Cultural Studies in Education
Department of Curriculum & Instruction
Best Suited To
Students interested in exploring current theories and issues in sociocultural studies in education, particularly those who want to understand how social, cultural, political and historical contexts shape learning and educational systems.
Career Objective
This degree prepares graduates for a range of professional paths, including university faculty roles, teacher educator positions and research careers focused on sociocultural foundations of education. It also supports advancement into K–16 leadership positions, curriculum development and influential roles within nonprofits, foundations and community-based organizations.
At a Glance
Program Starts: Fall
Deadline to Apply:
December 15
Length of Program: 48 months minimum
Program Location: On campus
GRE Required? No
Transform Education Through Culture and Inquiry
The Cultural Studies in Education (CSE) doctoral program prepares future scholars, researchers and educational leaders to critically examine the complex sociocultural forces shaping today’s educational systems. Through advanced coursework, interdisciplinary theory and intensive research training, students gain the expertise needed to analyze and address contemporary issues in multicultural education, equity, identity and social change. The program offers the invaluable opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty whose scholarship spans a wide range of critical and timely topics, including:
- Sociocultural knowledge and teaching.
- Critical theory and pedagogy.
- Contexts of activism in education.
- Identity formation across diverse communities.
- African American and Latina/o educational experiences.
- Diasporic community knowledge and cultural preservation.
- Indigenous knowledge systems and epistemologies.
- Globalization and its impact on education.
In addition to rich theoretical grounding, students develop strong methodological expertise. The program emphasizes narrative, qualitative and ethnographic research methods, enabling scholars to investigate issues related to race, ethnicity and cultural diversity with rigor and depth. Graduates leave prepared to produce influential research, inform policy, engage in community advocacy and contribute meaningfully to the field as university faculty, researchers and thought leaders.

Program Area Coordinator
Keffrelyn Brown

Program Area Advisor
Noah De Lissovoy

Graduate Admissions Coordinator
Stephen Flynn
Program Overview
Program Requirements
General Requirements (Minimum 21 credit hours)
Foundation Requirements (9 credit hours required)
- EDC 380F Sociocultural Foundations
- EDC 381F Introduction to Teaching and Teacher Education
- EDC 383F Curriculum Theory
Research Methodology Requirements (Minimum 12 credit hours)
To be taken in sequence:
- EDC 381R Introduction to Systems of Human Inquiry
- The following two courses (6 hours), in any order:
- EDC 385R Introduction to Quantitative Research
- EDC 386R Introduction to Qualitative Research
- One course (3 hours) selected from the following:
- EDC 387R Advanced Quantitative Research
- EDC 388R Advanced Qualitative Research
Directed Research (Minimum 12 credit hours)
- EDC 396T Directed Research in Curriculum & Instruction (6 hours minimum)
Please Note: EDC 396T can be taken more than once for credit - Two additional courses (6 hours) that include a substantial research component approved by academic adviser.
Specialization Requirements (Minimum 18 credit hours)
Doctoral students are required to take EDC 385G Cultural Theory in Education, preferably within the first year in the program.
Select a minimum of 9 credit hours from other curriculum and instruction programs to study the topics that are relevant to your work and as approved by your advisor from the following.
- EDC 385G Advanced Multicultural Education
- EDC 380G Anthropology of Education
- EDC 385G Chicana Feminist Theorists
- EDC 385G Critical Pedagogy
- EDC 385G Cultural Knowledge of Teachers and Teaching
- EDC 385G Education in Contemporary Black America
- EDC 385G Explorations in the Education of the Mexican American Child
- EDC 385G Foundations of Curriculum
- EDC 385G Identity, Agency, and Education
- EDC 385G Immigration Theory in Education
- EDC 385G Race and Ethnic Relations in Schools
- EDC 392L Philosophical Foundations of Education
Courses Outside the Department (Minimum 6 credit hours)
Coursework from sections General Requirements, Directed Research and Special Requirements may fulfill this requirement.
CSE students are strongly encouraged to take courses outside the College of Education to fulfill this requirement. Suggested areas of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Mexican American Studies
- African and African Diaspora Studies
- Asian and Asian American Studies
- Women and Gender Studies
- Anthropology
- Sociology
- History
- Latin American Studies
- Cultural Studies
- American Studies
Dissertation (Minimum 6 credit hours)
Students are required to continuously register for at least three credits of dissertation once they have advanced to candidacy.
You must register in X99W (399, 699 or 999W) in each semester of candidacy until you graduate.
Please Note: Students receiving fellowships, assistantships, or other financial aid, may be required to take 9 hours of dissertation credit each semester.
Faculty
Expertise in the intersections between teaching, curriculum, and sociocultural knowledge and Black intellectual thought in education
Accepting new students
Racialization, language ideology, educational carcerality, place, (de)coloniality, abolitionism, community-based youthwork, Latine communities, ethnography, journey/trajectory mapping, critical policy-anchored analysis, and narrative inquiry
Examines effects of race, class and capital in schools and society; investigates and extends traditions of critical pedagogy and philosophy.
Accepting new students
Explores issues in race and culture in physical activity and sport as well as identity development patterns of African Americans.
Follows trends around cultural and racial identities, agency, migration, and social movements in education.
Additional Information
Let us know what your academic interests are within the College of Education and we’ll be in touch.
