The USC Graduate School
The USC Graduate School is responsible for those academic and professional affairs of the university which relate to degree programs offered through the Graduate School. The Graduate School also participates in general university affairs relating to graduate and professional education and research.
Administration
Jean Morrison, Ph.D., Vice Provost for Graduate ProgramsJulena Lind, Ph.D., Associate Dean, Graduate School
Laura Yoneda, Ph.D., Associate Dean, Graduate School
History
Graduate studies had their formal beginnings at the University of Southern California in 1910, and 1923 marked the official constitution of the Graduate School of the university.Mission
Today the university's core values of free inquiry, the Trojan dedication to service and respect, the spirit of informed risk-taking and ethical conduct underpin the mission of the Graduate School. As the university positions itself to become one of the most influential and productive research universities in the world, the Graduate School's mission is responsive to an external environment for higher education which is quickly changing in significant ways.The vice provost for graduate programs has academic oversight responsibility for all graduate programs at the university. Excellence in graduate and professional education is critically dependent on the exchange of scholarly ideas among an increasingly diverse community of faculty and students. The values that characterize these interactions include dedication to excellence, mutual respect, fairness, collegiality, honesty and integrity.
The Graduate School, which confers all Ph.D. degrees, several professional doctorates and many master's degrees, adheres to that vision and those values. Graduate students at USC are key members of the university's community of scholars, contributing diverse viewpoints and fresh insights that are poised to make their mark on the theories, systems, inventions, public policy and creative work of the 21st century.
The Graduate School values the contribution of every graduate student. Its mission is to promote a distinguished Ph.D. educational experience, to support and celebrate all graduate student achievements and to provide leadership in the establishment and communication of policies, standards and processes related to graduate education.
Two common threads in all Graduate School activities are: advocacy on behalf of graduate students; and the fostering of the sense of community (composed of students, faculty, staff, alumni and administrators) that characterizes graduate education at USC as a place for students of all backgrounds. Facilitating the participation of under-represented groups in all areas of research and graduate studies is critical to the mission. Through its Provost's Fellowship program, the Graduate School partners excellent students with excellent faculty across the spectrum of disciplines and awards fellowships to incoming Ph.D. students who show outstanding promise for academic careers in research and teaching, and who serve to increase the representation of under-represented groups in their disciplines.