City and Regional Planning - Graduate Programs
Master’s Degrees
- City & Regional Planning, MCRP
Doctoral Degree
- Urban Planning and Public Policy, Ph.D.
Certificates
- Developmental Review Certificate
- Geographical Information Systems Certificate
General
Located in the heart of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, the fourth largest metropolitan region in the U.S., the City and Regional Planning Master’s Degree Program (MCRP) is situated in an optimal laboratory to study, analyze, and provide planning solutions to contemporary urban problems, such as sprawl, pollution, equity, carbon footprints, economic development, aging infrastructure, and, more generally, contributing to the development of sustainable cities and regions.
The program resides in the School of Urban and Public Affairs’ (SUPA) whose Institute of Urban Studies provides student research and practical experience through the professional planning services it offers to cities across the state of Texas.
Mission
The MCRP program prepares students for careers as professional planners with public, private and nonprofit organizations. It does this by training students to apply planning theory, knowledge, techniques, and skills to “real world” planning problems through coursework, studios, and internship opportunities.
UTA’s City and Regional Planning Master’s Degree Program is accredited by the Planning Accreditation Board (PAB). The program’s mission, goals and objectives, and accreditation efforts are shaped in consultation with the MCRP Advisory Board composed of alumni and area practitioners.
Admissions Requirements
The MCRP program takes a holistic approach to the application review process. Each applicant file is reviewed individually with equal consideration given to the quantitative and qualitative aspects of the student’s record. A complete application includes:
- Undergraduate Grade Point Average (GPA): The undergraduate GPA based on the last 60 hours of course work as calculated by the Graduate Admissions from the official transcript.
- Graduate Record Exam (GRE) scores: Verbal, Quantitative, and Writing (Exceptions: Outstanding UT Arlington graduates may qualify for GRE waiver providing they meet certain requirements)
- Letters of Recommendation attesting to the applicant’s potential to do Master’s-level work and complete the program. Letters for Master’s programs should be from professors or supervisors at work (download Letter of Recommendation form)
- Essay by applicant approximately one double-spaced page in length (approximately 250 words). The Essay is considered both for its content and quality of writing. The Essay should address the following questions: 1. Why do you want to earn a Master’s degree in the program for which you are applying? 2. What relevant background and experience do you bring to the program? The essay can also include other concerns you’d like to bring to the attention of the Graduate Advisor or Master’s Admissions Committee.
- Non-native English speakers only: TOEFL or IELTS scores (Exceptions: An applicant holding either a Bachelor’s or a Master’s degree from a regionally accredited U.S. college or university is not required to submit a TOEFL, TOEFL iBT, or IELTS score for admission purposes.)
Waivers
- Submission of GRE scores may be waived for applicants to SUPA master’s programs. The student must have graduated from a bachelor’s degree program at UT Arlington no more than three academic years prior to admission to the graduate program (as measured from the start of the semester for which admission is sought). Undergraduate students in their final year of study are also eligible; in such cases, admission with the GRE waiver is contingent upon successful completion of the bachelor’s degree. The student’s UT Arlington grade-point average must equal or exceed 3.0 in each of two calculations:
- in the last 60 hours of study as calculated for admission by the Graduate School;
- in all undergraduate coursework completed at UT Arlington.
- Submissions of TOEFL or IELTS scores may be waived for applicants to SUPA master’s programs who hold a Bachelor’s or Master’s degree from a regionally accredited U.S. college or university.
TYPES OF ADMISSION
Unconditional Admission
Applicants who meet all the following requirements will be considered for unconditional admission:
- Minimum Undergraduate GPA of 3.0
- A preferred minimum Verbal GRE score of 150 (450 if the test was taken before August 1, 2011), a preferred minimum Quantitative GRE score of 141 (450 if the test was taken before August 1, 2011), and a preferred minimum Writing GRE score of 4.
- Outstanding letters of recommendation
- Strong, well-written personal essay
- Non-native English speakers only: TOEFL scores of at least 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based), or 79 (iBT) with sectional scores that meet or exceed 22 Writing, 21 Speaking, 20 Reading, and 16 Listening; or, IELTS score of at least 6.5.
Probationary Admission
Applicants who do not meet all requirements for Unconditional admission will be considered for Probationary admission on the basis of the strength of all the listed admission factors. Test scores will not constitute the sole or primary basis for ending consideration of an applicant. Under Probationary admission, special course requirements or other conditions may be imposed by the SUPA Master’s Admissions Committee. Applicants who meet all the standards for Unconditional admission except for deficiency in Writing GRE score will be considered for Probationary Admission conditional on completing an approved Writing course in their first semester.
- Other types of admission decisions pertaining to Master’s applicants:
- Deferred: Applicants who are unable to supply required application materials, or who must complete additional preparatory work before their admissibility can be determined, may be deferred until records are complete.
- Provisional: Applicants who are unable to supply all required documentation prior to the admission deadline but who otherwise appear to meet admission requirements may be granted Provisional admission pending submission of complete and satisfactory credentials before the end of the semester in which they have registered in a Provisional status.
- Denied: Applicants who fail to meet more than one of the admission requirements and for whom the SUPA Master’s Admission Committee finds there is insufficient basis to justify any other kind of admission will be Denied admission. As the admission process is competitive, applicants meeting basic admission requirements who are less well qualified than other applicants may also be denied admission.
Scholarship and Fellowship Criteria
- Graduate students with a GPA of 3.0 or better who are enrolled in six hours or more are eligible to apply for competitive scholarships and fellowships.
- Scholarships and fellowships for Master’s and Doctoral students will be competitively awarded based on consideration of the all admission criteria assessed by their admitting programs.
SUPA Inadequate Academic Progress Point System
A student may be subject to dismissal from the program if they accumulate 4 deficiency points during their Master’s degree or their Ph.D. Students who complete a Master’s degree at SUPA will not carry deficiency points into their Ph.D. work. Deficiency points may not be removed from a student’s record by repeating a course or additional coursework.
D = 2 deficiency points
F = 3 deficiency points
I = 1 deficiency point
W = 0.5 deficiency point
Master's Degree Curriculum
The program’s curriculum imparts knowledge, skills and values necessary for entering the planning profession. The degree requires completion of 48 hours of study. The generalist core (33 hrs Professional Report or 36 hrs Thesis) is organized into three knowledge tiers: Theory (9 hrs), Analysis and Techniques (9 hrs), and Implementation and Plan Making (12 hrs), plus a Professional Report (3 hrs) or Thesis (6 hrs).
Core Courses | ||
CIRP 5303 | PLANNING HISTORY, THEORY AND ETHICS | 3 |
CIRP 5310 | PLANNING, URBAN DEVELOPMENT AND STRUCTURE | 3 |
CIRP 5308 | METROPOLITAN SUSTAINABILITY AND PLAN MAKING | 3 |
CIRP 5363 | LEADERSHIP AND COMMUNICATION SKILLS IN THE PLANNING PROCESS | 3 |
CIRP 5318 | TECHNIQUES OF PLANNING ANALYSIS I | 3 |
CIRP 5330 | TECHNIQUES OF PLANNING ANALYSIS II | 3 |
CIRP 5304 | PLAN IMPLEMENTATION, ZONING, AND REGULATIONS | 3 |
CIRP 5316 | LAND USE PLANNING AND THE LAW | 3 |
CIRP 5332 | PROJECT STUDIO | 3 |
CIRP 5380 | RESEARCH QUESTIONS IN PLANNING (taken in the next to last semester) | 3 |
CIRP 5397 | PROFESSIONAL REPORT | 3-6 |
or CIRP 5698 | PLANNING THESIS | |
Elective Courses | ||
Select 4-5 of the following: 1 | 12-15 | |
LAND USE, MANAGEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT | ||
URBAN REVITALIZATION | ||
TRANSPORTATION/LAND USE MODELING AND POLICY ANALYSIS | ||
ELEMENTS OF URBAN DESIGN | ||
URBAN GROWTH POLICIES | ||
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PLANNING AND POLICY | ||
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT | ||
PHYSICAL PLANNING AND URBAN DESIGN | ||
INTRODUCTION TO GREEN CITIES AND TRANSPORTATION | ||
GIS WORKSHOP (CIRP 5357 prerequisite) | ||
GIS AND SUITABILITY ANALYSIS | ||
ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS: LAWS AND PLANNING | ||
ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING | ||
TECHNIQUES OF ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT | ||
INTRODUCTION TO GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS | ||
INTERMEDIATE GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS | ||
PLANNING INTERNSHIP | ||
Total Hours | 45-51 |
1 | Other electives as approved by the Graduate Advisor |
See the program’s Graduate Advisor for a list of approved electives in each study area, or download a copy from the MCRP webpage . Other courses may be substituted upon approval of the program’s Graduate Advisor and/or Program Director.
Thesis or Professional Report (6 hours thesis students; 3 hours thesis-substitute students)
All MCRP students must enroll in CIRP 5380 RESEARCH QUESTIONS IN PLANNING in their next to last semester to prepare for the Thesis or Professional Report.
Thesis (minimum of 6 credit hours): This option is recommended for students who enjoy research and/or are interested in pursuing a career in research or private consulting, or who intend to obtain another advanced degree. However, this option is also available to students who intend to go into professional planning practice.
Thesis format and submission calendar must adhere to the Office of Graduate Studies’ thesis criteria. Thesis students identify a committee chair no later than their next to last semester and, in consultation with the chair, form a thesis committee consisting of at least three members of the SUPA Graduate Faculty. The thesis committee guides the student’s development of research question and choice of research method and analysis. Thesis students must defend their thesis in a public oral examination- open to all members of the faculty- and before all members of the student’s thesis committee. The thesis committee must have copies of the thesis at least two weeks prior to the thesis defense. All members of the student’s committee must be present at the defense. Thesis students must be enrolled in the appropriate section of CIRP 5698 PLANNING THESIS (under their committee chair) during the semester they receive advise from their chair and committee for preparing the thesis, as well as during the semester they defend their thesis. Once the student is enrolled in the thesis course, continuous enrollment is required.
Professional Report (3 credit hours): This option is recommended for students who are going into professional practice and/or who desire additional experience beyond the Project Studio course by working on a professional report. This option does not preclude professional report students the opportunity of further pursuing an advanced graduate degree. Students identify a professional report committee chair no later than their next to last semester and, in consultation with the chair, form a professional report committee consisting of at least three members of the SUPA Graduate Faculty. The professional report committee guides the student’s choice of planning project and method of analysis. Professional report students must defend their report in a public oral examination- open to all SUPA graduate faculty and students- and before all members of the student’s professional report committee. Professional Report students must be enrolled in the appropriate section (under their committee chair) of CIRP 5397 PROFESSIONAL REPORT the semester in which the professional report is defended.
Dual Degrees
To participate in the dual degree program, students must make separate application to each program and must meet the admission requirements of each program. Students must be admitted to the second program before completing more than 24 credit hours in the first program and must complete the second degree within three academic years following completion of the first. By participating in a dual degree program, students may apply 6-18 total credit hours jointly to meet the requirements of both degrees, thus reducing the total number of hours required to earn each degree separately (shared courses are subject to approval by Program Advisors of each program). Degree plans, thesis or professional report proposals, and the final thesis or report must be submitted separately for each degree and approved by Program Advisors and relevant committees of each program. The successful candidate is awarded two degrees (not one joint degree).
Those interested in the dual degree program should consult the appropriate Program Advisors for further information and review the statement on Dual Degree Programs in the general information section of the catalog.
Dual degrees can be arranged with any suitable program. Arrangements for the following dual degrees have already been made between M.C.R.P. and the relevant Program Advisors.
- M.C.R.P. and M.P.A. (Master of Public Administration)
- M.C.R.P. and M.A. (Master of Arts in Urban Affairs)
- M.C.R.P. and M.S.W. (Master of Social Work)
- M.C.R.P. and M.Arch. (Master of Architecture)*
- M.C.R.P. and M.S.L.A. (Master of Science in Landscape Architecture)
- M.C.R.P. and M.S.C.E. (Master of Science in Civil Engineering)/M.Engr. (Master of Engineering)
- M.C.R.P. and M.S.Ev.S.E. (Master of Science in Environmental Science and Engineering)
*MCRP students without a Bachelor’s degree in Architecture take Path A in the architecture program; those with an undergraduate degree take Path B. All 15 credit hours of electives in the M.Arch. program must be taken in the MCRP program. Only in special instances may students select the thesis substitute plan of the MCRP program. Student will write one thesis and the thesis supervisor should be selected from CIRP or the School of Architecture, and committee members should be selected from both faculties.
Ph.D. in Urban Planning and Public Policy (UPPP)
The UPPP Ph.D. program requires a minimum of 48 credit hours beyond the master’s degree, including 39 credit hours of coursework and a minimum of 9 dissertation credit hours. The 39 credit hours of coursework include: 6 hours of leveling courses, 9 hours in the required core of urban planning and public policy, 6 hours of methods courses and 18 hours of elected field area courses. Courses and credit hours may be waived for students with relevant previous coursework upon approval of the dissertation supervisor and program director.
Coursework in the required core, which covers core knowledge and competencies in planning and policy, as well as the courses in the selected field areas prepares students for the field exam. At the end of or after their first semester, students select their diagnostic committee based on their interests and take a diagnostic exam. The student’s committee will then guide their course work, including any extra courses needed based on their diagnostic exam as well as dissertation proposal stages.
Application Requirements and Deadlines
Along with the Graduate School application requirements, a complete application includes:
- Official transcripts from colleges and universities attended. Information about submitting transcripts is available in the Graduate Catalog
- Official test score reports for the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) and, for international applicants, the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or the International English Language Testing System (IELTS). Information about submitting official test scores is available from the Graduate Catalog. The ETS code for UTA is 6013
- Three Letters of Recommendation. Letters should attest to the applicant’s ability to do Doctoral-level work and complete the dissertation. Letters must be from references who hold a Ph.D. degree; and
- Essay by applicant approximately one double-spaced page in length (approximately 250 words). The essay is considered both for its content and writing quality. The essay should discuss research agenda, identify the faculty you wish to work with, and state the reasons for wanting to earn the Doctoral degree.
Official transcripts and test scores must be sent directly to the Graduate School by the institution and ETS respectively. Letters of recommendation and personal essay should be sent directly to: UPPP Admissions Committee, SUPA Box 19588, Arlington TX 76019 or email to the program’s Graduate Advisor. It is the applicant’s responsibility to ensure all application materials are received by the application deadline. Incomplete applications or applications received after the deadline could be deferred.
UPPP program admits doctoral students for Fall and Spring semester admissions. The application deadline for the UPPP program is February 1st for Fall semester and July 1st for spring semester.
Admission Criteria
Applicants are typically admitted unconditionally with a graduate GPA of 3.6, a Verbal GRE score of at least 153 (500 if test was taken before August 1, 2011) and a Quantitative GRE score of at least 144 (500 if test was taken before August 1, 2011). GRE requirements are applied flexibly as different areas of study vary in the relative importance of quantitative and verbal analysis. Applicants should contact the Graduate Advisor if uncertain whether their area of primary interest requires more strength in either quantitative or verbal analysis.
Applicants with an interest in areas with quantitative emphasis typically meet the minimum Quantitative GRE score requirement, but may be admitted with a lower than typical GRE Verbal score. Applicants pursing study in less quantitative but more verbally analytic areas typically meet the GRE Verbal score minimum, but may be admitted with lower than typical GRE Quantitative scores. However, in no case will standardized test performance be the sole or primary determinant of admissibility. Strength of letters of recommendation, and quality of personal statement and Master’s degree field of study are also considered carefully.
U.S. students with a Master’s degree from an accredited U.S. institution and several years of increasing responsibilities on the job are not required to submit GRE scores. International applicants are also required to have a score of 213 or higher on the TOEFL (550 or higher on the written TOEFL; 79 or higher on TOEFL iBT).
Applicants not admitted unconditionally may be considered for admission on probation based on factors mentioned above as well as multilingual proficiency, first generation graduate student from family and community service experience. The Doctoral admissions committee will set the probationary conditions.
The admissions committee may defer the admission decision when a component of the application is incomplete. It may also admit a student provisionally when an applicant is unable to supply all required documentation prior to the admission deadline but who otherwise appears to meet admission requirements.
Curriculum and Degree Requirements: | ||
Leveling Courses (6 hours) | ||
CIRP 5303 | PLANNING HISTORY, THEORY AND ETHICS | 3 |
CIRP 5310 | PLANNING, URBAN DEVELOPMENT AND STRUCTURE | 3 |
Required Core Courses (9 credit hours) | ||
UPPP 6300 | ADVANCED URBAN THEORY | 3 |
UPPP 6311 | SPATIAL THEORY AND POLICY: URBAN FORM AND STRUCTURE | 3 |
URPA 5306 | THE URBAN ECONOMY | 3 |
Methods Courses (6 hours) | ||
CIRP 5317 | INTERMEDIATE DATA ANALYSIS | 3 |
CIRP 5346 | QUALITATIVE METHODS | 3 |
URPA 6346 | ADVANCED DATA ANALYSIS IN URBAN AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS (based on the Dissertation Committee decision) | 3 |
or UPPP 6346 | ||
Urban Planning and Public Policy Field Area Courses (18 hours) | ||
Students take 18 hours of courses in their elected field area of planning and/or policy, preparing the student for the dissertation and beyond. Courses are determined in consultation and approval with the student’s diagnostic supervisor and diagnostic committee. | ||
Students are encouraged to use faculty resources and the opportunities offered in SUPA and UTA to specialize in following field areas or their combinations: | ||
Urban Policy and Planning | ||
Physical Planning, Development and Urban Design | ||
Land Use/Transportation Analysis, Planning and policy | ||
Environmental Planning Policy/Sustainability | ||
Dissertation (minimum 9 hours) |
ORGANIZATION
UPPP Diagnostic
When students are admitted into the UPPP program, a Graduate advisor will advise them regarding first semester courses and registration and will assign them an advisor based on the student’s interest area and/or Statement Letter. Students take a diagnostic exam toward the end of their first semester or early in their second semester so that their three-member Diagnostic Supervisory Committee can be selected and can guide them in their selection of courses thereafter. As a part of this process, the university requires that “a student and his/her advisor should complete the Milestone form during the student’s first term of study and it must be completed before the end of the second semester of enrollment.” The school will keep a copy of the completed form on file and the student will be provided a copy for his/her records.
Deficiency & Field Courses
The Supervisory Committee decides and provides guidance on needed field areas and additional coursework based on the deficiencies noted during the diagnostic process as well as during the proposal preparation and proposal defense stages.
Deficiency courses may include courses from the selected field area and other needed courses. The final decision on deficiencies will be determined in the proposal defense session.
Waivers or Substitutions
Based on UT Arlington regulations, no course that has been applied to any degree, at any graduate or undergraduate institution, may be applied to any other degree, either directly or by substitution. Graduate-level coursework completed in the student’s major area of doctoral study at institutions of recognized standing that grant doctoral degrees in those subject areas may serve to establish the student’s competency in equivalent UTA courses. Competency demonstrated by successful completion of equivalent courses may provide a basis for waiving some UPPP course requirements and the credit hours associated with those courses. Waivers must be recommended by the student’s graduate advisor and current supervising professor and their recommendation must be approved by both the Committee on Graduate Studies of the student’s major area and the Office of Graduate Studies. Only courses in which the student has earned a B (3.0) or better will be considered for purposes of a waiver. Waived courses must be shown on the student’s academic plan.
UPPP Field Area Exam
The Diagnostic Committee disbands toward the completion of the required coursework and the student selects a three-member Dissertation Committee to start working on his/her dissertation proposal. After completion of the coursework and when the student’s dissertation proposal has been sufficiently developed and also is fully established in the chosen field area, the student will be given a take-home field exam by the Dissertation Committee. The exam may include questions in both broader and more specific aspects of the selected field area as well as questions designed to guide the student toward completion of the dissertation proposal. It is crucial to select the dissertation proposal topic very carefully as the dissertation is the stepping stone for the student’s future professional goals, forming the first important building block of research work in the student’s field area of expertise.
Once the field exam is successfully completed, the student must continue work on the dissertation proposal which must be defended within 6 months of his/her field exam.
POSSIBLE COURSES TO ENHANCE FIELD AREAS | ||
UPPP 6301 | 0-3 | |
or URPA 6301 | THEORETICAL FOUNDATIONS AND PH.D. WORKSHOP | |
Urban Policy and Planning | ||
URPA 5304 | URBAN POLITICS | 3 |
URPA 5305 | THEORIES OF URBAN SOCIETY | 3 |
URPA 5311 | SOCIAL POLICY FORMATION | 3 |
URPA 5309 | INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS | 3 |
All SUPA policy courses | ||
Physical Planning, Development and Urban Design | ||
Physical Planning | ||
LAND USE, MANAGEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT | ||
URBAN REVITALIZATION | ||
URBAN GROWTH POLICIES | ||
GIS AND SUITABILITY ANALYSIS | ||
INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS (ITS) AND PLANNING | ||
Urban Design | ||
URBAN DESIGN | ||
ELEMENTS OF URBAN DESIGN | ||
SITE PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT PROCESSES | ||
LAND DEVELOPMENT PLANNING | ||
URBAN DESIGN SEMINAR | ||
Real Estate Development | ||
URBAN GROWTH POLICIES | ||
PLANNING AND REAL ESTATE DEVELOPMENT | ||
QUANTITATIVE METHODS FOR REAL ESTATE | ||
SEMINAR IN SPECIAL TOPICS IN REAL ESTATE | ||
Land Use/Transportation Analysis, Planning & Policy | ||
Urban Economics | ||
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PLANNING AND POLICY | ||
THE URBAN ECONOMY | ||
ECONOMIC POLICY | ||
Land Use/Transportation | ||
FUNDAMENTALS OF AIR POLLUTION | ||
SYSTEM EVALUATION | ||
PUBLIC TRANSIT PLANNING & OPERATIONS | ||
ANALYTICAL MODELS IN TRANSPORTATION | ||
LAND USE, MANAGEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT | ||
TRANSPORTATION/LAND USE MODELING AND POLICY ANALYSIS | ||
TRANSPORTATION POLICIES, PROGRAMS AND HISTORY | ||
GIS AND SUITABILITY ANALYSIS | ||
INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS (ITS) AND PLANNING | ||
Environmental Planning Policy/Sustainability | ||
Environmental Policy Planning | ||
GIS AND SUITABILITY ANALYSIS | ||
ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS: LAWS AND PLANNING | ||
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY | ||
or URPA 5317 | ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY | |
ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING | ||
TECHNIQUES OF ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT | ||
Environmental Science & Engineering | ||
CE 5324 | ||
ENVIRONMENTAL RISK BASED CORRECTIVE ACTION | ||
CE 5355 | ||
ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS-CHEMICAL ASPECTS | ||
ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS-GEOLOGICAL ASPECTS |
Dissertation Proposal
Upon completion of the coursework, students will work in preparation of their dissertation proposal. This preparation is guided by the student’s Dissertation Committee. The Dissertation committee may advise the student to take URPA 6301 Theoretical Foundations and Ph.D. Workshop, which provides theoretical background and techniques to prepare the student for completing the dissertation proposal. Students must also work closely with their dissertation supervisor and committee to develop their dissertation proposal. A formal proposal defense must be held, and the proposal must be formally approved by the dissertation committee before the student may continue to complete the dissertation. The dissertation represents the culmination of the student’s academic efforts and so is expected to demonstrate original and independent research activities and be a significant contribution to knowledge.
Dissertation
A student receiving advice and assistance from a faculty member in the preparation of a dissertation must register for the appropriate course commensurate with the student’s level of effort that is equivalent to an organized course of the same credit value . Once the student is enrolled in the dissertation course, continuous enrollment is required. The student must accumulate a minimum of nine dissertation hours to graduate.
The Graduate School offers Dissertation Seminars each semester and encourages all Dissertation students to attend.
All doctoral students must enroll in the appropriate Dissertation (6699, 6999) or Doctoral Degree Completion course (7399) in the semester in which they intend to defend their theses or dissertations. The Doctoral Degree Completion course, 7399, may be taken only once and cannot be repeated.
The dissertation defense is a public oral examination open to all members (faculty, students and invited guests) of the University community. Questioning of the candidate will be directed by the student’s dissertation supervising committee. All members of the student’s committee must be present at the defense. Although the defense is concerned primarily with the dissertation research and its interpretation, the examining committee may explore the student’s knowledge of areas relevant to the core of the dissertation problem.
The dissertation defense may result in a decision that the candidate has 1) passed unconditionally; 2) passed conditionally with remedial work specified by the committee; 3) failed, with permission to be re-examined after a specified period; or 4) failed and dismissed from the program. The dissertation must be approved unanimously by the student’s dissertation supervising committee and by the Dean of Graduate Studies.
Graduate Certificates
Certificate in Development Review
Certificate Coordinator: Enid Arvidson; enid@uta.edu
The Certificate in Development Review provides training in zoning, subdivision plat review, site design, communication skills, and urban development, while keeping in mind the interests of citizens and the spirit of places. These skills are essential for planners who want to understand proposed development activity, ensure that proposed development is consistent with a city’s vision, and facilitate review of development proposals. The program is geared for both entry-level planners/planning technicians, and for professionals in allied fields such as architecture, landscape architecture, law, engineering, and real estate.
The certificate requires completion of 15 hours of graduate-level coursework.
CIRP 5304 | PLAN IMPLEMENTATION, ZONING, AND REGULATIONS | 3 |
Select two of the following in land use and development: | 6 | |
LAND USE, MANAGEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT | ||
URBAN REVITALIZATION | ||
LAND USE PLANNING AND THE LAW | ||
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PLANNING AND POLICY | ||
Select one of the following in communication: | 3 | |
METROPOLITAN SUSTAINABILITY AND PLAN MAKING | ||
LEADERSHIP AND COMMUNICATION SKILLS IN THE PLANNING PROCESS | ||
Select one of the following in agencies and policies: | 3 | |
URBAN GROWTH POLICIES | ||
PUBLIC BUDGETING | ||
Total Hours | 15 |
Certificate in Geographic Information Systems
Certificate Coordinator: Jianling Li; jili@uta.edu
The Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Certificate program is designed for students and professionals wishing to acquire skills in spatial data analysis. GIS is a powerful computer-based analytical tool used at all levels of government, in business, industry, and institutions. GIS skills are a must in many different fields including urban planning, engineering, geology, and the social sciences. In planning for instance, GIS skills provide professionals a spatial analytical edge with application in all areas of planning including land use, environmental, transportation and economic development planning.
Applying for admission to the GIS-Certificate program does not require the GRE or a degree in planning and should be done as a Non-Degree Seeking Special Applicant through the Graduate School. To obtain the 15-credit hour certificate, students must maintain a GPA of 3.0 in their coursework.
Up to 12 GIS-certificate-credit hours earned as a special non-degree seeking student may be applied to the Master’s degree in City and Regional Planning, subject to the policies on grades and graduate credit described in the Graduate School catalog
Required | ||
CIRP 5356 | INTRODUCTION TO GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS | 3 |
CIRP 5357 | INTERMEDIATE GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS | 3 |
CIRP 5331 | GIS WORKSHOP | 3 |
Electives | ||
Select two electives with approval of the GIS Certificate Program advisor: | 6 | |
GIS AND SUITABILITY ANALYSIS | ||
REMOTE SENSING FUNDAMENTALS | ||
TOPICS IN COMPUTERS AND DESIGN and The Everyday City | ||
DATABASE SYSTEMS | ||
Total Hours | 15 |
Courses
CIRP 4310. PLANNING THE AMERICAN CITY. 3 Hours.
Students in this course will develop an understanding of the role of the private and public sectors in the development and management of the American city. It will consider such topics as the organization of city government, demographic, economic, and physical conditions analysis, land use planning, the quality of the urban environment, urban redevelopment, urban design, and regional planning. An off-campus service learning component is a key required element of this course.
CIRP 4320. SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITIES. 3 Hours.
This course course explores broad environmental and social issues in sustainable communities. Potential topics include urban water management, food and resources, wildlife conservation, native landscaping, waste management, green building, housing diversity, public transportation and community participation. The course serves as a laboratory for working with governmental and non-governmental organizations in the DFW area and developing issue-based, action research projects to solve real-world problems in our communities. This hands-on course combines lecture, student-led discussion, site visits and collaborative team work for service learning projects.
CIRP 4391. STUDIES CIRP. 3 Hours.
Advanced studies in various subjects of city and regional planning. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisite: consent of the instructor.
CIRP 5160. URBAN MANAGEMENT/PLANNING INTERNSHIP. 1 Hour.
Intended to enhance readiness for professional work through exposure to planning practice in a one semester log internship (100 hrs in the spring or fall semester or 75 hrs in the summer). Integrates work experience and coursework through journaling and reflective practice. Requirements: (1)student secures an internship from a planning related employer and approval from the student's major professor prior to enrolling in the course;(2)the intern must provide performance evaluation by the job supervisor and the intern's evaluation of the internship experience. Enrollment open to students with no previous formal planning experience. Credit not available for previous internship or planning experience. P/F grade.
CIRP 5191. CONFERENCE COURSE. 1 Hour.
Special subjects and issues as arranged by individual students and faculty members. May be repeated for credit.
CIRP 5193. MASTER'S COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION. 1 Hour.
Directed study, consultation and comprehensive examination over coursework leading to thesis substitute for MCRP degree. Required of all thesis substitute students who were admitted to the MCRP program prior to Fall 2009 and who are not enrolled in thesis or other thesis substitute courses during semester in which they plan to graduate. Students beginning the MCRP program in Fall 2009 or after may not choose the Master's Comprehensive Examination as a thesis substitute option and may not enroll in this course.
CIRP 5197. PROFESSIONAL REPORT. 1 Hour.
Preparation of final professional report as a thesis substitute for MCRP degree. Required of all thesis substitute students not enrolled in CIRP 5193.
CIRP 5297. PROFESSIONAL REPORT. 2 Hours.
Preparation of final professional report as a thesis substitute for MCRP degree. Required of all thesis substitute students not enrolled in CIRP 5193.
CIRP 5300. FOUNDATIONS OF URBAN THEORY. 3 Hours.
Spatial development of human settlements, their life cycles, expansion, and decay. Covers key theories of social, spatial, and economic structures of cities, nineteenth century to present. Considers influences of urban form and development on class, race, gender, and community.
CIRP 5303. PLANNING HISTORY, THEORY AND ETHICS. 3 Hours.
Various theories of planning including rational comprehensive, communicative action, social learning, and radical planning. Sets theories within their historical contexts, and examines the social and political details of each era to show the development of diverse planning practices and theories of planning. Evaluates the values embodied in different theories and their relationship to practice and social justice, including planning ethics as contained in the AICP Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct.
CIRP 5304. PLAN IMPLEMENTATION, ZONING, AND REGULATIONS. 3 Hours.
Introduction to plan preparation and implementation. Topics include zoning, subdivision regulations, form-based codes, site planning, strategic planning, and comprehensive planning.
CIRP 5305. LAND USE, MANAGEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT. 3 Hours.
Assesses land use, management and development and considers new directions. Relates comprehensive planning, environmental management, and land use.
CIRP 5306. URBAN REVITALIZATION. 3 Hours.
Examines various urban revitalization projects from coordinated, large-scale ventures to grassroots and informal neighborhood initiatives. Emphasis on the history, logic, politics, and implementation of these projects as well as their physical, social, and economic outcomes.
CIRP 5307. URBANIZATION IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD. 3 Hours.
Explores the social, political and spatial dimensions of urbanization processes in developing countries. Covers urban, social, and cultural movements as well as development, processes of urban-rural migration, and globalization. The course will cover all developing regions of the world with an emphasis on Latin American countries.
CIRP 5308. METROPOLITAN SUSTAINABILITY AND PLAN MAKING. 3 Hours.
Provides the background for sustainability planning at the city and metropolitan levels including plan making (e.g., comprehensive plans, small area plans, functional plans, etc.). Explores the relationship of environmental sustainability to economic vitality and social equity including planning ethics.
CIRP 5309. TRANSPORTATION/LAND USE MODELING AND POLICY ANALYSIS. 3 Hours.
Overview of transportation/land use with specific transportation models and simulation methods; topics include economic theory of travel demand, land use models, UTPS framework for travel demand estimation, disaggregated travel demand models and abstract mode models.
CIRP 5310. PLANNING, URBAN DEVELOPMENT AND STRUCTURE. 3 Hours.
Overview of functional areas of planning (e.g., urban design, housing, transportation, etc.); fundamentals of urban structure and development of cities and regions including environmental, social, economic, and political factors and issues affecting urban settlements; global dimensions of planning.
CIRP 5311. ELEMENTS OF URBAN DESIGN. 3 Hours.
Study of contemporary urban form and environmental design, emphasizing visual-spatial qualities, social needs and economic linkages. Examination of processes, methods and techniques for solving urban design problems.
CIRP 5312. STRATEGIC MGT AND PLANNING IN PUBLIC AND NON-PROFIT SERVICES. 3 Hours.
Readings and case studies of strategic planning and management in the public and non-profit sectors; application of principles to an actual situation, involving stakeholder identification, environmental scanning, and formulation of mission statements, goals, and strategies. Offered as CIRP 5312 and URPA 5357. Credit will be granted only once.
CIRP 5313. URBAN GROWTH POLICIES. 3 Hours.
Study of the political, societal and physical policies involved in urban growth management.
CIRP 5315. TRANSPORTATION POLICIES, PROGRAMS AND HISTORY. 3 Hours.
Transportation and related programs and policies in relation to city development and housing patterns. Interdependencies of land use, building development, and social change are explained as transportation-related.
CIRP 5316. LAND USE PLANNING AND THE LAW. 3 Hours.
Explores the law of land use in the context of the American legal, economic, and political systems. Examines leading court decisions and precedents for their background, content, and applicability to contemporary land use. Offered as CIRP 5316 and URPA 5331. Credit will be granted only once.
CIRP 5317. INTERMEDIATE DATA ANALYSIS. 3 Hours.
An intermediate level examination of statistical and research techniques appropriate to urban and social analysis. Presuming a basic understanding of descriptive and inferential statistics, the course covers multivariate regression, including error analysis and non-linear models, path analysis, Analysis Of Variance (ANOVA), logit and probit models, and techniques for data reduction (e.g., factor analysis). Prerequisite: URPA 5302. Offered as URPA 5342 and CIRP 5317; credit will be granted only once.
CIRP 5318. TECHNIQUES OF PLANNING ANALYSIS I. 3 Hours.
Introduction to analytical techniques used in urban and regional planning. Topics include: census data and geography and introduction to GIS, demographic analysis, cost-benefit analysis, economic base analysis, gravity models, and displaying and communicating data analysis and results in graphic, written, and oral forms.
CIRP 5319. AGENCIES OF PLANNING AND ADMINISTRATION. 3 Hours.
Contemporary managerial functions involved in running public, private, or non-profit organizations: goal setting, planning, organizing, delegating and motivating others, personal productivity and motivation, time and stress management, controlling, and project management.
CIRP 5320. DATABASE MANAGEMENT FOR URBAN PLANNING AND ADMINISTRATION. 3 Hours.
Concepts and computer applications of data management. Topics include data sources, data models, database design, data query, data analysis, and database management techniques for urban planning, management and administration. Credit will be given only once.
CIRP 5321. VISUAL BASIC AND GIS. 3 Hours.
Provides an introduction to the techniques and applications of computer graphics and mapping for presenting socioeconomic information in graphic and spatial form.
CIRP 5322. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PLANNING AND POLICY. 3 Hours.
Introductory seminar in subnational economic development programs in the U.S. Covers basics of location theory, economic planning, budgeting, incentives, public and private revenue sources, analysis methods such as central place and economic base, intergovernmental efforts, redevelopment, high tech, trade and/or tourism.
CIRP 5323. HISTORIC PRESERVATION. 3 Hours.
Covers elements of historic designation, rehabilitation, financial incentives, district regulations, and preservation impacts.
CIRP 5324. COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT. 3 Hours.
Focuses on current problems of community development and neighborhood revitalization. Housing, community assets, the roles of community development corporations and social capital in cities, and community economic development will be analyzed. Federal, state, and local policies, with grassroots initiatives evaluated for effectiveness on promoting alternatives for community building and organizing. Also offered as URPA 5313; credit will be granted only once.
CIRP 5325. PHYSICAL PLANNING AND URBAN DESIGN. 3 Hours.
Introduction to basic concepts in urban design and physical planning. Provides an understanding of how built environments evolve, and how they can be creatively planned and designed so as to meet social and ecological goals. Special attention to principles and analyses related to the physical planning of neighborhoods and streets, as well as patterns of urban form and public places.
CIRP 5326. CULTURAL PLANNING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT. 3 Hours.
This course examines 1) the composition of the creative economy in cities around the world, 2) arts, culture, and creative economy planning and policy efforts at the neighborhood, city, and regional levels, and 3) the social, spatial and political ramifications of these efforts and of the creative economy broadly.
CIRP 5327. INTRODUCTION TO GREEN CITIES AND TRANSPORTATION. 3 Hours.
Introduction to concepts of green cities and transportation, environmental and transportation challenges, and school of thoughts on causes of environmental and transportation problems, with emphasis on planning practices and policies in relation to environmental and transportation issues and roles of planners in shaping urban landscape and infrastructure.
CIRP 5328. PUBLIC BUDGETING. 3 Hours.
This course introduces students to the principles and practices used by federal, state, and local governments to acquire and spend revenues within the context of American democracy, capitalism, federalism, and economics. The primary objective of this course is to provide students with the practical skills and theoretical knowledge to enable them to be effective participants in the budgeting process and critical consumers and producers of research relevant to public budgeting. Offered as CIRP 5328 and URPA 5326. Credit will be granted only once.
CIRP 5329. PUBLIC CAPITAL BUDGETING. 3 Hours.
Examines governmental capital budgeting processes with a focus on understanding the significance of capital improvement planning, public facility investment, and project evaluation to sound infrastructure financing and regional economic growth. Governments purchase or construct long-lasting physical assets or facilities financed mostly through borrowing. This course aims to understand the rationale for public capital budgeting and debt instruments used to finance capital investment in the political context of public budgeting in America. Offered as URPA 5332 and CIRP 5329; credit will be granted only once.
CIRP 5330. TECHNIQUES OF PLANNING ANALYSIS II. 3 Hours.
Introduction to research methods, both quantitative and qualitative and mixed methods. Relating planning problem identification and definition with appropriate method of data gathering and analysis. Analysis and interpretation of qualitative and quantitative data including interview and small group techniques, and basic statistical analysis. Communication of analysis results in graphic, written, and oral forms.
CIRP 5331. GIS WORKSHOP. 3 Hours.
Skills, practical experience, problem-solving methods and techniques in geographic information systems. Capstone course for GIS Certificate Program; substitutes for one Project Planning Course.
CIRP 5332. PROJECT STUDIO. 3 Hours.
Studio course working on applied city and regional planning projects within the Dallas-Fort Worth area or elsewhere. Provides students with practical experience in collaborative teamwork and the application of skills, methods, and techniques in city and regional planning, including citizen participation, problem analysis, mapping, design, presentation, working with clients, and applied planning process. Should be taken in the second half of the student's program of study, with exceptions for those with applied planning experience. May be repeated as topic changes.
CIRP 5340. GIS AND SUITABILITY ANALYSIS. 3 Hours.
Acquaints students with theoretical and practical aspects of suitability analysis process or activity allocation on land use/environmental policies. Uses Geographic Information System (GIS) and computer models for overlaying map analysis, buffering, market demand and activity locations, etc. to incorporate environmental and ecological factors into the determination of land development potential including soils, slope, drainage, vegetation, and related factors.
CIRP 5341. ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS: LAWS AND PLANNING. 3 Hours.
Federal, state, and local environmental regulations which have effect on the practice of city and regional planning. Specific articles, laws, and directives contrasted and compared to local city design and development controls. Subjects include CERCLA, RCRA, SARA, TSCA, OSH Act, among others.
CIRP 5342. ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY. 3 Hours.
Focuses on the physical environmental dimensions of urbanization including such factors as pollution, waste disposal, and land use; stresses the role of economic, social, and political institutions as these affect environmental quality of the city. Offered as CIRP 5342 and URPA 5317; credit will be granted only once.
CIRP 5343. FOUNDATIONS OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY. 3 Hours.
Explores how environmental controversy is rooted in conflict between a number of schools of environmental policy thought with divergent perspectives on issues such as how to define progress, how to balance the needs of economy and ecosystem, how to cope with environmental complexity, and what role science should play in environment affairs. Also offered as URPA 5365; credit will be granted only once.
CIRP 5344. HUMAN SERVICES PLANNING. 3 Hours.
Social welfare institutions: private and public; needs assessment, resource allocation, procedures, city/state/federal/private policy review; highlights of current system demands and changes. Also offered as URPA 5316.
CIRP 5345. PLANNING AND REAL ESTATE DEVELOPMENT. 3 Hours.
The goals, strategies, methods, and achievements of major participants in the urban land and building markets are examined. Land owners, speculators, real estate brokers, developers, bankers, lawyers, non-profit builders, and government agencies are studied, as well as such business tools as: market and feasibility analysis, appraisal techniques, proforma analysis, and others.
CIRP 5346. QUALITATIVE METHODS. 3 Hours.
The study of qualitative research and analysis methods. Offered as CIRP 5346 and URPA 5344; credit will be given only once.
CIRP 5347. URBAN PROBLEMS. 3 Hours.
Specific urban problems examined in depth, traced to their historical origins to see how they or similar problems have been dealt with in other times and places. Students will then propose possible solutions to the problems in their contemporary form. Offered as CIRP 5347 and URPA 5319.
CIRP 5350. ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING. 3 Hours.
Overview of environmental planning issues and problems, including basic ecological principles; development and effects of the chemical industry; policies on international issues; environmental justice and ethics; environmental economics, including externalities and public goods; sustainable development; overviews of planning for air quality, water quality, solid waste, pollution prevention, habitat conservation, etc.; and plan implementation, including enforcement, regulation and funding.
CIRP 5351. TECHNIQUES OF ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT. 3 Hours.
Analysis of impact assessment documents from a variety of projects; study of federal laws and regulations governing the process; state impact assessment laws and regulations; and procedures used in other nations. Students will prepare an environmental assessment for a real-world project. Overviews of environmental site assessment, MIS documents, and environmental auditing will also be given.
CIRP 5352. ENVIRONMENT ASSESSMENT POLICY & PRACTICE. 3 Hours.
Review and analysis of the development of the environmental assessment process with focus on expectations of how environmental assessment will be transformed in the era of climate change. Students evaluate the effects of new laws and regulations and the accelerated growth of environmental policy development at all levels of government, especially among urban areas. The course includes review of selected environmental assessment documents and project case studies.
CIRP 5353. ENVIRONMENTAL LAW. 3 Hours.
This seminar examines the role of environmental law within the political-institutional framework of the American system. Emphasis is on the legal-judicial aspects of environmental regulation. Analyzes the decision of U.S. courts as these affect and interpret environmental laws and regulations for their legality and constitutionality.
CIRP 5354. HOUSING PLANNING, POLICY AND FINANCE. 3 Hours.
Evaluation of the effect of state, local, and federal housing policy on the urban arena. Topics will be selected from federal subsidy programs, tax subsidies, operations of financial intermediaries, and related areas.
CIRP 5356. INTRODUCTION TO GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS. 3 Hours.
Introduction to GIS and the application of computer graphics systems in the storage, processing, and retrieval of geographic urban and regional information; case examples and related projects and issues of system management.
CIRP 5357. INTERMEDIATE GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS. 3 Hours.
Applications of GIS to typical urban and regional geographic information problems and projects.
CIRP 5358. INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS (ITS) AND PLANNING. 3 Hours.
Concepts, components, deployments, and implementations of ITS; methods for ITS evaluations; linkage between ITS and traditional transportation planning; and issues related to ITS planning and deployment.
CIRP 5360. COMPUTER METHODS FOR TRANSPORTATION PLANNING. 3 Hours.
Applications of computer software (for example, TransCad, Tranplan) in transportation planning modeling. Theories of residential location choice and travel behavior. Topics may include land-use and travel demand models, trip distribution models, mode choice models, and network equilibrium.
CIRP 5361. PLANNING INTERNSHIP. 3 Hours.
Intended to enhance readiness for professional work through exposure to planning practice in a one semester log internship (300 hrs in the spring or fall semester or 275 hrs in the summer). Integrates work experience and coursework through journaling and reflective practice. Requirements: (1)student secures an internship from a planning related employer and approval from the student's major professor prior to enrolling in the course;(2)the intern must provide performance evaluation by the job supervisor and the intern's evaluation of the internship experience. Enrollment open to students with no previous formal planning experience. Credit not available for previous internship or planning experience. P/F grade.
CIRP 5362. URBAN DIVERSITY. 3 Hours.
Examines the growing spatial and social diversity of cities; how physical as well as socioeconomic urban structures have fostered race, class, and gender inequalities; how urban policies have addressed and can address these issues. Offered as CIRP 5362 and URPA 5362.
CIRP 5363. LEADERSHIP AND COMMUNICATION SKILLS IN THE PLANNING PROCESS. 3 Hours.
Governance and participation, comprehensive planning and the community planning process, participatory planning, and practical communication skills for planners and administrators: leadership and public meetings, participative decision making, interpersonal communications and conflict management, effective writing and presentations.
CIRP 5364. ECONOMIC BASE AND INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY. 3 Hours.
Theories and methods of local and regional economic base analyses; techniques for inventorying strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats of local capital, labor and land resources; alternative policy responses to industrial development issues arising from economic base analysis.
CIRP 5380. RESEARCH QUESTIONS IN PLANNING. 3 Hours.
Application of research issues, writing, and communication skills in planning. Designed to assist students in preparing their research for master's thesis or professional report.
CIRP 5391. CONFERENCE COURSE. 3 Hours.
Special subjects and issues as arranged by individual students and faculty members. May be repeated for credit.
CIRP 5395. SPECIAL TOPICS IN PLANNING. 3 Hours.
Selected topics in City and Regional Planning. May be repeated for credit.
CIRP 5397. PROFESSIONAL REPORT. 3 Hours.
Preparation of final professional report as a thesis substitute for MCRP degree. Required of all thesis substitute students not enrolled in CIRP 5193.
CIRP 5398. PLANNING THESIS. 3 Hours.
Graded F/R.
CIRP 5698. PLANNING THESIS. 6 Hours.
Graded F/R.
CIRP 5998. PLANNING THESIS. 9 Hours.
Graded P/F/R.
CIRP 6301. THEORETICAL FOUNDATIONS AND Ph.D. WORKSHOP. 3 Hours.
Explores the development and function of theoretical models and frameworks. Examines the major theories from the social sciences designed for framing issues in urban planning, administration, and public policy. Designed to assist doctoral students in preparing their research for dissertation. Opportunities to present work in progress, share ideas, and interact with faculty. Prerequisite: CIRP 5317/URPA 5342, and CIRP 5346/URPA 5344. Offered as CIRP 6301 and URPA 6301; credit will be granted only once.
CIRP 6305. SEMINAR IN URBAN PLANNING PROCESSES. 3 Hours.
Final course in urban planning field. Focus on the various political, economic, and social institutions and theoretical approaches in the planning process, and application of these multidisciplinary perspectives in the analysis of specific planning issues.
CIRP 6346. ADVANCED DATA ANALYSIS IN URBAN AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS. 3 Hours.
An introduction to selected advanced techniques related to planning analysis. Subjects include advanced applied regression analysis, multivariate logit analysis, and multinomial logistic regression. Applications of projection techniques, land use and transportation models, and methods of regional analysis. Offered as CIRP 6346 and URPA 6346. Credit will be given only once.
Courses
UPPP 6300. ADVANCED URBAN THEORY. 3 Hours.
Covers key theories of urbanization and socioeconomic relations. Emphasis is placed on the development of paradigms in urban theory, from classic texts to important shifts and debates in the late 20th-early 21st centuries. Considers principal theorists from urban disciplines of planning, geography, economics, sociology, and how they structure their arguments about urban form and social relations. Aimed at doctoral students, as well as advanced master's students, both from urban planning/urban affairs as well as from graduate programs outside School of Urban and Public Affairs.
UPPP 6311. SPATIAL THEORY AND POLICY: URBAN FORM AND STRUCTURE. 3 Hours.
Examines factors shaping urban form. Includes economic and spatial structures of cities and their implications for planning and policy issues. Outlines location theory, urban growth, density and land price, land use and spatial pattern, multi-centering and sprawl, as well as new traditional and transit oriented developments (NTD & TOD) among others. Broadens understanding of different aspects of cities and urban areas (housing, employment and commercial centers). Reflects on the connections between emergent patterns of growth and evolving transportation network.
UPPP 6399. DISSERTATION. 3 Hours.
Graded R/F only.
UPPP 6699. DISSERTATION. 6 Hours.
Graded R/F/P/W only.
UPPP 6999. DISSERTATION. 9 Hours.
Graded P/F/R.
UPPP 7399. DOCTORAL DEGREE COMPLETION. 3 Hours.
This course may be taken during the semester in which a student expects to complete all requirements for the doctoral degree and graduate. Enrolling in this course meets minimum enrollment requirements for graduation, for holding fellowships awarded by The Office of Graduate Studies and for full-time GTA or GRA positions. Students should verify that enrollment in this course meets other applicable enrollment requirements. To remain eligible in their final semester of study for grants, loans or other forms of financial aid administered by the Financial Aid Office must enroll in a minimum of 5 hours as required by the Office of Financial Aid. Other funding sources may also require more than 3-hours of enrollment. Additional hours may also be required to meet to requirements set by immigration law or by the policies of the student's degree program. Students should contact the Financial Aid Office, other sources of funding, Office of International Education and/or their graduate advisor to verify enrollment requirements before registering for this course. This course may only be taken once and may not be repeated. Students who do not complete all graduation requirements while enrolled in this course must enroll in a minimum of 6 dissertation hours (6699 or 6999) in their graduation term. Graded P/F/R.
Faculty
Ardeshir Anjomani
Professor
Barbara Becker
Professor
Jianling Li
Professor
Enid Arvidson
Associate Professor
Ivonne Audirac
Associate Professor
Karabi Bezboruah
Assistant Professor
Andrew Whittemore
Assistant Professor