organizations
    • Labs & Facilities
  • Alumni & Friends
    • Alumni Engagement
    • Featured Alumni
    • Alumni Directory
    • Advisory Board
  • About Information Sciences
    • Overview
    • Directory
    • Faculty Showcase
    • Diversity, Equity, Inclusion
    • Visit Us
  1. Home
  2. Graduate Programs
  3. Doctoral Program
Doctoral students in a class.

Research, Mentorship, Community

Students pursuing a doctoral degree from the College of Communication and Information with an information sciences concentration have a flexible interdisciplinary curriculum that empowers them to approach research and learning from a holistic perspective and prepares them for research, teaching, service, and administration. Students not only enjoy the benefits of a world-renown information sciences doctoral program, but also a community that values diversity, inclusion and equal opportunity for all.

PhD admission information and requirements

Courses

Research

The mentoring offered by Dr. Awa Zhu and my committee members, as well as the financial support provided by the School of Information Sciences and College of Communication and Information, gave me the tools necessary for realizing my doctoral dreams.”

Joseph Winberry, PhD

Assistant Professor

University of North Carolina’s School of Information and Library Science

Courses

Doctoral students are required to take a set of core, concentration, and cognate courses to complete CCI’s interdisciplinary doctoral degree. Core courses are taught by faculty from across the college. These courses are designed to help doctoral students understand the common threads across disciplinary areas in communication and information that are found in literature, theories, and methods to integrate knowledge and skill set. 

Concentration courses are taught by faculty in each of the 4 schools. Most students define their concentration in terms of one of the disciplinary areas within the college based upon their research focus in advertising, communication studies, information sciences, journalism and media, or public relations. 

Cognate courses are most often a set of courses from a discipline outside the college. Frequent cognate areas include marketing, sociology, political science, psychology, education, etc., and some students define their cognates in a more interdisciplinary way, taking courses from across the university in broad areas. 

Doctoral students focus on a disciplinary area of study, meaning that the concentration and cognate courses vary for each student, depending upon the doctoral student’s research focus. Below is an example of courses a doctoral student would typically take in their first year.

Fall Semester: 

  • CCI 605 Philosophical and Theoretical Foundations of Communication and Information (3) 
  • CCI 620 Professional Development Seminar (1)  
  • CCI 631 Quantitative Com & Info Research Methods I (3) 
  • Graduate Level Statistics Course (CCI 611 or advanced statistics course) or course in Concentration Area (3) 

Spring Semester

  • CCI 635 Qualitative Com & Info Research Methods I (3) 
  • CCI 620 Professional Development Seminar (1)  
  • Concentration Area (CCI Level) (3) or Cognate area 
  • Theory Course in Concentration area (3)  

Theory Courses

Students choose one from the following theory courses in their concentration area: 

  • ADVT 680 Mass Communication Theory (cross-listed with JREM 680 and PBRL 680) 
  • CMST 680 Communication Studies Theory 
  • INSC 680 Information Science Theory 
  • JREM 680 Mass Communication Theory (cross-listed with ADVT 680, PBRL 680) 
  • PBRL 680 Mass Communication Theory (cross-listed with ADVT 680, JREM 680)

Research at the School of Information Sciences

As part of a Research 1 institution, our faculty is constantly engaged in innovative and cutting-edge research. Students working with faculty will learn how to conduct peer-reviewed academic research on a wide range of media-connected topics from sports communication to new media to political communication. Check out our faculty showcase to explore recent research produced by our faculty. Doctoral students also have the opportunity to seek support for research from the College of Communication and Information’s Research and Innovation Center (RIC).

We’re Here to Help!

Wade Bishop

Wade Bishop

Professor & Director of Graduate Studies

bbisho13@utk.edu

865-974-2775

Profile

Virginia Kupritz

Virginia Kupritz

Associate Dean for Graduate Programs

ginger1@utk.edu

Margaret Taylor

Margaret Taylor

Administrative Specialist III

mtaylor8@utk.edu


More Graduate Studies Resources

The Graduate School at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville

UT Office of Graduate Admissions

2023-2024 Graduate Course Catalog

International Student and Scholar Services

A group of students sit in the Communication and Information fourth-floor lobby.

School of Information Sciences

451 Communication & Information Building
1345 Circle Park Drive
Knoxville, TN 37996-0324
Phone: 865-974-2148
Email: sis@utk.edu

Twitter Facebook YouTube Instagram
iSchools logo

The University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Knoxville, Tennessee 37996
865-974-1000

The flagship campus of the University of Tennessee System and partner in the Tennessee Transfer Pathway.

ADA Privacy Safety Title IX