PH.D. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE PROGRAM (POST M.S.)

Similar documents
Handbook for Graduate Students in TESL and Applied Linguistics Programs

College of Engineering and Applied Science Department of Computer Science

DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY HANDBOOK

DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN POLITICAL SCIENCE

We are strong in research and particularly noted in software engineering, information security and privacy, and humane gaming.

DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN ARCHITECTURE

MASTER OF SCIENCE (M.S.) MAJOR IN COMPUTER SCIENCE

MASTER OF ARCHITECTURE

GRADUATE PROGRAM Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Drexel University Graduate Advisor: Prof. Caroline Schauer, Ph.D.

Graduate Handbook Linguistics Program For Students Admitted Prior to Academic Year Academic year Last Revised March 16, 2015

Doctoral GUIDELINES FOR GRADUATE STUDY

Individual Interdisciplinary Doctoral Program Faculty/Student HANDBOOK

M.S. in Environmental Science Graduate Program Handbook. Department of Biology, Geology, and Environmental Science

GRADUATE STUDENT HANDBOOK Master of Science Programs in Biostatistics

Kinesiology. Master of Science in Kinesiology. Doctor of Philosophy in Kinesiology. Admission Criteria. Admission Criteria.

GRADUATE PROGRAM IN ENGLISH

SCHOOL OF ART & ART HISTORY

DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS. GRADUATE HANDBOOK And PROGRAM POLICY STATEMENT

Undergraduate Program Guide. Bachelor of Science. Computer Science DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE and ENGINEERING

TEACHING AND EXAMINATION REGULATIONS PART B: programme-specific section MASTER S PROGRAMME IN LOGIC

American Studies Ph.D. Timeline and Requirements

NSU Oceanographic Center Directions for the Thesis Track Student

SORRELL COLLEGE OF BUSINESS

Multimedia Application Effective Support of Education

Teaching and Examination Regulations Master s Degree Programme in Media Studies

Master of Philosophy. 1 Rules. 2 Guidelines. 3 Definitions. 4 Academic standing

MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING GRADUATE MANUAL

Anthropology Graduate Student Handbook (revised 5/15)

Department of Rural Sociology Graduate Student Handbook University of Missouri College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources

DEPARTMENT OF MOLECULAR AND CELL BIOLOGY

COMPUTATIONAL COMPLEXITY OF LEFT-ASSOCIATIVE GRAMMAR

MASTER OF EDUCATION DEGREE: PHYSICAL EDUCATION GRADUATE MANUAL

CONCEPT MAPS AS A DEVICE FOR LEARNING DATABASE CONCEPTS

APPLICATION DEADLINE: 5:00 PM, December 25, 2013

PhD in Computer Science. Introduction. Dr. Roberto Rosas Romero Program Coordinator Phone: +52 (222) Ext:

GRADUATE SCHOOL DOCTORAL DISSERTATION AWARD APPLICATION FORM

Steps for Thesis / Thematic Paper Process (Master s Degree Program)

Department of Political Science Kent State University. Graduate Studies Handbook (MA, MPA, PhD programs) *

Assessment System for M.S. in Health Professions Education (rev. 4/2011)

ACCREDITATION STANDARDS

Teachers Guide Chair Study

Master of Public Health Program Kansas State University

General rules and guidelines for the PhD programme at the University of Copenhagen Adopted 3 November 2014

Linguistics. Undergraduate. Departmental Honors. Graduate. Faculty. Linguistics 1

Department of Social Work Master of Social Work Program

THE M.A. DEGREE Revised 1994 Includes All Further Revisions Through May 2012

Wildlife, Fisheries, & Conservation Biology

B.S/M.A in Mathematics

Spring 2016 Stony Brook University Instructor: Dr. Paul Fodor

Guidelines for the Use of the Continuing Education Unit (CEU)

Residential Admissions Procedure Manual

Ph.D. in Behavior Analysis Ph.d. i atferdsanalyse

EMPLOYMENT APPLICATION Legislative Counsel Bureau and Nevada Legislature 401 S. Carson Street Carson City, NV Equal Opportunity Employer

Office of Graduate Studies 6000 J Street, Sacramento, CA NEW GRADUATE STUDENT ORIENTATION CIVIL ENGINEERING

I AKS Research Grant

TITLE 23: EDUCATION AND CULTURAL RESOURCES SUBTITLE A: EDUCATION CHAPTER I: STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION SUBCHAPTER b: PERSONNEL PART 25 CERTIFICATION

Intra-talker Variation: Audience Design Factors Affecting Lexical Selections

Thesis and Dissertation Submission Instructions

TEACHING AND EXAMINATION REGULATIONS (TER) (see Article 7.13 of the Higher Education and Research Act) MASTER S PROGRAMME EMBEDDED SYSTEMS

The Ohio State University Department Of History. Graduate Handbook

Grade 11 Language Arts (2 Semester Course) CURRICULUM. Course Description ENGLISH 11 (2 Semester Course) Duration: 2 Semesters Prerequisite: None

Chromatography Syllabus and Course Information 2 Credits Fall 2016

1. Study Regulations for the Bachelor of Arts (BA) in Economics and Business Administration

Mathematics Program Assessment Plan

Implementation Regulations

GRADUATE EDUCATION. Admission to Professional Certificate Programs. Prospective Graduate Students. Application for Admission

Self Study Report Computer Science

School of Earth and Space Exploration. Graduate Program Guidebook. Arizona State University

MASTER OF ARTS IN APPLIED SOCIOLOGY. Thesis Option

THEORY/COMPOSITION AREA HANDBOOK 2010

DEPARTMENT OF EARLY CHILDHOOD, SPECIAL EDUCATION, and REHABILITATION COUNSELING. DOCTORAL PROGRAM Ph.D.

Schenectady County Is An Equal Opportunity Employer. Open Competitive Examination

Department of Education School of Education & Human Services Master of Education Policy Manual

EDUCATION. Readmission. Residency Requirements and Time Limits. Transfer of Credits. Rules and Procedures. Program of Study

GEB 6930 Doing Business in Asia Hough Graduate School Warrington College of Business Administration University of Florida

DMA Timeline and Checklist Modified for use by DAC Chairs (based on three-year timeline)

Master Program: Strategic Management. Master s Thesis a roadmap to success. Innsbruck University School of Management

Master of Science (MS) in Education with a specialization in. Leadership in Educational Administration

POLICIES AND GUIDELINES

Sociology. M.A. Sociology. About the Program. Academic Regulations. M.A. Sociology with Concentration in Quantitative Methodology.

Navigating the PhD Options in CMS

INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES FIELD MAJOR APPLICATION TO DECLARE

TREATMENT OF SMC COURSEWORK FOR STUDENTS WITHOUT AN ASSOCIATE OF ARTS

MASTER OF LIBERAL STUDIES

Characterizing Mathematical Digital Literacy: A Preliminary Investigation. Todd Abel Appalachian State University

Bittinger, M. L., Ellenbogen, D. J., & Johnson, B. L. (2012). Prealgebra (6th ed.). Boston, MA: Addison-Wesley.

Applying Learn Team Coaching to an Introductory Programming Course

GUIDELINES AND POLICIES FOR THE PhD REASEARCH TRACK IN MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY

Marketing Management MBA 706 Mondays 2:00-4:50

Computer Architecture CSC

Santa Fe Community College Teacher Academy Student Guide 1

PATHOLOGY AND LABORATORY MEDICINE GUIDELINES GRADUATE STUDENTS IN RESEARCH-BASED PROGRAMS

INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES FIELD MAJOR APPLICATION TO DECLARE

School: Business Course Number: ACCT603 General Accounting and Business Concepts Credit Hours: 3 hours Length of Course: 8 weeks Prerequisite: None

OFFICIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS

Firms and Markets Saturdays Summer I 2014

Georgetown University School of Continuing Studies Master of Professional Studies in Human Resources Management Course Syllabus Summer 2014

VI-1.12 Librarian Policy on Promotion and Permanent Status

LINGUISTICS. Learning Outcomes (Graduate) Learning Outcomes (Undergraduate) Graduate Programs in Linguistics. Bachelor of Arts in Linguistics

PUTRA BUSINESS SCHOOL (GRADUATE STUDIES RULES) NO. CONTENT PAGE. 1. Citation and Commencement 4 2. Definitions and Interpretations 4

Transcription:

PH.D. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE PROGRAM (POST M.S.) OVERVIEW ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS

OVERVIEW FOR THE PH.D. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE Overview The doctoral program is designed for those students who have an interest in pursuing an academic or industrial research career. The student is required to make a significant contribution to the field of computer science by working on an original research problem with a committee of faculty. In addition, the doctoral student is expected to demonstrate a mastery in several areas of computer science. Each student is required to (1) pass the Ph.D. qualifying exam in order to be admitted to candidacy, (2) pass the Ph.D. comprehensive exam where the proposed research is presented. This is followed by the culminating Ph.D. thesis which results in an original research contribution and must be defended. The degree normally requires three to four years beyond the master's degree for full-time students. Part-time students can also enter the program but will need more time to complete the degree. ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS

ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS FOR THE PH.D. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE (POST M.S.) Applicants must have a M.S. degree in Computer Science. Admission is competitive and it is expected that applicants will have a high grade-point average. For non-english speaking applicants without a U.S. degree from an accredited institution, a minimum TOEFL score of 550 is required. If the TOEFL score is less than 600, the applicant is required, in addition, to take the English Proficiency Exam administered by the IIT Humanities Department. Graduate students with degrees from English-speaking countries are not required to submit the TOEFL score. Please check with the Graduate College for details. Note that Puerto Rican students must submit the TOEFL score. Applicants for Regular, degree-seeking, graduate admission must submit official GRE scores prior to admission. The GRE requirements are: at least 1100 on the verbal and quantitative part and 3.50/6.00 on the analytical part. In the old GRE system the minimum required is 1600. Applicants must submit three (3) letters of recommendation. Application Documents Required for the Direct Ph.D. in Computer Science Students must submit a completed application for admission plus official or certified copies of all transcripts and at least three letters of recommendation. In addition, applicants who are required to submit a TOEFL score must submit original (or certified) copies of their TOEFL results. OVERVIEW PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE PH.D. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE (POST M.S.) COURSE WORK REQUIREMENTS PH.D. QUALIFIERS COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION THESIS DEFENSE ESTABLISHING AND MODIFYING A PROGRAM OF STUDY RESIDENCE REQUIREMENTS APPLYING FOR GRADUATION TIME LIMIT OVERVIEW ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS

PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE PH.D. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE (POST M.S.) Coursework Requirements For students entering with a MS the requirements are as follows: 1. Students with MS in Computer Science: Students with an MS in Computer Science from an approved university are required to take 18 additional credits at the 500 level. 9 of these credits are required from three separate core groups from among the six core groups. Students are required to take 9 additional 500 level credits and complete 24 credits of thesis work. To summarize: 54-93 total credits are required, of which: 1 of the PhD seminar 3-12 of CS 597 (Reading and Special Problems) 18-30 credits of 500 level courses apart from CS 597, with at most 6 credits from outside the CS department 24-48 credits of CS 691 (Research/Thesis for Ph.D. Degree - after qualification) 0-12 credits of CS 400 level courses 3 credits of CS597 must be done in their first year. The students are also required to pass the qualifier no later than their 4th semester, with the first attempt in their 3 rd semester. 2. Students with MS not in Computer Science: Students with an MS degree not in Computer Science from an approved university are required to take 5 core CS500 level courses, one each from Group 1, Group 2, and Group 3 and the remainder from at least two of the other core Groups. They are required to take 3 additional 500 Level courses and complete 24 credits of thesis work. To summarize: 60-99 total credits, of which: 1 of the PhD seminar 3-12 CS 597 (Reading and Special Problems) 24-30 credits of 500 level courses, with at most 6 credits outside the CS department 24-48 credits of CS 691 (Research/Thesis for Ph.D. Degree - after the qualification) 0-12 credits of CS 400 level courses 3 credits of CS597 must be done in their first year. The students are also required to pass the qualifier no later than their 4 th semester, with the first attempt in their 3 rd semester. 3. Students transferring into the PhD program from another program. The transfer of courses will be decided by the graduate committee on a case-by-case basis. Core Courses The groups are: Group I: Theory of Computation CS 530 - Theory of Computation CS 533 - Computational Geometry CS 535 - Analysis of Algorithms CS 538 - Combinatorial Optimization 2. Group II: Systems

CS 546 - Parallel Processing CS 550 - Advanced Operating Systems CS 570 - Advanced Computer Architecture 3. Group III: Programming Languages CS 536 - Science of Programming CS 541 - Topics in Compiler Construction CS 545 - Distributed Computing Landscape 4. Group IV: Networks CS 542 - Computer Networks I: Fundamentals CS 544 - Computer Networks II: Network Services 5. Group V: Databases CS 525 - Advanced Database Organization 6. Group VI: Software Engineering CS 586 - Software System Architectures PH.D. QUALIFIERS COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION THESIS DEFENSE ESTABLISHING AND MODIFYING A PROGRAM OF STUDY RESIDENCE REQUIREMENTS APPLYING FOR GRADUATION TIME LIMIT

PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE PH.D. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE The following rules apply to Fall 2005 semester. For following semesters, changes are possible. Ph.D. Qualifying Examination To ensure that the students are well prepared for research in their chosen area, a PhD qualification is required. The Ph.D. qualification is to be based on an exam. The exam will have two parts, the oral and the written, both of which have to be cleared by the student. Time Schedule For direct PhD students, the first attempt in oral examination and the written examination must be taken no later than a student's 5th semester. The second attempt must be taken no later than a student's 6th semester. These requirements hold for both full-time and part-time students. For post-ms PhD students, the first attempt in oral examination and the written examination must be taken no later than a student's 3th semester. The second attempt must be taken no later than a student's 4th semester. Part-time students should take this exam no later than the semester in which they complete 24 credit hours in the Ph.D. program, with a second attempt (if necessary) the following (not counting Summer) semester. Students admitted up to Fall 2003 who chose to complete the "old program", the same requirements apply with the exception that the three written examinations are not required. Repeating the Exam: Every student must pass these exams with at most two attempts. A student has to repeat only the areas in which he has failed. Oral Qualifier Purpose of the Oral Qualifier: The purpose of the qualifier is to judge the research capabilities of the student. It is to be determined if the student is capable of the academic elements that constitute the research process. These elements may be categorized as: a scholarly review of the topic, a formal description of the problem, familiarity with techniques that may be useful in solving the problem innovative ideas useful to solving the problem, finally, the student should show a capability to present his work in written as well as oral form. It is expected that the student will address the above requirement by presenting one or more research problems, carefully reviewed, exhibit knowledge of techniques required to solve the problem, propose partial or full solutions and show prospects for further research, if possible. While the student may address more than one problem, the student should guard against simply reviewing a number of problems as evidence of his research capabilities. It is possible that the student has published, based on his research. This is additional evidence of his capabilities. Procedural Issues: The following rules apply from SPRING 2004: The PhD coordinator will co-ordinate the exam.

The student will be examined by a faculty group, which excludes the advisor. Each group will decide the format of the exam. This could be: A description of research of the student's choice. Specific paper/topic assignment to the student. A written report may be required. The examination methodology should be announced to the student well in advance. The qualifier date is to be held at the beginning of the semester. The date, time and schedule would be announced at least two weeks in advance. The exam will be closed. A review of the examination will be intimated to the student along with the result of the exam within a week of the exam. Each student would either: Pass Fail Conditional Pass. The exact nature of the condition is to be decided by the Committee. The student could be required to do a course or some other assigned task. The results of the written exams will be available within ten days of the exam. After that, a student who failed a subject has ten days to request a re-examination of his/her exam. The request must be in writing and explain why the student believes the score of the exam is not correct, and be sent to the PhD coordinator. The graduate committee would answer the request for re-examination within ten days. The Written Examination Areas Three areas will be tested: 1. Theory (algorithms, complexity, computability, formal languages) Topics come from CS 532 (CS 530 and an undergraduate course in formal languages is a valid substitute) and from CS 535. The exam is closed notes and will last 2.5h. Three problems will be given. Relevant chapters form the two reference books below will be provided together with writing paper. No other help (notes, calculators, cell phones, etc.) is allowed, except for writing pens. The problems will relate to material from the book chapters listed below. From "Introduction to Algorithms", second edition, by Cormen, Leiserson, Rivest, and Stein, the following chapters: 2, 3, 4 without 4.4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 without 11.5, 12 without 12.4, 13, 14, 15, 16 without 16.4, 16.5, 17, 19, 20, 21 without 21.4, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26 without 26.4, 26.5, 34 From "Introduction to the Theory of Computation", by Sipser, the following chapters: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7 In Fall 2004, the exam consisted of Problem 2-20 from Sipser and problems 9-2 and 22-3 from Cormen et al. The exam given in Spring 2005 is available in PDF here. The difficulty level is comparable to final exams from CS 532 or CS 535. Reference books: CS 530 Michael Sipser. Introduction to the Theory of Computation. Brooks Cole. CS 535 T. H. Cormen, C. E. Leiserson, R. L. Rivest, C. Stein. Introduction to Algorithms 2 nd edition. MIT Press. 2. Operating systems Topics come from CS 450 and CS 550. Reference books: Topics: CS 450 and CS 550 Silberschatz, Galvin, and Gagne. Operating system concepts Sixth edition, Wiley A. S. Tanenbaum, M. van Steen. Distributed Systems: Principles and Paradigms. Prentice Hall 2002.

CS 550 Issues in communication including Remote Procedure Call, Remote Method Invocation, and Message- and Stream-Oriented communication Processes and threads Naming Synchronization Consistency and replication Fault tolerance Distributed file systems Security in distributed systems The exam will be closed books and closed notes, with a time limit of two hours. The exam given in Spring 2005 is available in PDF here. No other exams are available 3. Programming languages Topics come from CS 536 (and its CS 440 as prerequisite material). Reference books: Topics: CS 440 A. V. Aho, R. Sethi, J.D. Ullman. Compilers Principles, Techniques and Tools. Addison Wesley. K. C. Louden. Programming Languages, Principles and Practice. Thomson Publications. M. L. Scott. Programming Language Pragmatics. Morgan Kaufmann Publishers. CS 536 David Gries. The Science of Programming. Springer-Verlag(ISBN 0-387-96480-0) - required. Willem-Paul de Rover, et al. Concurrency and Verification - Introduction to Compositional and Non-compositional Methods. Cambridge University Press. K. M. Chandy, J. Misra. Parallel Program Design - A Foundation. Addison Wesley. Gregory R. Andrews. Foundation of Multithreaded, Parallel, and Distributed Programming. Pearson Addison Wesley. CS 440 Language design Compilation and Interpretation Programming language syntax Names, scopes and bindings Parameter passing scheme Semantic analysis Control flow Recursion Data types/data abstractions CS 536 Deductive proofs Predicates Using assertions to document programs Predicate transformer: WP Deterministic/non-deterministic semantics and proof rules skip, abort, and composition commands assignment commands alternative commands iterative commands Topics in formal methods A Hoare Logic for Shared-Variable Concurrency A Hoare Logic for Synchronous Message Passing Transformational Design and Hoare Logic Parallel Program Design Parallelism and Programming Programming Notation Programming Logic Architectures and Mappings Proof techniques for shared variable programming Proof techniques for distributed programming

The exam will be closed books and closed notes, with a time limit of two hours. The exam given in Fall 2004 is available in PDF here. The exam given in Spring 2005 is available in PDF here. 2005 Illinois Institute of Technology 3300 South Federal Street, Chicago, IL 60616-3793 Tel 312 567-3000 Last posted May 18, 2005.

PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE PH.D. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE (POST M.S.) Comprehensive (Research Proposal) Examination The purpose of the Comprehensive Examination is to ensure that the candidate has the background to carry out successful research in the chosen area and that the research problem is properly formulated and has sufficient scholarly merit. The student (in concert with the student s research advisor) must develop and orally present a research proposal containing a literature review, a proposed research topic, and a program of research based upon this topic. The research proposal must be written. The student must request appointment of an examination committee. The examination committee may consist of from four to seven members. It must include at least three fulltime faculty members from the Computer Science Department and one full-time faculty member from another department in the University. Other committee members from inside or outside the University may be chosen. The student should consult with his/her research advisor concerning the makeup of the committee COURSE WORK REQUIREMENTS PH.D. QUALIFIERS THESIS DEFENSE ESTABLISHING AND MODIFYING A PROGRAM OF STUDY RESIDENCE REQUIREMENTS APPLYING FOR GRADUATION TIME LIMIT

PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE PH.D. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE (POST M.S.) Thesis Defense Each student must present an oral defense of his/her Ph.D. Thesis. The Thesis Review Committee is appointed in much the same way as the Ph.D. Comprehensive Examination committee. It will examine the written thesis and examine the student during the oral defense. All Ph.D. Thesis Defenses are open to the public. COURSE WORK REQUIREMENTS PH.D. QUALIFIERS COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION ESTABLISHING AND MODIFYING A PROGRAM OF STUDY RESIDENCE REQUIREMENTS APPLYING FOR GRADUATION TIME LIMIT

PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE PH.D. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE (POST M.S.) Establishing a Program of Study Every student in the Ph.D. Program must file a Program of Study (Form #401). Full-time students must file the Program of Study (Form #401) within four months after enrollment. Part-time students must file the Program of Study before completing 12 credit hours in the Ph.D. program at IIT. The Program of Study is prepared after consultation with the advisor and lists all of the courses that a student plans to take as part of the Ph.D. Program (including courses that have been completed). This form must be signed by the advisor and the Department Chair (or an Associate Chair). Modifying a Program of Study A Program of Study may be modified through the submission of Form #406. Form #406 must be signed by the advisor and the Department Chair (or an Associate Chair). Changes in the program may or may not be approved by the graduate dean after the student has filled an application for graduation. COURSE WORK REQUIREMENTS PH.D. QUALIFIERS COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION THESIS DEFENSE RESIDENCE REQUIREMENTS APPLYING FOR GRADUATION TIME LIMIT

PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE PH.D. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE (POST M.S.) Residence Requirements University regulations require that each Ph.D. student must spend a minimum of two regular semesters in full-time study on campus. In special cases, two summers of research or other day-time graduate activity may be substituted for one of the two semesters. A full-time student is one who registered for at least 9 credit hours in a regular semester or six credit hours in the summer. COURSE WORK REQUIREMENTS PH.D. QUALIFIERS COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION THESIS DEFENSE ESTABLISHING AND MODIFYING A PROGRAM OF STUDY APPLYING FOR GRADUATION TIME LIMIT 2005 Illinois Institute of Technology 3300 South Federal Street, Chicago, IL 60616-3793 Tel 312 567-3000 Last posted May 4, 2005.

PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE PH.D. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE (POST M.S.) Applying for Graduation Each student who expects to receive a graduate degree in a given semester must file an application for graduation in the Graduate College within 2 weeks of the start of the intended semester of graduation. No application will be accepted after that date and no changes in a Program of Study are allowed after that date. An application for graduation is good for only one semester. If the student fails to graduate in the intended semester, a new application must be filled for a later semester (No additional fees will be charged for filling a second application). COURSE WORK REQUIREMENTS PH.D. QUALIFIERS COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION THESIS DEFENSE ESTABLISHING AND MODIFYING A PROGRAM OF STUDY RESIDENCE REQUIREMENTS TIME LIMIT

PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE PH.D. IN COMPUTER SCIENCE (POST M.S.) Time Limit Every student is given up to six calendar years to complete the Ph.D. Program. This time interval begins when the Ph.D. Program of Study (Form #401) is filed. Should this time limit expire, the student will be required to petition the Dean of the Graduate School to have the time limit extended. Such an extension will ordinarily entail additional examinations and fees. COURSE WORK REQUIREMENTS PH.D. QUALIFIERS COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION THESIS DEFENSE ESTABLISHING AND MODIFYING A PROGRAM OF STUDY RESIDENCE REQUIREMENTS APPLYING FOR GRADUATION