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THE STRUCTURE & CONTENT AND SOME OBSERVATIONS ABOUT GLOBAL DOCTORAL EDUCATION IN ARCHITECTURE. Gary T Moore Professor Emeritus of Environment-Behaviour Studies Faculty of Architecture, Design & Planning University of Sydney Australia Istanbul 28 November 2011.
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THE STRUCTURE & CONTENT AND SOME OBSERVATIONS ABOUT GLOBAL DOCTORAL EDUCATION IN ARCHITECTURE Gary T Moore Professor Emeritus of Environment-Behaviour Studies Faculty of Architecture, Design & Planning University of Sydney Australia Istanbul 28 November 2011
Aims of Paper & for Discussion • Overview of doctoral education in other parts of the world (not Europe, as you are already the experts) • Focus on North America, Asia & Australasia • History of doctoral education • Informal non-representative survey of doctoral programs • Current status of doctoral programs: • When, where & how many programs? • Sizes ? • Administrative home? • Structure & content? • Questions for discussion – issues for debate
History & Recurring Issues about Doctoral Programs Where was the first doctoral program in architecture in the world? Europe? Asia (China, Japan)? Middle East/Arab world? How important is doctoral education in/for architecture? What areas are important, or ‘worthless’? While PhD programs are universally accepted in other disciplines (natural sciences, social sciences, humanities), still very few and questioned in architecture. Why? In 1984, I made observations and raised questions about doctoral education in architecture – many of those issues remain 27 years later
North America In North America, doctoral degrees in architecture since early 1900s (e.g., Harvard, Princeton, Columbia) Initially, all in architectural history, offered by departments of art history First PhD program began in 1942 (Harvard), discontinued in 1961, reinstated in 1987 First PhD in architecture, other than in architectural history, granted in 1956 (Harvard, Dr Sami Hassid) First PhD program other than in architectural history in 1964 (Pennsylvania)
By mid-1980s, 13 formal programs (12 in USA, 1 in Canada): • Most begun in 1960s • Princeton 1965, Carnegie Mellon 1967, UC Berkeley 1968, Michigan 1969, Cornell & Montreal, 1970, etc. • 5 long-established programs inactive by mid-1980s, including Harvard, Catholic, Columbia, IIT and Rice • Started primarily in older, private universities with strong traditional architectural design programs (e.g., Princeton, Harvard) • Most degrees awarded in architectural history • Later supplemented by some professional DArch degrees
Newer, research-oriented, technologically advanced universities began more diverse programs in 1960s-70s: • E.g., Carnegie-Mellon, Berkeley, Michigan, Texas A&M, MIT, VPI, UCLA, Georgia Tech, UW-Milwaukee, etc. • All research-oriented, mostly quantitative research; all lead to the PhD • Range of content areas – environment-behaviour studies, computer-aided design, and architectural science & technology, environmental systems, urban design/planning/landscape architecture, as well as traditional architectural history & theory • Most housed in departments or schools of architecture • Many offered just one area, e.g., architectural theory at Pennsylvania, computer -aided design at Carnegie-Mellon, environment-behaviour studies at UW-Milwaukee, environmental systems at Texas A&M • Some offered several areas, e.g., history, technology, energy & environment-behaviour at UC Berkeley
By late 1990s, 14-18 programs (different data, Schneider, 1998, Wineman, 1998), ie, very small growth Another 52 universities granted architecture PhD degree through non-architecture programs (Schneider, 1998) By 2008, 35 programs: 32 in USA, 3 in Canada (Noble, 2008), ie, rapid growth, doubled in 10 years
Several programs focused on 1-2 areas; others developed an ‘umbrella’ administrative structure for a range of fields • Most focused on three or more areas of study, e.g.: • Architectural history, theory & criticism • Environment-behaviour studies • Building technology • Design computing • Urban design & city planning (within architecture departments)
Program size varied greatly, depending on number of areas of study, e.g.; • Some broad programs with 30-65 students, e.g., Berkeley, Pennsylvania, Michigan • On average, 4-6 new students per year; some up to 10-15 pa • Some programs have small and intimate feeling, e.g., 12-20 students with core of 3-5 committed academics • Some are larger and ‘disparate’, with more students and ‘part-time’ staff • In 1980s-90s, UW-Milwaukee enrolled over 50% of all North American students in environment-behavior studies • From 1960s to 2000, large number of foreign applicants, e.g., often 50% of candidates (82% at Carnegie-Mellon) • Interesting statistic pie-charts & bar-diagrams in Wineman (1998/2008) & Schneider (1998/2008)
Are we overproducing PhDs in architecture? • In USA, 1974-88 – 48,000 PhDs in engineering • Same 15-year period – 2,300 PhDs in sociology • Same period – 486 PhDs in architecture (Schneider, 1998), ie, 32 pa vs 3,333 pa in engineering (100 x more) – Why so low? • By 2008 – estimated ca 600 students enrolled & ca 100 graduating annually (Noble, 2008), ie, still only 3% the size of engineering • In USA alone, 3595 institutions of higher education • 236 (6.5% ) are doctorate-granting research universities • Only 18 (8% of doctoral research universities, or 1/2 of 1/% of all universities) have granted a doctoral degree in architecture (Schneider, 1998) • Even with doubling by 2008, still only 1% of all universities grant doctoral degrees in architecture – Why?
Staffing: • 2-7 full-time academic staff • + others spending only some time with doctoral students • About 75% hold doctorates • Program length: 3-8 years, average 5.5 years • Program structure – all USA & Canada PhD programs: • Ca 2-year minimum residency (range 1-3 years) • 1-2 years coursework – major and minor areas of study, maybe language • Including 1-3 courses on research methods (philosophy of inquiry, scholarly, qualitative, quantitative), theories of architecture, etc. • Qualifying/comprehensive examinations • Research proposal, usually by end of 2nd year • 2-3 more years of research, dissertation & defence (mostly oral defences) • More diversity than uniformity (Wineman, 1998)
Elsewhere, Globally? • No known books or monographs on other parts of the world; no comprehensive research papers found on topic • Informal survey late 2011 of Asian, Middle Eastern and Australasian universities: • When, where & how many programs? • Sizes ? • Administrative home? • Structure & content? • However, very hard to gather data – non-representative and very patchy
Asia First program? Maybe Hong Kong University, maybe Tsingua or Tongji Universities, maybe Tokyo University? (no one is sure) All the national universities of China & Japan (e.g., Tsingua, Tongji, Tokyo, Osaka, Tokyo Inst of Tech) Some other major government and private universities in Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia (5), Taiwan (12) & Thailand (6) Many new programs started in 1990s, especially in China and Japan Most small in size (15-20 students), some huge (e.g., Tongji, reputed to have over 200 PhD candidates)
Exclusively PhDs (no other names mentioned) Vast majority by research only (a few by coursework and research) Traditionally, most in faculties of engineering, now also in social sciences, building, environmental studies, built environment, etc., with some in dedicated schools of architecture (and maybe also planning) – home seems not to matter Often need to complete Masters before applying Heavy emphasis on research & publishing – often required to publish papers as part of qualifying examinations, and again before being granted the PhD degree
Wide variety of content: • Architectural history and theory • Building sciences and technology, e.g., building services, technology, structures, environmental control • Sustainability • Environmental design, ie, architecture, landscape architecture, urban design, urban planning, environmental planning • Heritage management, preservation • Environment and society, environment-behaviour studies • Design computing • None in or by design
What to do after graduating? • In China, growth of PhD programs and numbers of students is intended to supply many regional universities with architecture academic staff – required to have a PhD • In Japan, the opposite – also required to have PhD to join academic staff, but very limited job opportunities recently for PhD graduates – Similar in Europe?
Australasia • First program? University of Sydney, Australia • 12 in Australia, 2 in New Zealand, none known elsewhere • All the ‘sandstone’ universities in Australia • Most small in size (15-20), some much larger (e.g., Sydney ca 75) • In wide variety of homes • architecture etc., built environment, even social sciences • Many universities have amalgamated faculties into ‘super-faculties’ of many different disciplines • Architecture PhDs sometimes suffer because of this
Mostly PhDs, few professional by design • All by research, very few with one or two mandatory research methods courses, e.g., Modes of Inquiry • Wide variety of content (first two are largest): • Architectural theory and history • Architectural science and technology • Sustainability • Design computing • Environment-behaviour studies has died out; no PhD program anywhere in Australasia in that area
Issues for Debate Purpose, administrative home, structure & content? PhD program without thriving research program? PhD by research only, or by coursework, examinations & research? Core methods? PhD or DArch by design? Strengths & limitations of different approaches to research? Integration of research & scholarship into mainstream architecture? What to do after graduating?
References Books and Monographs Moore, G.T., & Templer, J.A. (Eds.) (1984). Doctoral Education for Architectural Research: Questions of Theory, Method, and Implementation. Washington, DC: Architectural Research Centers Consortium, 1984. Noble, D. (Ed.) (2008). Doctoral Education in Architecture: Compendium 2 – A Collection of Papers on the Status and Direction of Doctoral Programs in Architecture and Environmental Design. Los Angeles: Guild Architecture Press, 2008. Wineman, J. (Ed.) (1997). Doctoral Education in Architecture Schools: The Challenge of the 21st Century. Atlanta: Georgia Institute of Technology, College of Architecture Working Paper Series, 1998.
Papers Moore, G.T. (1984/2008). The history and current status of doctoral research and education in architecture. In G.T. Moore & J.A. Templer (Eds.), Doctoral Education for Architectural Research (pp 3-27). Washington, DC: Architectural Research Centers Consortium, 1984. Reprinted in D. Noble (Ed.), Doctoral Education in Architecture (pp 29-46). Los Angeles: Guild Architecture Press, 2008. Moore, G.T. (1998/2008). Pedagogic structures of doctoral programs in architecture. In J. Wineman (Ed.), Doctoral Education in Architecture Schools (pp 59-65). Atlanta: Georgia Institute of Technology, College of Architecture Working Paper Series, 1998. Reprinted in D. Noble (Ed.), Doctoral Education in Architecture (pp 111-120). Los Angeles: Guild Architecture Press, 2008. Moore, G.T. (2003). Recommendations for the parity of creative, artistic and professional work with traditional forms of research and scholarship. In C. Newton (Ed.), Design + Research: Project Based Research in Architecture [Online]. Melbourne: University of Melbourne, Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning. Available: http://www.arbld.unimelb.edu.au/events/conferences/aasa/papers/web_final_version/ theme_title.php?theme_id=8#14, 12 pgs. Noble, D. (2008). Directions for doctoral education in architecture in North America. In D. Noble (Ed.), Doctoral Education in Architecture (pp 23-28). Los Angeles: Guild Architecture Press, 2008.
Schneider, R.H. (1998). Doctoral programs in architecture in the United States: A review of the terrain. In J. Wineman (Ed.), Doctoral Education in Architecture Schools (pp 25-39). Atlanta: Georgia Institute of Technology, College of Architecture Working Paper Series, 1998. Wineman, J. (1998). Comparative statistics on PhD programs in architecture in the United States. In J. Wineman (Ed.), Doctoral Education in Architecture Schools (pp 41-56). Atlanta: Georgia Institute of Technology, College of Architecture Working Paper Series, 1998.