
The Degree of Master of
Public Service and Administration
The George Bush School of Government
and Public Service offers an interdisciplinary, non-thesis program
leading to the degree of Master
of Public Service and Administration (MPSA).
The curriculum in the Bush School
provides a professional education for those persons seeking to
lead and manage organizations concerned with furthering the public
interest. Successful leaders in public and not-for-profit organizations
must possess a combination of substantive knowledge and critical
skills. This knowledge includes an understanding of the structures
and processes of policy formation and the political, social and
economic forces that shape policy transactions. Coalition building,
personnel motivation, policy analysis and effective communication
are skills crucial to productive public service. The Bush School
will equip students having a disposition toward leadership and
public service with vital skills and knowledge critical for professional
careers, whether in federal, state or local government, or in
the not-for-profit sectors.
The MPSA degree is a two-year, 54
credit hour professional program that includes a core curriculum
of 8 courses, a summer internship, seven electives and a capstone
policy seminar. The program integrates leadership assessment
and skills acquisition throughout the two-year course of study.
The MPSA degree is a non-thesis degree.
For further information about the
Bush School, including requests for admission materials, please
contact: Bush School, Texas A&M University, 4220 TAMU, College
Station, TX 77843-4220, email admissions@bushschool.tamu.edu or on the website bush.tamu.edu.
Residence
Students must complete 12 credit
hours of Texas A&M University resident credit to satisfy
the residence requirement for the Master of Public Service
and
Administration
degree.
Student's Advisory Committee
After receiving admission to graduate
studies and enrolling for course work, the student will consult
with the program director concerning appointment of the chair
of his or her advisory committee. The student's advisory committee
for the master's degree will consist of no
fewer than three members of the graduate faculty representative
of the student's fields of study. The chair or one of the co-chairs
of the advisory committee must be from the student's department,
and at least one or more
of the members must be from a department other than the student's
major department.
The chair, in consultation with the student,
will select the remainder of the advisory committee. The chair
will then notify the tentative members of the advisory committee,
giving the student's name and field of study, and request
that they consider serving on this committee. The student
will interview each prospective committee member to determine
whether he or she is willing to serve. Only graduate faculty
members located on the campuses at College Station, Galveston,
Texas A&M University-Temple Campus or Institute of Biosciences
and Technology-Houston may serve as chair of a student's
advisory committee. Other graduate faculty members may serve
as co-chair with an individual located at College Station
or Galveston. The chair of the committee, who usually has
immediate supervision of the student's degree program, has
the responsibility for calling required meetings of the committee
and for calling meetings at any other time considered desirable.
If the chair of the student's
advisory committee is unavailable for an extended time in any
academic period during which the student is involved in activities
relating to an internship and is registered for 684, 692 or
693 courses, the student may request, in writing, that the
department head appoint an alternate advisory committee chair
during the interim period.
The duties of the committee include
responsibility for the proposed degree plan and any professional
study or project. In addition, the committee as a group and
as individual members is responsible for counseling the student
on academic matters, and, in the case of academic deficiency,
initiating recommendations to the Office of Graduate Studies.
The committee members' signatures
on the degree plan indicate their willingness to accept the
responsibility for guiding and directing the entire academic
program of the student and for initiating all academic actions
concerning the student. Although individual committee members
may be replaced by petition for valid reasons, a committee
cannot resign en masse.
Degree Plan
The student's advisory committee,
in consultation with the student, will develop the proposed
degree plan. The degree
plan must be completed and filed with the Office of Graduate
Studies following the deadlines imposed by the student's college,
and no later than the dates announced in the OGS calendar of
deadlines for graduation. No exceptions are allowed.
This proposed degree plan must
be typed and submitted on the official form as it appears on
the website at vpr.tamu.edu with endorsements by the student's
advisory committee and the head of the student's major department.
Credit Requirement
A minimum of 54 semester credit
hours of approved courses that include a core curriculum of
8 courses, a summer internship, seven elective courses and
a capstone policy seminar is required for the Master of Public
Service and Administration degree.
Limitations on the Use of Transfer, Extension
and Certain Other Courses
Some departments may have more restrictive requirements
for transfer work. If otherwise acceptable, certain courses
may be used toward meeting credit-hour requirements for the
master's degree under the following limitations.
Exceptions will be permitted only in unusual
cases and when petitioned by the student's advisory committee
and approved by the Office of Graduate Studies.
Transfer of Credit
A student who has earned 12 hours of graduate
credit in residence at Texas A&M
University may be authorized to
transfer courses in excess of the
limits prescribed above
upon the advice of the advisory
committee and with the advance
approval of the Office of Graduate
Studies if
these courses are not available
at Texas A&M University.
Courses taken in residence at an
accredited U.S. institution or
approved international institution
with a final grade of
B or greater might be considered
for transfer credit if, at the
time the courses were completed,
the student was in degree-seeking
status at Texas A&M University
or at the institution at which
the courses were taken, and if
the courses would be accepted
for credit toward a similar degree
for students in degree-seeking
status at the host institution.
Otherwise, the limitations
stated in the preceding section
apply. Course work in which
no formal grades are given or in
which grades other than letter
grades (A, B, C, etc.) are given
(for
example, CR, P, S, U, H, etc.)
is not accepted for transfer credit.
Courses appearing on the degree
plan with grades of D, F or U may
not be absolved by transfer work.
Credit for
thesis research or the equivalent
is not transferable. Credit for
course work submitted for transfer
from any college or
university must be shown in semester
credit hours or equated to semester
credit hours. An official transcript
from the university
at which the transfer course work
was taken must be sent directly
to the Office of Admissions and Records.
Courses completed at other institutions
are not included in computing the GPR.
Foreign Languages
There is no specific language requirement
for the Master of Public Service and Administration degree.
Internship
During the summer between their
first and second year, students participate in an internship
related to their career plans. Six hours of graduate course-work
credit is earned by satisfactorily completing this requirement.
Time Limit
All degree requirements must be
completed within a period of seven consecutive years for the
degree to be granted. A course will be considered valid until
seven years after the end of the semester in which it is taken.
Graduate credit for course work which is more than seven calendar
years old may not be used to satisfy degree requirements.
Application for Degree
Graduate degrees are conferred
at the close of each regular semester
and 10-week summer semester. Candidates for advanced degrees
who expect to complete their
work at the end of a given semester
must apply for graduation by submitting the electronic application
for degree to the
Office of the Registrar and by
paying the required graduation fee at the Fiscal Department
no later than the Friday of the
second week of the fall or spring
semester or the Friday of the first week of the first summer
term. The
electronic application for degree
can be accessed via the website
degreeapp.tamu.edu.
Final Examination
A final comprehensive examination
is not required for the Master of Public Service and Administration.