Admissions and Aid

Review important admissions and aid information below. Also, visit the Admissions website:

Learn more or Apply Online

Admissions Overview

Admission to the Ph.D. and M.A. programs in Philosophy is administered through the Graduate Center's Office of Admissions. Please visit their website to apply online

Application Deadlines:
January 1 for fall enrollment (Ph.D.)
April 15 for fall enrollment (M.A.)

Application Requirements:

  • Completed application form
  • *18 credits in philosophy
  • Statement of Purpose
  • Transcripts from prior schools
  • Writing sample (Approx. 4,000-5,000 words)
  • Three letters of recommendation
  • GRE scores (note: GRE scores are optional for 2020-2021)
  • TOEFL scores for foreign students
  • Completed application form
  • *15 credits in philosophy
  • Statement of Purpose
  • Transcripts from prior schools
  • Writing sample (Approx. 4,000-5,000 words)
  • Three letters of recommendation
  • GRE scores (note: GRE scores are optional for Fall 2023 admission)
  • TOEFL scores for foreign students 

NOTE: A student's undergraduate preparation should ordinarily include at least 18 credits for approved courses in philosophy for admission to the Ph.D. program, and at least 15 for admission to the M.A. program. The Committee on Admissions may modify these requirements in special cases (e.g. a strong major in a related field).

Fellowships and Financial Aid

Institutional Aid

Every applicant to The Graduate Center’s doctoral programs will automatically be considered for five-year institutional funding packages. The aid we offer — including fellowships, tuition awards, and assistantships — is based on merit. 

Learn more about institutional aid for doctoral students »

Federal Aid

Federal aid for doctoral students includes:

New York State also provides the Tuition Assistance Program (TAP) for eligible graduate students who are New York State residents.

 

Support for Underrepresented Students

Additional funding may be available to incoming students from underrepresented populations through offerings from the Office of Educational Opportunity and Diversity, including several fellowships and the CUNY Pipeline Program for undergraduate CUNY students.

Learn more about funding opportunities from OEOD »

While The Graduate Center does not currently offer full-tuition scholarships or additional stipends for living expenses, there are funding opportunities available to master’s students that can help cover the cost of attendance, including scholarships, federal and private loans, and federal work-study.

Learn more about financial aid for master’s students »

Tuition and Fees

Tuition rates for doctoral programs at The Graduate Center are based on a student's “level,” which is determined by a combination of the number of graduate credits completed (including, in the case of transfer students, credits accepted by the student's degree program and the Registrar) and specific academic accomplishments. 

The fee structure is also affected by a student’s resident status.

See current doctoral tuition rates »

Master’s students at The Graduate Center who are residents of New York State and registered for a minimum of 12 credits per semester will pay a flat fee for tuition. Out-of-state residents and students taking less than 12 credits will be charged on a per-credit basis.

See current master’s tuition rates »

Each student will be billed for a Graduate School student activities fee, a University student senate fee, a University consolidated services fee and a technology fee. These fees are not refundable.

Nonmatriculated Students

Anyone who wishes to enroll in a Philosophy Program course as a nonmatriculated student must have transcripts documenting at least three undergraduate courses in philosophy, with excellent grades.

Prospective applicants who meet this requirement should email the Executive Officer two weeks before the start of classes (and no earlier) to schedule an appointment to complete the necessary forms. Registration is subject to the availability of places in requested courses and the approval of the Executive Officer. There is a $75 application fee. Nonmatriculated students may take only two courses (at the per credit rate), after which they must request entry into the program.

NOTE: Please do not be concerned about the deadline posted in The Graduate Center's academic calendar. Registration for non-matriculated students in the Philosophy program takes place after the deadline in the week before classes begin each term. 

Why Choose the Graduate Center

At a time when the job market in many fields is tough to negotiate, the GC offers unusually robust support for your post-Ph.D. career, in keeping with the directions your research interests, skills, and priorities take you. In addition to the support given to you by the faculty in your program, the GC provides workshops, resources, and one-on-one support for a wide range of career-related questions.

We hope you’ll take advantage of these resources from the first day you arrive. Recent analysis of a ten-year cohort of GC alumni revealed that about 68% of our graduates work in education, 4% in government, 8% in non-profit, 14% in the for-profit sector, and 6% are self-employed. Wherever your studies may take you, we are here to help you get there.

The Graduate Center fosters an inclusive culture and diversity among its students, faculty, and staff. Click here to learn more Diversity and Inclusion.

Feel free to browse our website for more information: Office of the Provost.  

  • The Early Research Initiative offers summer fellowships for exploratory research in archives, museums, field sites, special collections, laboratories, and research centers across the globe. These fellowships aim to support students at the pre-dissertation proposal stage in order to help them refine and develop more advanced individualized research agendas.
  • The Futures Initiative organizes workshops, team-taught interdisciplinary courses, and workshops aimed at empowering the next generation of intellectual leaders with bold, publicly engaged teaching and learning. One of its goals is helping interested students produce world-class research that is presented in a form outside of the box of the conventional monograph-style dissertation.
  • The GC Digital Initiatives provides training in digital pedagogy, supports working groups devoted to training in Python, Text Analysis, and GIS, and offers fellowships and grants in videography, in social media, and in digital innovation.
  • The Office of Career Planning and Professional Development offers individual career advising to students, including advice on CVs, résumés, and other job search materials, assistance with preparing for interviews, and discussions of career planning strategies. The office also hosts a substantial amount of career-related programs and workshops, including sessions with GC alumni. 
  • The Teaching & Learning Center prepares new college teachers for their entry into the classroom. The TLC provides training in the use of educational technologies, the praxis of writing across the curriculum, and the teaching of quantitative reasoning. In addition to workshops and seminars, the TLC also fosters focused inquiry groups on such topics as museum education and environmental justice. 
  • The Quantitative Research Consulting Center provides resources and support for research in quantitative and empirical research. The Center complements existing statistics coursework by bridging the gap between the classroom and implementation in researchers’ own work.
  • Over thirty interdisciplinary research centers and institutes are located at the Graduate Center. A number of them, including the Advanced Research Collaborative, The Center for Place, Culture, and Politics, The Committee on Globalization and Social Change, The Committee for Interdisciplinary Science Studies, and The Committee for the Study of Religion offer mid-career and dissertation level fellowships that enable students to join interdisciplinary working groups.
  • The Graduate Center has established internships and collaborative partnerships with the Morgan Library, the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, the New-York Historical Society, the New York Botanical Garden, the Vera Institute for Justice, the Center for Court Innovation, The Brooklyn Rail, the Global Fund for Women, and Open House New York.

Our career support is provided by staff and faculty who are actively involved in the national conversation on doctoral education and post-PhD careers. The offices and initiatives mentioned above also organize varied programming that supports, challenges, and excites GC graduate students. Recent events and series include:

  • Twitter for Academics
  • Intro to Tools for Collaborative Research
  • Working in Archives and Special Collections
  • Still Share: Data Viz, Where Data Meets Design
  • Teach@CUNY
  • Writing Next: Pitching to Broader Audiences (NEH Next Gen Phd Seminar)
  • Careers in Research outside of Academia
  • Careers in the Arts and Cultural Production
  • Behind the Scenes with a Faculty Search Committee
  • An Alt-Ac/Industry Job Search Timeline
  • A Faculty Job Search Timeline
  • Futures Initiative (FI) Dialogues From Dissertation to First Book