Nov 27, 2024  
2017 - 2018 Graduate Catalog 
    
2017 - 2018 Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Accelerated B.A./B.S. and M.P.P.


W&M undergraduate students are able to earn both a bachelor’s degree and a Master of Public Policy in five years. Candidates interested in this accelerated degree path must apply to and gain acceptance to the Public Policy Program in their junior year. Acceptance into the accelerated degree path includes the intention that the graduate committee will recommend regular admission to the graduate program when the baccalaureate degree has been conferred.

With advance written permission from the program’s graduate committee, up to nine graduate credits with a grade of C or higher taken by students in the B.A./B.S./M.P.P. accelerated degree path may be used to satisfy both graduate and undergraduate degree requirements. Students in the accelerated degree path will take additional graduate public policy classes during their fourth year; these classes will count exclusively toward the M.P.P. degree requirements.

Students may also earn up to 9 graduate credits through demonstrating competency in the following first-year M.P.P. classes: PUBP 601 - The Political Environment , PUBP 602 - Quantitative Methods I , and PUBP 603 - Quantitative Methods II . Competency will be demonstrated by passing the final exam of these courses with a grade of B or higher. Students who successfully demonstrate competency in these courses will receive course credit and a grade of P.

M.P.P. Degree Requirements


The Master of Public Policy degree program is a two-year, full-time, residential program requiring forty-nine hours of course credit.

The following core courses are required:

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In addition to the core courses, students in the M.P.P. degree program are required to take at least one 3-credit or two 2-credit, program-approved, School of Law course(s). Additional elective courses  must be taken to fulfill the 49 hour credit requirement. Students choose elective credits based around their chosen area of interest or develop an alternative set of courses developed with the consent of the Director.  Areas of emphasis include education policy, environmental policy, health care policy, international trade, regulatory policy, and state and local policy.