Contact:
Dr. John Jordan, Professor of Practice; jmjordan@syr.edu; 315-443-1878
Overview:
The Doctorate of Professional Studies in Information Management (DPS-IM) is a 51-credit, part-time executive degree program for working professionals who are interested in the applied aspects of research in the information field. This 36-month degree program prepares executives to be the catalyst for positive change within their organizations.
The professional doctorate serves mid-career information professionals who are already employed in their respective disciplines. Our practice-focused curriculum will prepare them for advanced placement opportunities in executive and senior information management positions in the public, private, defense, academic, and non-profit sectors. Whether the goal is contributions and advancement within an organization, or a shift in specialization within the information professions, a doctoral degree can open a world of new possibilities for a thriving career in a rapidly changing profession.
In particular, the Doctorate of Professional Studies in Information Management will be of interest to those who consume, create, supervise, or evaluate research as part of larger problem solving or information management.
Distinctive Features
• Limited residency, distance-learning format
Online, hybrid, and brief residency course formats provide flexibility for off-campus professionals while encouraging opportunities for interaction among students and with faculty. Two one-week residencies bring cohorts together, typically in May and September.
• Applied focus
The program enriches students’ understanding of the role of information in the knowledge economy and teaches how to apply this expertise to enhance the effectiveness of information-based organizations in the public and private sectors. Students add to their breadth and depth of information, while building a solid foundation for advanced levels of information research, and develop competencies in program evaluation, data interpretation and applied problem solving.
• Doctoral level research
Because most students will enter with one or more relevant masters’ degrees in hand, the program’s emphasis is on the development of the research that underlies the writing of the thesis. This document is focused on the application of existing scholarly and professional literature to management and leadership in information industries, the military and public sector, or librarianship. A distinctive feature of this program is that the cohort of students pursue common deadlines. So, for each cohort, the research question and motivation, the review of literature, the method(s) of inquiry, the thesis proposal, and the thesis defense are pursued in a structured thesis-writing class, relying on each other for encouragement and practical support. All theses in the cohort model will likely follow a similar architecture (across students’ diverse topics) in contrast to the individualized approaches that reflect the iSchool PhD program’s mentor-apprentice model.
• Customizable areas of study
Concentrations and fields of research can focus on any of the school’s many disciplines, including information literacy, technology planning, digital libraries, electronic commerce, human-computer interaction, telecommunications policy, information seeking and classification, global networking, cyber security, data management, government information policy, knowledge management, among others.