Graduate Student Support
See here for information on advising and job placement
See here for information on LUC facilities & resources
See here for information on scheduling a visit
Financial Support
Unfortunately, for the entering class of fall 2021, we are only accepting students who can self-fund as either full time or part time students. We expect to resume offering fellowships to PhD applicants in the fall of 2022. If you choose to self-fund for 2021, you would still be eligible to apply for funding for the fall of 2022. During the COVID-19 pandemic, we are offering all our classes online. If you have any questions about the program, please contact the Graduate Program Director, Dr. Marilyn Krogh at mkrogh@luc.edu
Starting in fall 2022, fellowships, assistantships, and tuition scholarships will be available to a limited number of qualified full-time students in the PhD program. Assistantships are awarded by the department and are available to both new and continuing students. Fellowships come from the Graduate School (following departmental nomination) and are generally available only to continuing students. In return for assistantships and/or tuition scholarships, students participate in apprenticeship-like relationships with individual faculty members and work on specific research projects.
See here for more detailed information from the Graduate School on funding your education.
New students applying to the PhD program should submit their applications by January 5th in order to be considered for financial aid. Similarly, new MA applicants should submit their applications by June 1st. The Graduate Record Exam (required for all applicants) should be taken early in the fall prior to application to ensure the department receives the scores prior to consideration for financial support. Assistantship appointments are usually made in March, although in some cases an assistantship may become available at a later date. The various fellowships have nominations in December, January, and February, with appointments usually made in March. Specific assistantship assignments are made at the start of each semester.
The department has been successful in receiving fellowships from several Graduate School programs. The Pre-doctoral Teaching Fellowship focuses on training graduate students for teaching excellence at the undergraduate level. Advanced graduate students in the PhD program are given full responsibility for teaching in the undergraduate curriculum under the mentorship of an experienced professor. Teaching Scholars attend a special seminar on the integration of university teaching and research. Two other fellowship programs, the Advanced Doctoral Fellowships and the Schmitt Dissertation Fellowships are geared toward students working on their dissertations. Other university fellowships are available for a variety of purposes; see the Graduate School's website for full information.
Paid and volunteer internships in non-academic settings are also frequently available. The department actively helps students in locating such positions.
Advising and Job Placement
The Sociology Department has a strong advising and mentoring program, giving graduate students the individual attention needed to successfully complete their programs. The department also assists its graduates in searching for appropriate job opportunities. Recent graduates have found positions in university and college teaching; federal, state and local governments; social service and research agencies; and religious and corporate organizations.
The LUC Career Development Center may have additional resources available to you.
Facilities and Resources
(located on the Lake Shore Campus) houses the university's fine arts, humanities, science and social sciences collections, as well as the University Archives and government document depository collections. The Cudahy collections comprise more than 900,000 volumes and 3,600 periodical subscriptions. Students also have access to the business, law and medical collections located at the other campuses. Together, the libraries hold over 1.1 million volumes and 30,000 print and online journal subscriptions, and provide online access to a rich array of electronic resources. What we don’t have on campus can also be located and delivered through Inter-Library Loan.
The new Information Commons links to Cudahy Library by a café, and affords direct views of Lake Michigan and the Lake Shore Campus quadrangle. Among its state-of-the-art features, the building houses 222 computer workstations, six classrooms, wireless Internet access, 30 group-study rooms and a Help Desk to answer students' research and technology questions. All students have access to these computers and there is a small computing lab in the department.
Graduate housing is available at the Water Tower Campus for our graduate and professional students. The $51 million, 25-story Rev. Raymond C. Baumhart, S.J. Residence Hall is located at 26 E. Pearson ST and opened in 2006. It is steps away from the Loyola Law Center, Law Library, Quinlan School of Business, classrooms, the 51Âþ»Museum of Art (LUMA), and the Magnificant Mile.
Public transportation and the intercampus shuttle bus are available to transport students to the Lake Shore Campus. Currently most graduate students live off campus in apartments near the Lake Shore Campus in the Rogers Park neighborhood.
A modern recreational gymnasium and track - the at the Lake Shore Campus - provides handball, basketball, tennis, swimming, dance, and weight facilities.
Visit Our Department
The department also sponsors several pot luck or informal dinners for faculty and graduate students each year. If you would like to attend one of these special events or an evening class, please make arrangements with the Graduate Program Director. You are, of course, always welcome to come and talk with the graduate director or other faculty or graduate students.
See here for information on advising and job placement
See here for information on LUC facilities & resources
See here for information on scheduling a visit
Financial Support
Unfortunately, for the entering class of fall 2021, we are only accepting students who can self-fund as either full time or part time students. We expect to resume offering fellowships to PhD applicants in the fall of 2022. If you choose to self-fund for 2021, you would still be eligible to apply for funding for the fall of 2022. During the COVID-19 pandemic, we are offering all our classes online. If you have any questions about the program, please contact the Graduate Program Director, Dr. Marilyn Krogh at mkrogh@luc.edu
Starting in fall 2022, fellowships, assistantships, and tuition scholarships will be available to a limited number of qualified full-time students in the PhD program. Assistantships are awarded by the department and are available to both new and continuing students. Fellowships come from the Graduate School (following departmental nomination) and are generally available only to continuing students. In return for assistantships and/or tuition scholarships, students participate in apprenticeship-like relationships with individual faculty members and work on specific research projects.
See here for more detailed information from the Graduate School on funding your education.
New students applying to the PhD program should submit their applications by January 5th in order to be considered for financial aid. Similarly, new MA applicants should submit their applications by June 1st. The Graduate Record Exam (required for all applicants) should be taken early in the fall prior to application to ensure the department receives the scores prior to consideration for financial support. Assistantship appointments are usually made in March, although in some cases an assistantship may become available at a later date. The various fellowships have nominations in December, January, and February, with appointments usually made in March. Specific assistantship assignments are made at the start of each semester.
The department has been successful in receiving fellowships from several Graduate School programs. The Pre-doctoral Teaching Fellowship focuses on training graduate students for teaching excellence at the undergraduate level. Advanced graduate students in the PhD program are given full responsibility for teaching in the undergraduate curriculum under the mentorship of an experienced professor. Teaching Scholars attend a special seminar on the integration of university teaching and research. Two other fellowship programs, the Advanced Doctoral Fellowships and the Schmitt Dissertation Fellowships are geared toward students working on their dissertations. Other university fellowships are available for a variety of purposes; see the Graduate School's website for full information.
Paid and volunteer internships in non-academic settings are also frequently available. The department actively helps students in locating such positions.
Advising and Job Placement
The Sociology Department has a strong advising and mentoring program, giving graduate students the individual attention needed to successfully complete their programs. The department also assists its graduates in searching for appropriate job opportunities. Recent graduates have found positions in university and college teaching; federal, state and local governments; social service and research agencies; and religious and corporate organizations.
The LUC Career Development Center may have additional resources available to you.
Facilities and Resources
(located on the Lake Shore Campus) houses the university's fine arts, humanities, science and social sciences collections, as well as the University Archives and government document depository collections. The Cudahy collections comprise more than 900,000 volumes and 3,600 periodical subscriptions. Students also have access to the business, law and medical collections located at the other campuses. Together, the libraries hold over 1.1 million volumes and 30,000 print and online journal subscriptions, and provide online access to a rich array of electronic resources. What we don’t have on campus can also be located and delivered through Inter-Library Loan.
The new Information Commons links to Cudahy Library by a café, and affords direct views of Lake Michigan and the Lake Shore Campus quadrangle. Among its state-of-the-art features, the building houses 222 computer workstations, six classrooms, wireless Internet access, 30 group-study rooms and a Help Desk to answer students' research and technology questions. All students have access to these computers and there is a small computing lab in the department.
Graduate housing is available at the Water Tower Campus for our graduate and professional students. The $51 million, 25-story Rev. Raymond C. Baumhart, S.J. Residence Hall is located at 26 E. Pearson ST and opened in 2006. It is steps away from the Loyola Law Center, Law Library, Quinlan School of Business, classrooms, the 51Âþ»Museum of Art (LUMA), and the Magnificant Mile.
Public transportation and the intercampus shuttle bus are available to transport students to the Lake Shore Campus. Currently most graduate students live off campus in apartments near the Lake Shore Campus in the Rogers Park neighborhood.
A modern recreational gymnasium and track - the at the Lake Shore Campus - provides handball, basketball, tennis, swimming, dance, and weight facilities.
Visit Our Department
The department also sponsors several pot luck or informal dinners for faculty and graduate students each year. If you would like to attend one of these special events or an evening class, please make arrangements with the Graduate Program Director. You are, of course, always welcome to come and talk with the graduate director or other faculty or graduate students.