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Graduate Degree Requirements for the Ph.D.
(1) Admission to Ph.D. Program for M.S. Students - A student
getting an M.S. in our department who wishes to enter our Ph.D. program
(either prior to or at the time of completion of the M.S. degree)
can do so with an appropriate recommendation from the student's committee
and approval by the Department Chairperson.
The M.S. committee of the student must write a letter
in support of the request, which all members of the committee must sign. If
the M.S. committee does not think the student should enter the Ph.D.
program, the letter should state this fact. Or, if
there is a member of the M.S. committee who does not think the student should
enter the Ph.D. program, the letter should reflect this fact.
The committee letter along with their recommendation about continuation
for the Ph.D. should be conveyed to the Chairperson in writing within a
week of the thesis defense (if the M.S. is to be completed). The Department
Chairperson will then make a decision regarding admission.
(2) Advisors - University of Virginia M.S. students
continue to utilize their M.S. committee for course advice until a Ph.D.
committee is formed. Students from other M.S. programs are assigned a
temporary advisor as described earlier.
(3) Course Requirements - For the Doctor of Philosophy
degree, a student must complete a minimum of 72 graduate credit hours
including at least 54 credit hours in graduate courses other than
Non-Topical Research (EVSC 897-898 or 998-999) and pay the tuition and
fees associated with these courses. The 54 hours of coursework may be
comprised of any combination of regularly scheduled courses or EVSC 993-
994: Research Problems. Part of the 54 hours will consist of the
Core-Area Courses as described below. Students holding an M.S. from
another graduate school, must complete at least 30 credit hours of
graduate coursework other than non- topical research and pay the
associated tuition and fees. Students who obtain their M.S. from the
University of Virginia are normally allowed to count all graduate
hours earned (except for Non-Topical Research) toward the Ph.D. In any
event the M.S. plus Ph.D. hours must equal at least 54.
(4) Area Requirements - All Ph.D. students are required to fulfill the
area requirements described in the M.S. program. Ph.D. candidates also must pass
one additional 700-level environmental sciences non-semniar course of 3-4 hours.
(5) Committee Formation - The directive committee can be
formed by the student at any time after entry and must be approved by
the Graduate School. The committee consists of at least four faculty:
three from the department (including one member of the department
outside the student's area of specialization) and one Graduate Committee
representative (from another department). Sometimes committee members
(but not the Graduate School representative) may be chosen from other
institutions (Note: this a graduate school rule that is sometimes
interpreted differently by the Deans.)
(6) Comprehensive Examination - Within four semesters of
entering the Ph.D. program, all Ph.D. candidates take a Comprehensive
Examination. This examination consists of a written examination created
by the student's committee (possibly in collaboration with other faculty
members whose expertise is needed) administered over a 2-day period
followed by an oral examination. The written examination is based in
part on the student's coursework and in part on the general background
that the committee thinks is necessary to address specifically the
proposed area of the dissertation research. The aim of the examination
is to require students to review all prior coursework, to test their
ability to synthesize and interpret information in the critical
intellectual fashion expected of Ph.D. candidates, and to judge the
aptitude of the candidate for carrying out original scientific research.
Copies of the examination questions along with the candidate's answers
will be placed in the student's department file. Oral examinations
normally will be scheduled within two weeks of the written examination.
Oral examinations are open to all faculty but they are not normally open
to other students. The examinations will be held at a convenient time
during the year for the committee and the student and preferably should
not be held during regular examination periods. An announcement must be
distributed at least one week prior to the oral examination. The results
of the written and oral examination will be announced immediately
following the oral exam. The results will be pass, conditional pass, or
fail. A conditional pass is accepted to mean pass, providing the
student subsequently demonstrates elimination of inadequacies by means
stipulated by the committee. In the event of a failure, the committee
may elect to allow a single repetition of the examination.
(7) Dissertation Proposal - This consists of a written
document circulated to the student's committee at least a week prior to
the oral presentation. The latter is open to any student or faculty who
wishes to attend. (See comments under M.S. thesis proposal.)
(8) Seminar - All candidates for the Ph.D. are required
to deliver a Department-level seminar on the results of their thesis
work sometime after their successful dissertation proposal defense and
before the dissertation defense. The degree will not be conferred until
this obligation is met.
(9) Dissertation Defense - (See comments under M.S.
thesis defense.) This defense cannot be held within four months of
presentation of the dissertation proposal. Because publication of
research results is an important professional activity, conference of
the Ph.D. will be approved by the department only after a manuscript
arising from the thesis has been accepted as suitable for submission for
publication by the committee at the time of the thesis defense. It is
understood that the manuscript is to be submitted for publication as
soon as possible.
NOTE: Questions or problems concerning application of
the regulations to specific student programs should be directed to the
GARC chairman or your advisor.
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Environmental Sciences Department
291 McCormick Rd
Charlottesville, Virginia
(434) 924-7761 |
Maintained by
wsc4j@virginia.edu
and hee2b@virginia.edu.
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