Woodrow Wilson School Graduate Admissions Viewbook

Page 1

VIEWBOOK


HISTORY Gift from Charles ‘26 and Marie Robertson greatly expands the graduate program The Junior Summer Institute at WWS begins

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY

SCHOLARS IN THE

NATION’S SERVICE INITIATIVE

1930

1948

1961

Established as the School of Public Graduate professional and International Master in Public Affairs Affairs (SPIA) (MPA) degree program created and School renamed to honor Woodrow Wilson ‘1879

1966

1966

Woodrow Wilson Ph.D. in Public School building Affairs begins dedicated (named Robertson Hall in 1988) and becomes the central hub of WWS

1967

1985

First woman awarded MPA degree

MESSAGE

FROM THE DEAN

“At every level, our work is informed by our commitment to a multidisciplinary approach to policy issues, a global perspective and an emphasis on top-quality research and teaching.” —Cecilia Elena Rouse, Dean 2012–present

1997 Master in Public Policy (MPP) degree program starts

2006

TODAY

20 WWS Scholars in the Research Centers; Nation’s Service WWS faculty, Initiative (SINSI) staff, students, and programs created are housed in multiple buildings across campus


GRADUATE DEGREES M PA

2-year Master of Public Affairs International Relations • International Development Domestic Policy • Economics and Public Policy

1-year Master of Public Policy

MPP

Mid-Career Program

PHD

5-year Ph.D. in Public Affairs Security Studies • Science, Technology and Environmental Policy


MASTER’S DEGREE CURRICULUM PUBLIC AFFAIRS

PUBLIC POLICY

2 Year Degree

1 Year Mid-Career Degree

16

8

Courses

Courses

Core Courses:

90+ Courses:

Microeconomics • Macroeconomics Quantitative Analysis • Politics of Public Policy Psychology for Policy Analysis and Implementation Applied Econometrics

The Management of Organizations • National Security Policy Energy Economics • Psychology and Inequality Gender in the World Economy Economics and Ethics: Social Justice & Policy State and Local Finance • Negotiation

90+ Electives

Fields of Concentration

International Relations

International Development

Domestic Policy

Economics and Public Policy

Optional Certificate Programs

Demography

Health and Health Policy

Science, Technology and Environmental Policy

Urban Policy

Urban Policy and Planning


GRADUATE POLICY WORKSHOPS These small seminars are a required part of the MPA curriculum. In each, students tackle real-world policy issues and present a report for a client.

Recent Policy Workshop Topics Equitable Neighborhoods in Philadelphia: Assessing Gentrification and Residential Displacement • Education Reform in Chile • Foreign Policy with Former Enemies • Poland and the Euro • Policy, Political and Implementation Challenges Facing the Affordable Care Act • Learning Lessons from Afghanistan • Foreign Direct Investment in Zambia • Health and Sanitation in India • Strategies for Preventing Youth Violence in Philadelphia’s 22nd Police District • Policies on Hydrofracking: State Policy Opportunities in Unconventional Oil and Gas • Applying Behavioral Science to Family Planning and Reproductive Health in Sub-Saharan Africa • Peace-Building and Development in Conflict-Affected States

Elections and Political Transition in Myanmar

U.S. Strategy in the Middle East: Pursuing American Interests through Calibrated Leadership

Using the Affordable Care Act Innovation Waiver to Reach Minnesota’s Triple Aim


PHD CURRICULUM SECURITY STUDIES

SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY

12

8

Courses

Courses

Areas of Concentration

Areas of Concentration

Grand Strategies • Arms Competitions Coercive Diplomacy • Terrorism • Proliferation Insurgency • Political Instability Civil-Military Relations • Cyber Warfare Capabilities

Science and Policy of: Global Climate Change • Air Pollution Conservation Biology • Tropical Disease Transmission Information Technology • Nuclear Power • Renewable Energy

Dissertations

Dissertations

“Military Innovation in War: The Criticality of the Senior Military Leader” • “Remotely Piloted Aircraft: The Airpower Revolution, Diffusion and the Future of Air Warfare” • “Perfecting War: The Organizational Sources of Doctrinal Change”

“Catching Up: The Rise of the Chinese Wind Turbine Industry” • “Returning to the Planetary Boundary for Nitrogen: A Multidisciplinary Assessment“ • “Policy Diffusion of Emission Regulations for On-Road Vehicles: Causes and Benefits for Air Quality” • “Surface Ozone Pollution and Global Agriculture: Estimated Impacts and Strategies to Reduce Damages”


CURRENTLY

ENROLLED

134 MPAs

18 MPPs

35 Ph.D.s


WHY

WWS


COMMUNITY

With fewer than 200 graduate students enrolled at any given time, you will make lifelong friendships and develop strong professional networks.

AN INTIMATE PROGRAM

Due to the small size of WWS, your interaction with faculty goes far deeper than listening to lectures and writing papers.

CAREER SERVICES

Mentoring is provided at every stage of your search – starting on day one!

PUBLIC SERVANTS AS TEACHERS

Many faculty members have high-level policy experience at the state level, in Washington and abroad.

CURRICULUM

The WWS curriculum is rigorous yet flexible, combining a core of micro and macroeconomics, econometrics and political and behavioral analysis with specialized classes in a wide variety of policy topics.

PUBLIC AFFAIRS SPEAKERS

WWS students have frequent opportunities to hear and interact with key national and international policy makers.

RESEARCH FACULTY

Most WWS faculty members have co-appointments with disciplinary departments ranging from the social sciences to computer science to the natural sciences.

HANDS-ON LEARNING

Master’s students participate in policy workshops that allow them to use their developed skills to analyze specific policy issues and create reports for real clients.

ALUMNI

Join the ranks of more than 4,000 “Woos” who are committed to improving the world through public service, advocacy, evidence-based scholarship and public/private partnerships.


TEACHING & RESEARCH Full-Time Faculty

GLOBALIZATION

ARTS AND CULTURE

POLITICAL ECONOMY

SUCCESSFUL SOCIETIES

SCIENCE AND GLOBAL SECURITY

DEMOCRATIC POLITICS

INTERNATIONAL SECURITY

POPULATION

HEALTH SURVEY RESEARCH

SELF-DETERMINATION

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

DEVELOPMENT CHINA EDUCATION

FINANCE

SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENT

LAW

Visiting Professors, Lecturers and Practitioners

CHILD WELLBEING

BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE

Research Centers


GENEROUS FINANCIAL AID Most students graduate debt-free, giving them the ability to pursue careers in public service.

MPA

FINANCIAL AID

94%

Full Merit-Based Tuition

MPP

FINANCIAL AID

100%

$25,400 Median Stipend

94%

SAJDA OUACHTOUKI, MPA NEW YORK, N.Y.

“WWS offers me the chance to fuse my passion for international affairs with my commitment to public service.”

Need-Based Stipend

RUPERT ELDERKIN, MPP

MPP FULLY FUNDED BY INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL SCHOLARSHIPS

CAMBRIDGE, UNITED KINGDOM “WWS offers a chance to develop a broader understanding of organizational management and policy development – alongside an inspiring group of colleagues.”

Full Merit-Based Tuition & Stipend

PHD

FINANCIAL AID

100% Full Merit-Based Tuition & Stipend

DIANE L. COFFEY, Ph.D. HEBRON, CONN. AWARDED FOR FIVE YEARS

“WWS financial aid packages are uniquely generous. They allow students to concentrate on learning at Princeton and to pursue careers in public service without worrying about graduate school debt.”


APPLICATION DUE Dec. 15

ADMISSIONS DECISIONS March 15

ADMITTED STUDENTS HOSTING WEEKEND April

GETTING

IN SUCCESSFUL CANDIDATES DEMONSTRATE A COMMITMENT TO PUBLIC SERVICE AND AN ABILITY TO LEARN WHAT WE TEACH.

ADMITTED STUDENTS DECISION DEADLINE April 15


MPA

AVERAGE FROM 2012-15 WOMEN ADMITTED

MEN ADMITTED

52%

NATIONALITY

82% 18%

48%

United States

ADMITS’ GRADE POINT AVERAGES

International

ETHNICITY OF U.S. ADMITS

74%

1%

6%

NATIVE AMERICAN

HISPANIC MEXICAN AMERICAN PUERTO RICAN

11%

ASIAN AMERICAN

10%

11%

21%

MULTIRACIAL

AFRICAN AMERICAN

5%

5%

56%

3.7-4.0 3.4-3.6 3.0-3.3

NON-IDENTIFIED

CAUCASIAN

INTERNATIONAL ADMITS FROM 32 COUNTRIES

GRE AVERAGE FROM 2012-15 QUANTITATIVE

ANALYTICAL WRITING

6%

5%

(<60%)

14%

(60-69%)

(3.0-3.5)

4%

8%

31%

7%

(70-79%)

34%

16%

(4.0-4.5)

19%

(70-79%)

30%

(80-89%)

3%

(60-69%) (<60%)

(6.0) (90-99%)

VERBAL

(80-89%)

53%

(5.0-5.5)

70%

(90-99%)


MPP

AVERAGE FROM 2012-15 WOMEN ADMITTED

MEN ADMITTED

44%

NATIONALITY

68% 32%

56%

United States

ADMITS’ GRADE POINT AVERAGES

ETHNICITY OF U.S. ADMITS

6%

10%

ASIAN AMERICAN

38%

International

MULTIRACIAL

7%

33% 22%

AFRICAN AMERICAN

64%

7%

13%

NON-IDENTIFIED

CAUCASIAN

3.7-4.0 3.4-3.6 3.0-3.3 <3.0 INTERNATIONAL ADMITS FROM 15 COUNTRIES

GRE AVERAGE FROM 2012-15 QUANTITATIVE

ANALYTICAL WRITING

12%

35%

(<60%)

8%

(90-99%)

11%

(3.0-3.5)

8%

(<3.0)

VERBAL

7%

14%

(6.0)

(<60%)

6%

(60-69%)

(80-89%)

6%

(70-79%)

20%

(60-69%)

22%

(70-79%)

39%

(4.0-4.5)

38%

(5.0-5.5)

13%

(80-89%)

61%

(90-99%)


PHD

AVERAGE FROM 2012-15 WOMEN ADMITTED

MEN ADMITTED

40%

NATIONALITY

60% 40%

60%

United States

ADMITS’ GRADE POINT AVERAGES

ETHNICITY OF U.S. ADMITS

60%

66%

6%

CAUCASIAN

ASIAN AMERICAN

34%

6%

6% 3.7-4.0 3.4-3.6

International

AFRICAN AMERICAN

22%

MULTIRACIAL

<3.4 INTERNATIONAL ADMITS FROM 6 COUNTRIES

GRE AVERAGE FROM 2012-15 QUANTITATIVE

ANALYTICAL WRITING

17%

13%

(3.0-3.5)

(<70%)

17%

(70-79%)

13% (6.0)

VERBAL

10%

10%

(<70%)

(70-79%)

47%

(90-99%)

10%

33%

(80-89%)

(4.0-4.5)

23%

(80-89%)

37%

(5.0-5.5)

70%

(90-99%)


PRIOR WORK EXPERIENCE 407 MPA ADMITS FROM 2012-15

11%

46%

Private Sector

48%

41%

Non-Profit Sector

Public Sector

8% None

9%

1% 1yr

2 yrs

18% 18% 3 yrs

4yrs 5+yrs

92 MPP ADMITS FROM 2012-15

5%

Private Sector

32%

40%

Non-Profit Sector

27% 63%

Public Sector

17%

13%

3% None

1-7yrs 8-9 yrs 10-14 yrs 15+yrs

26 PHD ADMITS FROM 2012-15

15%

Private Sector

60% 35%

Public Sector

50%

17%

Non-Profit Sector

None

10% 7% 3% 3% 1yr

2yrs

3 yrs

4yrs 5+yrs


LOCATION

TO NEW YORK CITY

51 MILES

PRINCETON NEW JERSEY

TO WASHINGTON, D.C.

183 MILES

TO PHILADELPHIA

45 MILES


PRINCETON ANTONY BUGG-LEVINE, MPA ‘01

JULIUS E. COLES, MPA ‘66

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, NONPROFIT FINANCE FUND

DIRECTOR & FOUNDER, ANDREW YOUNG CENTER FOR GLOBAL LEADERSHIP

• Chair, Global Impact Investing Network • Managing Director, Rockefeller Foundation • Country Director, TechnoServe Kenya and Uganda

• President, Africare • Director, Ralph Bunche International Center, Howard University • Foreign Service Diplomat, USAID, Senegal • James Madison Medal, Princeton University

LISETTE NIEVES, MPA ‘01 FOUNDING PARTNER, LINGO VENTURES

• Executive Director, Year Up New York • Chief of Staff, Department of Youth and Community Development, New York • Board Member, White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for Hispanics • Truman Scholar, Rhodes Scholar, Aspen Pahara Fellow

MINH-THU PHAM, MPA ‘03

JOSE QUINONEZ, MPA ’98

DIRECTOR OF POLICY, UNITED NATIONS FOUNDATION

FOUNDING EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, MISSION ASSET FUND

• Chief of Staff, Office of the U.N. Special Envoy for Malaria • Policy Advisor, Executive Office of the Secretary-General, United Nations • Board Member, Coalition for Asian American Children and Families

• Policy Director, Asset Policy Initiative of California • California Outreach Director, Center for Responsible Lending • Chair, Consumer Advisory Board of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

ROBERT GORDON, III, MPA ‘89 PRESIDENT, BE THE CHANGE, INC.

• Deputy Under Secretary of Defense, Obama Administration • Senior Vice President, City Year • Director of Special Operations, Clinton Administration • Lt. Colonel, U.S. Army


IN THE

NATION’S SERVICE MARINE A. BUISSONNIÈRE, MPP ‘08 DIRECTOR, PUBLIC HEALTH PROGRAM, OPEN SOCIETY FOUNDATIONS

• Secretary-General, Médecins Sans Frontières International • Chargée de Mission, Médecins Sans Frontières France • Head-of-Mission, Médecins Sans Frontières France & Spain

AARON D. LEVINE, Ph.D. ‘07

LARRY HANDERHAN, MPA ‘12

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR & DIRECTOR OF GRADUATE STUDIES SCHOOL OF PUBLIC POLICY GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY

PROGRAM MANAGER, INTERNATIONAL & PHILANTHROPIC INNOVATION, U.S. HUD

• Scheduling Coordinator, Mayor Gavin Newsom of San Francisco • Coordinator, Princeton University Queer Graduate Caucus • Donald E. Stokes Prize for Leadership

• Guest Researcher, Division of Reproductive Health, Center for Disease Control • National Science Foundation Early Career Faculty Award

KAVITA RAMDAS, MPA ‘88 REPRESENTATIVE FOR INDIA, NEPAL AND SRI LANKA, THE FORD FOUNDATION

• President and Chief Executive Officer, Global Fund for Women • Executive Director, Program on Social Entrepreneurship, Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Stanford University • Duveneck Humanitarian Award

DOUG MERCADO, MPP ’07

TEAM LEADER, USAID’S DISASTER ASSISTANCE RESPONSE TEAM FOR THE WEST AFRICA EBOLA OUTBREAK

• Program Policy Officer, U.N. World Food Programme • Deputy Manger for Operations, USAID’s Response Management Team for Syria Humanitarian Crisis

FREDERICK WHERRY, MPA ‘00, Ph.D. ‘04 PROFESSOR OF SOCIOLOGY, YALE UNIVERSITY

• Consultant, Office of the Vice President for East Asia and Pacific, Social Policy and Governance, The World Bank • Board Member, Raíces Culturales Latinoamericanas • Luce Scholar


AND MPA

JOB PLACEMENT 2010-14

16%

Private Sector

35%

Non-Profit Sector

49%

Public Sector

44%

Domestic Policy Focus

56%

International Policy Focus

WHEREVER YOU G


IN THE

SERVICE OF ALL NATIONS

MPP

JOB PLACEMENT 2010-14

12%

20%

Private Sector

Non-Profit Sector

68%

Public Sector

23%

Domestic Policy Focus

77%

International Policy Focus

O, THERE WE ARE


GETTING INVOLVED AT WWS Gender and Policy Network Graduate Consulting Group Journal of Public and International Affairs Students and Alumni of Color Woodrow Wilson Action Committee Woodrow Wilson Political Network

WILSONSCHOOL

FOLLOW US

@WWSADMIT

WWS BLOG

wws.princeton.edu


Credits Editor Elisabeth Hirschhorn Donahue Graphic Designer Ticiana Jardim Marini Copy Editors B. Rose Huber Kathryn Lopez Photography Denise Applewhite Anastacia Dialynas Sam duPont John Houston Ticiana Jardim Marini Sameer Khan Larry Levanti Melissa McGinnis Dan Meuse Tori Sulewski John Templeton Chex Yu Copyright Š 2015 by The Trustees of Princeton University

Graduate Admissions Office Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs Princeton University Robertson Hall Princeton, NJ 08544-1013

John Templeton Associate Dean for Graduate Admissions Melissa Lyles Assistant Director of Graduate Admissions & Social Media Strategist

wwsadmit@princeton.edu P. 609-258-4836 F. 609-258-2095

Melissa McGinnis Admissions Manager Technical Administrator

wws.princeton.edu/admissions

Lisa Duffy Admissions Assistant Vance Stephens Admissions Assistant


Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs Princeton University Robertson Hall Princeton, NJ 08544-1013 wwsadmit@princeton.edu P. 609-258-4836 F. 609-258-2095 wws.princeton.edu


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