ERIC Identifier: ED301140
Publication Date: 1988-00-00
Author: Glazer, Judith S.
Source: ERIC Clearinghouse on Higher Education Washington DC.
The Master's Degree. ERIC Digest.
THIS DIGEST WAS CREATED BY ERIC, THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATION CENTER. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT ERIC, CONTACT ACCESS ERIC 1-800-LET-ERIC
The master's degree has been shaped by the traditional arts and
science model as the first postbaccalaureate degree conferred upon
candidates following one year of graduate study. It is the
mid-point to the doctorate, the terminal degree for most
professions, and a source of enrichment in the chosen field of
study. It exceeds other graduate degrees in its diversity,
validating successful completion of a program in numerous
disciplines and subfields of study. This report reviews the
research on the development of the master's degree in the United
States and its growth in the postwar technological era within the
context of tradition, diversity, and change. It synthesizes
research on structure and organization, curricular reform, quality
control, and innovation, concluding with recommendations for future
research.
WHAT IS THE CURRENT STATUS OF THE MASTER'S DEGREE?
In
1982-83, 289,921 master's degrees in 30 disciplines and 633
specialties were conferred, an increase of 75 percent in the past
two decades (OERI 1985). Professional master's degrees accounted
for 84.2 percent of the total, liberal arts master's degrees for
15.8 percent. Nearly three times as many master's degrees were
conferred in 1982-83 as the aggregate of first professional and
doctoral degrees, and more than half of them were awarded in
education and business. Teacher education, once the major field
partly because of its certifying role, has declined as a percentage
of total degrees awarded. Business, health sciences, computer
science, psychology, and public affairs are now the fastest-growing
fields of study (OERI 1985). No longer can the graduate school,
confronted by new professional programs seeking autonomy from the
research model, function effectively as an academic "Bureau of
Standards" (Pelikan 1983). State education boards, accrediting
agencies, and professional associations comment with increasing
frequency on the problems of the proliferation of degrees, while
institutions mount efforts to attract nontraditional clienteles to
existing and new degree programs. The result is uncertainty about
the role of the university and the functions and purposes of
graduate and professional education and about the meaning of a
generic degree of such diversity that no single definition
adequately describes its structure, content, and goals.HOW
DIVERSIFIED IS THE MASTER'S DEGREE?
No single master's degree
exists, and its diversity has been a source of concern throughout
this century (Spurr 1970). The multiplicity and variety of
professional programs, combined with persistent efforts to
differentiate these degrees from the dominant arts and science
model, have resulted in an avalanche of new titles (OERI 1985).
Curricular models reflect this diversity; they vary widely in
emphasis but generally include five major components-introductory
core courses, a major concentration in a subfield or specialty,
cognate or elective courses to expand and strengthen the program, an
integrative experience, and a summative experience. Master's
degrees are classified as academic, professional, or experiential,
making comparisons difficult. Each discipline may have more than
one designation or title, numerous fields, subfields, or
concentrations, variable requirements for credit, different levels
of degrees, and different integrative and summative experiences.
Efforts to conceptualize the master's degree falter amid the
continued proliferation of this level of program development by
professional groups and within institutions themselves. It is only
in the past decade that attention has been given to the important
role of professional schools, the nature of graduate education in
the professions, and the extraordinary diversification of the
master's degree in certifying professional achievement in a variety
of areas (CGS 1979; Spurr 1970). In an effort to bridge the gap
between professional and nonprofessional disciplines, it may be that
the new paradigm of graduate education is the first professional
degree-a highly differentiated degree whose content and structure
are based on more utilitarian and measurable objectives and directed
toward more immediate outcomes that reflect contemporary societal
values. The issue is not the devaluation of the baccalaureate or
the master of arts, but the new dominance of professionalism at all
levels, associate through doctoral degree.HOW ARE STANDARDS
MAINTAINED?
The past two decades have witnessed an ongoing
dialogue over how quality should be assessed. In graduate and
professional education, the master's degree has received little
attention, but recent research indicates that neither reputational
ranking nor quantitative assessments are adequate and that
multidimensional indicators are needed to assess this level of
degree. The accrediting process has focused on two
concerns-educational quality and institutional integrity, attempting
to discourage proliferation and specialization, to define and
monitor quality within specific disciplines, and to measure
educational outcomes. States have reviewed academic programs as a
means of coordinating, assessing, and consolidating graduate
programs. State oversight is more prevalent in public than in
private universities, and it is characterized by two kinds of
problems: the diversity of programs, which make generic criteria
difficult to sustain, and the perceived need for public institutions
in particular to respond to the needs of non-traditional
clienteles (Pelczar and Solomon 1984). In an effort to systematize
the review of master's level programs, the Council of Graduate
Schools and the Graduate Record Examination Board have devised the
Graduate Program Self-Assessment Service for institutional
self-study of programs or departments.WHAT ARE THE DOMINANT
MODELS?
The major professional degrees range from business,
engineering, and public affairs to teacher education, nursing, and
library science, and they include many specialties within each
degree designation. The overriding issue in the literature on these
degrees is the dilemma between theory and practice-how to balance
the need for practical knowledge and training in a skill with the
theoretical framework of the field of study. The major issues are
specialization or multidisciplinary education, requirements for
admission and for the degree, access and standards, and modes of
instruction and delivery. The inroads being made by corporate
colleges and other noncollegiate alternatives are a source of
concern within the academic community (Hugstad 1983). Business
alone spends an estimated $40 to 60 billion a year on management
training, much of it comparable to advanced degree programs.IS
THERE ROOM FOR INNOVATION?
In the 1960s and early 1970s, change
was a function of the rapid expansion of graduate education, the
vocationalism of graduate students, and the introduction of public
policies to strengthen access and opportunity at all levels. Today,
in a climate of retrenchment, change is linked to the management of
enrollments, to the market for jobs, and to adherence to external
and institutional standards. Graduate and professional schools are
seeking to respond to society's and individuals' perceived needs and
are encountering limited incentives with which to implement new
programs and demands from state and accreditation agencies for
higher standards, greater productivity, and more measurable
outcomes (Folger 1984). Disincentives to change go beyond the costs
and benefits of implementing new programs-to continuing preference
for theoretical over applied programs, vertical specialization over
breadth, and established over emergent programs in the status
hierarchy (Pelczar and Solomon 1984). External degrees, experiential
learning, cooperative education, interinstitutional consortia,
combined degrees, interdisciplinary programs, and distance learning
are some of the mechanisms and strategies being implemented in
graduate and professional programs with mixed results.A concerted
effort is needed to focus on the master's degree-its academic
strengths and weaknesses, its diffuse character, and its importance
in the hierarchy of degrees. The master's degree is distinct from
other graduate degrees and needs to be analyzed as a class of
degrees rather than as one generic model. While its relationship to
the baccalaureate and doctorate is important, it is increasingly
sought as a credential on its own merits. By addressing the issues
pervading this degree, we can modify and adapt various models that
strengthen postbaccalaureate education and suggest future parameters
for the master's degree.
SELECTED REFERENCES
Order ERIC
documents by "ED" number from the ERIC Document Reproduction
Service, 3900 Wheeler Avenue, Alexandria, VA 22304. Specify paper
copy (PC) or microfiche (MF) and number of pages. Call
1-800-227-ERIC.Council of Graduate Schools in the United
States.1979. "The
Assessment of Quality in Master's Programs."
Proceedings. College
Park, MD, University of Maryland. ED 196 960.
195 pp. MF-$1.00;
PC-$16.96.
Folger, John, ed. 1984. Financial
Incentives for Academic
Quality. New Directions for Higher
Education No. 48. San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Hugstad, Paul S.
1983. The Business School in the 1980s:
Liberalism versus
Vocationalism. New York: Praeger.
Judge, Harry. 1982. American
Graduate Schools of Education: A
View from Abroad. New York: Ford
Foundation.
Office of Educational Research and Improvement.
1985. "Bachelor's
Master's and Doctor's Degrees Conferred, by
Field, 1982-83."
Unpublished data. Washington. D.C.: Author. ED 179
198.
60 pp. MF-$1.00; PC-$7.29.
Pelczar, Michael J., and Solomon,
Lewis C., eds. 1984. Keeping
Graduate Programs Responsive to
National Needs. New Directions
for Higher Education No. 46. San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Pelikan, Jaroslav. 1983. Scholarship and
Its Survival: Questions
on the Idea of Graduate Education.
Princeton, N.J.: Princeton
University Press.
Spurr, Stephen H.
1970. Academic Degree Structures: Innovative
Approaches. Principles
of Reform in Degree Structures in the
United States. Berkeley,
Cal.: Carnegie Foundation for
Advancement of Teaching.
NOTE: This
ERIC Digest is a summary of The Master's Degree: Tradition,
Diversity, Innovation by the same author (ERIC ED 279 260).
This
publication was prepared partially with funding from the Office of
Educational Research and Improvement, U.S. Department of Education.
The opinions expressed in this report do not necessarily reflect the
positions or policies of OERI or the Department.
Title: The Master's Degree. ERIC Digest.
Document Type: Information Analyses---ERIC Information Analysis Products (IAPs) (071); Information Analyses---ERIC Digests (Selected) in Full Text (073);
Target Audience: Practitioners
Available From: ERIC Clearinghouse on Higher Education, One Dupont Circle, Suite
630, Washington, DC 20036 (free with self-addressed stamped
envelope).
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Curriculum Design, Degree Requirements,
Educational Change, Educational Innovation, Educational Quality,
Graduate Study, Higher Education, Intellectual Disciplines,
Masters Degrees, Professional Education, Program Evaluation
Identifiers: ERIC Digests
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