国际学生入学条件
Admission to graduate study in Comparative Literature at Penn State is based on a number of considerations. Above all we seek intellectually curious, highly motivated students whose interests suggest a good fit with our departmental strengths. We welcome well-qualified applicants from diverse backgrounds.
We are often asked what our committee looks for and the truth is that there is no standard formula. We consider GPAs and test scores (GREs and TOEFLs), but above all we look for intellectual engagement and scholarly commitment. The graduate committee that evaluates applicants seeks evidence of intellectual promise, openness to new ideas and methods, capacity for original scholarship, the ability to think critically and to write clearly, and potential for professional success. Of obvious importance for scholars who will work across cultures is appropriate language preparation. Research plans that are in synch with our areas of expertise are also of importance.
Sample of your written work, preferably an essay on literature.
Statement of purpose. The statement of purpose should include information on a) your education and other relevant background, including teaching experience or other activities that have prepared you for graduate work in Comparative Literature, b) your research interests, c) your language skills and their application to your research interests, d) your reasons for considering graduate work in Comparative Literature, especially your interest in our specific program.
A C.V. or resum.
Three Letters of Reference
Official transcripts of all relevant university education.
All international applicants must take and submit scores for the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or the IELTS (International English Language Testing System), with the exceptions noted below. The minimum acceptable score for the TOEFL is 550 for the paper-based test, 213 for the computer-based test, or a total score of 80 with a 19 on the speaking section for the Internet-based test (iBT). Applicants with iBT speaking scores between 15 and 18 may be considered for provisional admission, with Graduate School approval, which requires an institutional test of English proficiency upon the first semester of enrollment and, if necessary, remedial course work. The minimum composite score for the IELTS is 6.5.
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雅思考试总分
6.5
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雅思考试指南
- 雅思总分:6.5
- 托福网考总分:80
- 托福笔试总分:550
- 其他语言考试:NA
CRICOS代码:
申请截止日期: 请与IDP顾问联系以获取详细信息。
课程简介
我们的教师研究各种叙事(和各种媒体)之间的关系以及人们在不同地理区域的生活经历。这些经验包括法律压迫,不利的健康决定因素以及对地方,国家,国际和全球管辖权的复杂,相互竞争的主张的暗示。我们的教师研究个人人权,国家和国际机构行使生物政治权力形式的主权以及国际习惯法的地方形式的主权概念,并展示这些相互作用是如何形成的,并由审美文化所塑造。与我们对法律,人权和文学的全球方法的关注相辅相成,我们提供了重要医学人文学科的研究。这些领域以各种方式重叠,包括在全球研究恐怖和酷刑的方法以及创伤研究方面的教师研究和教学。对
Our faculty research relations between narratives of all kinds (and in all kinds of media) and the lived experiences of people in a variety of geographical areas. These experiences include legal oppression, adverse health determinants, and implication in complex, competing claims of local, national, international and global jurisdictions. Our faculty study concepts of individual human rights, the sovereign rights of nations and international bodies to exercise forms of biopolitical power, and local forms of customary law, and show how interactions among these shape and are shaped by aesthetic culture. Complementary to our focus on global approaches to law, human rights and literature, we offer studies in the critical medical humanities. These fields overlap in a variety of ways, including faculty research and teaching on global approaches to terror and torture, and on trauma studies. Investigations of forms of resilience that contest and expand canonical formulations of trauma offer graduate students the opportunity to study and participate in ongoing debates on issues ranging from post-traumatic stress disorder to the health consequences of structural injustice, graduate students also serve as TAs, or teach on their own, courses like CMLIT 143, Literature and Human Rights. The department's strong relationship with Penn State's program in Bioethics, with the School of International Affairs, and with the African Studies Program and the department of Women's Studies, extend these topics beyond the walls of Comparative Literature, and give students access to a wide variety of talks, conferences, and other events.
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