About the Ph.D. Prep Program
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BYU's School of Accountancy offers a specialized PhD Prep Track as part of the Masters of Accountancy (MAcc) degree. The program is designed to prepare students to enroll in a Ph.D. program in accounting at another university after finishing their master’s degree. Students in both the five-year integrated program and the two-year graduate program are eligible to apply to the PhD Prep Track. The program involves Ph.D.-style seminars to learn about research and academic work, as well as coursework in mathematics, econometrics, and statistics. Students who participated in this program have been highly successful in placing at research intensive Ph.D. programs. Those who complete their Ph.D. in accounting enter a field where there is high demand, and it is projected that this will be the case for the foreseeable future. Starting salaries for new professors in accounting are two to four times higher than starting salaries for MAcc graduates.
Learn more about the Prep Track by reading the History of the Prep Track.
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People
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One purpose of this website is to improve networking among past Ph.D. prep students, current Ph.D. prep students, and friends of BYU. Please make sure you are included in the website and you keep your information up to date.
Also, please see our collective Accomplishments and Successes.
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Advice, Suggestions, and Resources
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This site is meant to provide useful advice, suggestions, and resources for all users. These are separated by topical area:
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Announcements
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Featured Doctoral Student
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- Ph.D. Institution: University of Texas - Austin
- Why a Ph.D.? "I knew that doing a PhD would require me to learn how to research accounting and that continued success in the academic field would lead me to learn more and more... I feel that professors can have an impact for good on the life of each student. I know that I had some marvelous professors at BYU and wanted to have a chance to give back."
- Awards:University of Texas Office of Graduate Studies Professional Development Award, 2008; University of Texas McCombs School of Business Doctoral Fellowship, 2006–2008
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Quote
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"Starting now, you must use your education not to say something impressive but to do something that will lift others and help them be successful. In other words, you must use your education not to distinguish yourself from others but to devote yourself to them--to helping them grow and flourish, even if it seems at the expense of your own prominence and glory. This is the way of our Savior." Elder Robert D. Hales, BYU Spring Commencement 2006 (full text available here) - more Quotes
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