The Department of Communicative Disorders and Sciences (CDS) Master of Science degree program in Speech Language Pathology offers an in-depth study of communication disorders with an emphasis on articulation and phonological disorders, fluency disorders (stuttering), augmentative and alternative communication (AAC), voice disorders, dysphagia (swallowing disorders), neurogenic disorders, hearing disorders, language disorders, social aspects of communication, and cognitive-communication disorders. Courses and clinical training opportunities place a high priority on assessment and intervention within an evidence-based, ethical, inclusive, and culturally responsive framework. Clinical practices are completed in varied settings, including the Kay Armstead Center for Communicative Disorders housed in the department. Signature speech, language and hearing services include screenings, evaluations, and a variety of therapy clinics including an AAC clinic, a voice clinic, a clinic for adults with intellectual disability, a clinic for children with language disorders, the Spartan Aphasia Research Clinic, and a summer camp for children with stuttering. Students have clinical opportunities for working with toddlers, children, adolescents, and adults in multiple settings, including public, private and charter schools (preschool, elementary, middle, high schools), rehabilitation agencies, private practices, skilled nursing facilities, and hospitals.
Admission Requirements
University Requirements
Applicants must meet all university admission requirements . The university-level graduate application is separate from the application you send to the department. You will need to apply separately to the university to obtain approval for university-level admission and to the department to obtain admission into the Master of Science degree program. Depending on their level of preparation, students can be admitted in either classified or conditionally classified standing. Minimum requirements for admission in classified standing are a completed Bachelor’s degree or post-baccalaureate program in communication disorders. An applicant holding a Bachelor’s degree in another field of study may be admitted with conditionally classified standing. The admissions letter will detail the preparatory coursework required for advancing to classified standing in the program. Additional requirements for international students are listed below.
Department Requirements
Instructions for applying to the Speech-Language Pathology Master’s Program.
Applicants from countries in which the official language is not English must achieve a minimum English-language proficiency test score as indicated on the Graduate Program Test Requirements webpage at GAPE.
Advancement to Candidacy
Students must meet the university requirements for candidacy. General university requirements for advancement to candidacy for the MS degree are detailed in the Graduate Policies and Procedures section. Candidacy includes the successful completion of the Graduation Writing Assessment Requirement (GWAR) . The department’s GWAR is met by completing the EDSP 221 course with a grade of B or better.
Graduation Requirements
University Graduation Requirements
Students must complete all residency, curriculum, unit, GPA, and culminating experience requirements as outlined in the Graduation Requirements section of the Graduate Policies and Procedures . Completion of the degree also requires a minimum grade of “B” in all courses taken and a minimum overall GPA of 3.0.
Degree Requirements
Students are expected to complete all required courses, the culminating experience, clinical practica, and observation requirements. To meet degree requirements, candidates for the MS degree must maintain a 3.0 GPA in all courses with no single course grade below a B- (B minus). Students who earn less than a B- (B minus) in any required course must retake the course and earn a grade of B- (B minus) or better.
- Complete 24 practicum/fieldwork units including EDSP 277 (3 times in 3 different types of clinics), EDSP 276 , EDSP 269 (School-based SLP externship), and EDSP 278 (medical/other externship). Candidates for the Master’s degree must accumulate a minimum of 375 required clock hours in a supervised clinical practicum in three distinctly different settings, and a minimum of 25 hours of observation;
- Complete 39 units of required academic courses, corresponding to national and state accreditation standards in Speech-Language Pathology;
- Apply for graduation via MySJSU; and,
- Culminating Experience: Successfully pass the MS Comprehensive exam or complete a Master’s Thesis as a required culminating experience in the graduate program.
In addition to the curriculum, students must demonstrate knowledge of each of five additional content areas (listed below) as required by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) and the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing (CCTC).
- Biological Sciences (ASHA requirement),
- Social/Behavioral Sciences (ASHA requirement),
- Physical Sciences (ASHA requirement),
- Statistics (ASHA requirement) and
- Child and/or Adolescent Development (CCTC requirement).
Prior to providing any speech, language, or communication assessment or intervention services during clinical practica, students must show evidence of all of the following:
- Certificate of Clearance;
- Negative TB (tuberculosis) test;
- Negative Hepatitis test;
- Physical Clearance to provide speech-language pathology services;
- Successful completion of online training related to HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act); and,
- CPR (Cardiopulmonary resuscitation) Certification.
- COVID-19 vaccination and vaccine booster, or appropriate documentation of medical or religious exemptions to vaccine, in compliance with the CSU vaccination policy.
Graduation Writing Assessment Requirement
At SJSU, students must pass the Graduation Writing Assessment Requirement (GWAR) . Program GWAR fulfilled by EDSP 221 .
Culminating Experience
Plan A (Comprehensive Exam)
All students in the Master of Science (MS) in Speech Language Pathology program must successfully complete the Comprehensive Examination during their last semester (Spring semester of the second year). The examination assesses broad knowledge and competency across topics in speech, language, hearing, cognitive-communication, and swallowing disorders. Upon completion of the program, students receive a Master of Science degree and are eligible to work as speech-language pathologists.
Plan B (Thesis)
Students who have a strong interest in research may be approved to complete the Thesis (Plan A). It requires students to secure a thesis advisor and a thesis committee and enroll in EDSP 299 during the Spring semester of the second year. (Enrolling in the EDSP 299 adds 3 units to the program for a total of 66 units.) Students electing to take this option are not required to complete the comprehensive examination. Theses must be defended and approved by a thesis committee and follow the College of Graduate Studies Master’s Thesis and Doctoral Dissertation Guidelines.