Each year, we enroll a small cohort of four or five new students into the UW Evans School Ph.D. program with the expectation that it will take students four to six years to complete their degree. All admitted Ph.D. students will be provided with a funding offer at time of their acceptance. The financial support package includes tuition, stipend, and health insurance along with part-time employment as a research or teaching assistant.
Take the Next Step in Your Research Career
Application Deadline: December 15, 2024
Preparing Your Application
We welcome and encourage applicants from all areas of the world and actively promote a diverse student body comprised of different ethnic, socioeconomic, cultural, academic and personal backgrounds.
We consider applicants with a master’s degree in a related field or with a bachelor’s degree and professional research experience.
Gather your required University of Washington (UW) Graduate School – Evans School application materials:
- Application fee of $90 (U.S.). The graduate admissions application fee has increased by $5.00 to $90.00 for all programs beginning on or after autumn 2025. This fee is charged by the UW Graduate School (not the Evans School). The graduate school offers an application fee waiver for those who qualify.
- Resume, including:
- Relevant academic, professional, volunteer, or military experience
- Academic and/or professional honors, prizes, or scholarships
- Leadership positions and professional affiliations
- Writing sample of a sole-authored piece of work showing your analytic and writing capacity. The sample should be cut down to 30 pages or fewer if taken from a longer document.
- Statement of purpose, describing in 750 words or less:
- Yourself and your experience in the context of your decision to purse the Ph.D. in public policy and management
- Your expectations of the Ph.D. program in furthering your career objectives
- Your research interests and how you see them matching the strengths of the Evans School
- Your academic background, research, professional, and other experiences as well as any other factors relevant to your interest in public policy and management
- Unofficial transcripts from each college or university you have attended. Upon acceptance into the program, students will be asked to send an official copy of their transcript to the UW Graduate School office for degree verification purposes.
- Admitted students will be required to complete a college-level course in calculus before enrolling in the Ph.D. program. The application asks about your prior calculus coursework. If you haven’t previously taken calculus, you can briefly detail (in two sentences or fewer) your plan to do so if admitted into the program.
- Three letters of recommendation, to be submitted electronically by your references. At least two of the letters should be from faculty familiar with your academic work, and all three should address your capacity for pursuing an advanced research degree. You may designate up to five recommenders in the application system, but only three letters are required for your application to be complete.
- GRE Scores or Quantitative/Analytic Resume: Applicants to the Evans School Ph.D. program have the option of either submitting official GRE scores OR addressing their quantitative and analytic preparation in a Quantitative/Analytic Resume. Applications without one of these components will be considered incomplete and will not be reviewed.
- Applicants who choose to submit GRE scores need to have official scores sent from ETS. GMAT scores can be submitted in place of the GRE, but the GRE is preferred. Scores should be sent to the University of Washington (institution code: 4854). We highly recommend submitting official GRE scores if you have not previously completed coursework in advanced math or statistics, or if your coursework in these areas is more than 10 years old.
- Applicants who choose to submit a Quantitative/Analytic Resume should use the template provided. The template collects complete information about quantitative and analytic coursework and professional experience.
- TOEFL scores, or other demonstration of English language proficiency, for applicants whose native language is not English. See the full list of ways to establish English language proficiency. The Evans School no longer accepts IELTS scores as a measure of English language proficiency.
- A research proposal is not required for the application, but we ask applicants review the list of potential Ph.D. advisors and identify 2-3 whose research aligns with your interests. You may include a one or two sentence explanation for each faculty member about why you have selected them.
You will need to complete the UW Graduate School online application. During this process, you will be asked to identify which program you are applying to. Select Public Policy & Governance – Daniel J. Evans School – Ph.D. (Public Policy & Management) as your degree option. You will then be able to complete the Evans School specific portion of the application.
Frequently Asked Questions
We offer all students admitted into our doctoral program five years of academic-year funding through a mix of research and teaching assistantships at the Evans School. Academic-year funding consists of a tuition waiver, a monthly stipend of approximately $2,300-2,600 during the 9-months of the academic year, and health insurance year-round. Research and teaching assistantships have a 20 hour a week work obligation. Students are assigned to a research assistantship with an Evans School faculty member in their first year in the program, and then complete a mix of research and teaching assistantships in subsequent quarters. On average, Evans School doctoral students serve as teaching assistants for six quarters while in the program.
Yes. If you haven’t previously taken a college-level course in calculus, you can detail your plan to do so if admitted into the program in your application. However, having previously taken a course in calculus can make your application more competitive.
The GRE is not required and there is no minimum GRE score. Applicants to the Evans School must submit either official GRE scores or a Quantitative/Analytic Resume. We review applications holistically, taking into account your prior coursework and grades, your letters of recommendation, your research experience and writing sample, your personal statement, and your test scores or quantitative/analytic resume. We are looking for evidence of quantitative and analytic preparation and aptitude. We recommend that applicants submit official GRE scores if they have not had prior coursework in economics, statistics, quantitative methods, or other quantitative subjects.
If you will have a bachelor’s or master’s degree from a U.S. institution by the time you would start in the program, you do not need to submit TOEFL scores as part of your application.
If you have a bachelor’s or master’s degree from an institution in Australia, the Bahamas, Canada, Ireland, Jamaica, Kenya, New Zealand, Singapore, South Africa, Trinidad and Tobago, or the United Kingdom and where English is the medium of instruction, you do not need to submit a TOEFL score. Please see the UW Graduate School English Language Proficiency Requirements for a full list of options for demonstrating English proficiency.
Our Ph.D. program is an academic degree program designed to prepare graduates for careers as tenure-track academics or senior researchers at think tanks or NGO’s. The curriculum of the program focuses on research skill development and professional development within the academic field. For that reason, the curriculum of our Ph.D. program differs in its focus from MPA/MPP programs, and an MPA/MPP is not equivalent to the first two years of doctoral coursework. Students in our doctoral program earn a Master of Science in public policy and management degree upon completion of their first two years of coursework and their Major Area Paper (the literature review of the dissertation proposal).
You can see the profiles of our Ph.D. graduates, with their current positions listed.
Contact Us
Contact us via email at evansphd@uw.edu or by calling 206.543.4900.