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Zachary Schrag's Guidelines for History Students

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  • About
  • Argument
    • A Thesis Statement Template
    • Dialectical Thesis Statements
    • Elements of a Thesis Statement
  • Exams
    • How to Take an Exam
    • How to Take an Oral Comprehensive Exam
    • The Comprehensive Exam
  • Format
    • Pre-Submission Checklist
    • Style Guidelines
  • Miscellaneous
    • Boilerplate for George Mason University courses
    • Grading Standards
    • How to Write an Outline (2013-2014 version)
    • Scrivener for Historians
    • Syllabus Archive
    • The Wealth of Nature: The Stage Version
    • Washington, D.C.: Spelling, Punctuation, and Capitalization
    • When Thomas Takes His Pen
  • Organization
    • How to Write an Essay
    • How to Write an Outline
    • The Anatomy of a 30-Page Paper
    • The Anatomy of a Ten-Page Paper
    • Topic Sentences
  • Reading
    • A History Professor’s Guide to Audible.com
    • A Layperson’s Reading List in American History
    • How to Read a History Book
    • How to Use Examples to Evaluate Scholarship
    • How to Write a Reading Response
    • How to Write a Review
    • Reverse Engineering for Historians
  • Research
    • Critical Reading
    • Examples of Critical Reading
    • How to Narrow a Research Topic
    • How to Read a Primary Source
    • How to Research a History Paper
    • How to Write a Prospectus
    • Image Analysis
  • External Links

How to take an oral comprehensive exam

New advice for doctoral students in history: “How to Take an Oral Comprehensive Exam.” The process should be one of the most valuable experiences in graduate school.

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This entry was posted in pedagogy, website updates on February 7, 2016 by Zachary Schrag.

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Pages

  • About
  • Argument
    • A Thesis Statement Template
    • Dialectical Thesis Statements
    • Elements of a Thesis Statement
  • Exams
    • How to Take an Exam
    • How to Take an Oral Comprehensive Exam
    • The Comprehensive Exam
  • External Links
  • Format
    • Pre-Submission Checklist
    • Style Guidelines
  • Miscellaneous
    • Boilerplate for George Mason University courses
    • Grading Standards
    • How to Write an Outline (2013-2014 version)
    • Scrivener for Historians
    • Syllabus Archive
    • The Wealth of Nature: The Stage Version
    • Washington, D.C.: Spelling, Punctuation, and Capitalization
    • When Thomas Takes His Pen
  • Organization
    • How to Write an Essay
    • How to Write an Outline
    • The Anatomy of a 30-Page Paper
    • The Anatomy of a Ten-Page Paper
    • Topic Sentences
  • Reading
    • A History Professor’s Guide to Audible.com
    • A Layperson’s Reading List in American History
    • How to Read a History Book
    • How to Use Examples to Evaluate Scholarship
    • How to Write a Reading Response
    • How to Write a Review
    • Reverse Engineering for Historians
  • Research
    • Critical Reading
    • Examples of Critical Reading
    • How to Narrow a Research Topic
    • How to Read a Primary Source
    • How to Research a History Paper
    • How to Write a Prospectus
    • Image Analysis

Credit and copyright.

This site is maintained by Zachary M. Schrag, Professor of History at George Mason University. While its advice is designed primarily for undergraduate and graduate students of United States history, I hope it will prove useful to all those who wish to study history and related disciplines. This material was formerly posted at www.schrag.info and was moved to this domain in the summer of 2010. The views expressed here are my own and may not reflect those of George Mason University.

Please use this site for the most recent versions. Except where noted otherwise, all original material on this site is copyright © 2002-2012 Zachary M. Schrag. It may be used for non-commercial personal and educational purposes provided it is attributed to Zachary M. Schrag.

If you are an educator who finds this site useful for classroom teaching, I would appreciate your sending me a note at zach (at) zacharyschrag.com telling me how you are using it and how it might be improved. Please do not use this address for the public business of George Mason University.

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