Graduate School Academics
Welcome to the Graduate School Academics Division
The Academics Division in the USF Graduate School serves as an academic liaison for Graduate Colleges and Programs in matters pertaining to policy, curriculum, and best practices in graduate education.
Academics Team Members
- Associate Dean, Dr. Peter Harries
- Administrative Specialist, TBA
- Assistant Director, Academics, Carol Hines-Cobb
- Team Assistant, Kathy Whitley
- Assistant Director, Academics, Joseph Butts
- Academic Svcs Administrator, Ryan Durrant
Responsibilities
- Academic Liaison for
- Registrar's List of Approved Programs and Concentrations
Masters Degrees
Advanced Degrees
Email Distribution Lists (secured)
page last updated 10_4_11
Graduate News
- 2012 Outstanding Graduate Faculty Mentor Awards
- The Spring Edition of the Graduate Voice Newsletter is now available to view online
- USF Grad Program Helps Entrepreneurs
- Article Questions Graduate Student Grades
- USF Wins Grants to Study What Helps Minority Ph.D. Students in Sciences Succeed
- Robin Telford, USF PhD candidate in Public Health, has been awarded Social Security Research Stipend to Improve Disability
- Three doctoral students in physics have each been invited separately to attend the 62nd Nobel Laureates Meeting in Lindau, Germany
- Student Green Energy Fund Proposal Deadline Approaching
- Graduate School Dean, Dr. Karen Liller, Publishes Second Edition of Book
- GSA Honors Dr. Peter Harries As An Exceptional Reviewer for 2011
- Graduate education and engineering programs earn spots on U.S. News & World Report rankings of best online education opportunities
- USF Takes Second in CA Technologies International Case Competition Finals
- National Science Foundation East Asia and Pacific summer institutes for U.S graduate students - 2012 application now open
- USF is ranked #19 overall and #8 among public universities
- Graduate Faculty Mentor Awards
- Scholarship-for-service opportunity for graduate students, SMART Scholarship Program
- Ten Simple Rules for Building and Maintaining a Scientific Reputation