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General Information


  • FAS Graduate Studies
    FAS Graduate Studies has final approval over all admissions to graduate study in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) and all appointments as Teaching Assistants, Teaching Fellows, Graduate Student Assistants, FAS Fellows and Graduate Student Researchers, as well as processing all related tuition scholarships. It reviews and records the academic progress of graduate students, including the passing of comprehensive examinations, admissions to doctoral candidacy, and final oral examinations. It verifies the completion of theses and dissertations, and certifies all graduate degrees awarded in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

    FAS Graduate Studies consists of two offices: FAS Graduate Studies, Office of the Associate Dean, located in 910 Cathedral of Learning; and FAS Graduate Studies, Student Services, located in 140 Thackeray Hall.

    Questions regarding admissions, teaching and research appointments, and programs of study should be addressed first to the individual graduate department or program. Questions regarding registration, tuition scholarships for Teaching or Research Assistants, and graduate status should be addressed to FAS Graduate Studies, Student Services; 140 Thackeray Hall; (412) 624-6082. Our fax number is (412) 624-5299; our E-mail address is fasgrad@pitt.edu. FAS Graduate Studies also maintains a World Wide Web site at http://www.pitt.edu/~fasgrad to provide information to prospective and current graduate students.

  • Accreditation
    The University of Pittsburgh, including the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and all four regional campuses, is accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools, Commission on Higher Education. For additional departmental accreditation, see departmental listings.

     

  • The University of Pittsburgh
    Founded in 1787, the University of Pittsburgh is one of the oldest institutions of higher education west of the Allegheny Mountains. It is an independent, state-related, non-sectarian, coeducational institution offering a variety of undergraduate, graduate, and adult education programs. The main campus occupies 90 buildings, among them the 42-story Cathedral of Learning, and is located in Oakland, the cultural heart of Pittsburgh.

    Graduate degrees have been conferred since 1836, when two students received the Master of Arts degree. The first PhD program was developed in 1884. The University now offers graduate programs in 30 departments and 8 programs within Arts and Sciences, and in 13 professional schools. In recognition of the strength of its graduate programs, the University was elected in 1974 to the Association of American Universities, an organization of the 58 most respected graduate and research institutions in North America. Total enrollment at the Pittsburgh campus during the regular academic year is approximately 25,000, of which nearly 10,000 are graduate and professional students. Approximately 2,000 students are active in graduate programs within Arts and Sciences.

     

  • Cultural and Recreational Resources of the City
    The cultural and recreational opportunities offered by Pittsburgh are rich in variety and easily accessible to students. Within walking distance of the University are theaters, art galleries, museums, libraries, and concert halls. National touring shows add to the attractiveness of the impressive permanent collections of the Carnegie Museum of Art and Museum of Natural History, adjacent to the University. The Chamber Music Society offers the finest groups at reasonable prices in a concert hall near campus. The University's Department of Theatre Arts presents outstanding productions in its campus-based theater. In nearby downtown Pittsburgh, students can enjoy performances of the worldrenowned Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, the Pittsburgh Opera, and the Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre, as well as concerts and live theater productions.

    Pittsburgh has consistently been named one of the nation's most livable cities in various national surveys. For sports enthusiasts, the city offers professional football, hockey, and baseball teams, and the University has nationally recognized teams in football and basketball. An Olympic-size swimming pool and a large gym are used for recreation by students and faculty. The 456-acre Schenley Park, adjacent to the main campus, has facilities for ice skating, cross-country skiing, bicycling, golf, tennis, and picnicking. Schenley Park is also the site of the Phipps Conservatory. State recreational parks in the outlying areas of Pittsburgh offer swimming, hiking, and sailing. The mountains and rivers of western Pennsylvania and West Virginia are famous for white-water rafting, back-packing, camping, and hiking in summer and for cross-country and downhill skiing in the winter.

    Most students and many faculty live within walking distance of the University, either in Oakland, Squirrel Hill, or Shadyside. These areas abound in ethnic restaurants and in shops of all varieties, reflecting the cosmopolitan background of the residents.

    Most people find that Pittsburgh is a friendly, warm, active, exciting, and comfortable city in which to live.


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