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General Information for PhD Students
Foreign Language Requirements
There is no departmental language requirement for
the MS or PhD degrees. The student is expected to be able
to acquire an understanding of the relevant literature in their
area as directed by their committee.
Timetable
- You have been assigned a beginning advisor
who can assist you with questions concerning your program,
etc. You may change your advisor at any time.
- The PhD Written Qualifying
Examination consists of written exams in three subjects
selected by the student from a list of thirteen
possibilities. The purpose of the exam is to ensure
that each PhD student studies three subjects to a depth
that represents adequate preliminary background to begin
a PhD project. Each subject is represented by a two-semester
sequence of courses.
- The following guidelines hold
- a. Students entering the program without a masters
in pure or applied mathematics must take the three
examinations within 2 years of entry.
- Students entering the program with a masters in
pure or applied mathematics must take the three examinations
within one year.
- For each of the three examinations taken the student
is allowed one retake. The retake must be done within
12 months of the time the examination is first taken.
If a student fails an examination twice they are considered
to have failed qualifiers. The retake does not have
to be the same exam as the one initially failed.
- The 3 qualifying examinations do not have to be
taken at the same time. A student could conceivably
take one immediately upon entering, one after year
one, and one after year two.
- If the student takes less than three qualifying
examinations on the first try, and if they do not
pass one of those examinations, then the student must
inform the graduate program director in writing on
subsequent examinations which examinations are to
be considered as being taken for the first time and
which are to be considered as being taken as retakes
of an earlier failed test. This information is required
before the test is taken.
- The number of examinations taken at any given exam
cannot be greater than the remaining number of passes
need to reach a total of 3.
- If an examination is failed and retaken later,
the second examination must be counted as a retake
of the first.
Note: For part time students years will be in term of
credit hours with one year = 18 credit hours. For all
students who are considered full time, calendar years
are used.
- You should choose a dissertation advisor
either before taking the qualifying examination, or as
soon as possible after passing the exam. Your dissertation
advisor need not be the same faculty member who has been
your advisor up to this point. In consultation with your
dissertation advisor, you choose three additional faculty
members for your advisory committee. If you have a minor,
one member of your committee must come from the minor
department or program. (A minor is optional in mathematics
department PhD programs.) Name and signatures of committee
members are submitted on the Doctoral Plans of Graduate
Work, This form is available in the Mathematics Graduate
Program Office and a fill-able form is available in the
index of the Graduate School Administrative Handbook at
http://www.fis.ncsu.edu/grad_publicns/handbook/
.
- In your second or third
year , you must develop a Plan of Graduate Work in consultation
with your dissertation advisor and advisory committee. It should
include the additional course work needed to prepare you
for the future that you envision. For example:
- Students who envision a career with
a strong mathematics research component will benefit
from advanced courses in several related areas, possibly
including courses in other departments.
- Students who plan a career focused
on college teaching will benefit from courses in other
mathematical sciences, especially statistics and computer
science. Bear in mind that in many colleges mathematics
faculty are expected to teach these subjects. Experience
with applications of mathematics is also beneficial
for college teaching.
- Students who plan a non-academic career
will benefit from substantial course work in the related
fields of science and engineering that interest them.
In some cases the student, in consultation
with the advisory committee, may decide to minor in
another department or program. In these cases, the minor
department or program should be consulted to determine
its requirements, and a representative of the minor
department must serve on the advisory committee.
At the time the Plan of Graduate Work
is prepared, the student and advisory committee should
also agree on other appropriate projects that do not
appear on this document. Examples are:
When the Plan of Graduate Work has been
approved by your advisory committee,you submit it to
the Mathematics Graduate Program Office. Before the
plan is sent to the Graduate School, you must have signed
and submitted a Patent Agreement form.
- Schedule the Preliminary Oral Examination
with your advisory committee, and submit a Request for
Approval to Schedule Doctoral Oral Examination form to
the Mathematics Graduate Program Office at least three
weeks in advance . The Graduate Program Office will reserve
a room for your exam. This exam must be scheduled at least
four months before the final oral exam. At the Preliminary
Oral Examination you present your thesis topic and preliminary
research to the advisory committee. The committee members
will ask questions about the thesis topic to judge the
suitability of the proposed research and your ability
to carry it out. They may also ask questions about related
areas of mathematics.
- Schedule the Final Oral Examination with
your advisory committee, and submit a Request for Approval
to Schedule Doctoral Oral Examination form to the Mathematics
Graduate Program Office at least four weeks in advance
. The Graduate Program Office will reserve a room for
your exam. Each member of the advisory committee must
receive a copy of your thesis at least two weeks before
the final oral exam . To graduate in a given semester,
you must pass the exam before the Graduate School deadline
for that semester, approximately six weeks before graduation
.
- Complete a Diploma Order Request from the
Graduate Program Office at the beginning of the semester
in which graduation is anticipated .
- Schedule an appointment with the Graduate
School Thesis Editor to go over the thesis to check form
and grammar. This appointment is made after the Final
Oral examination, and at least six weeks before the end
of the semester in which graduation is sought. Please
consult the Thesis and Dissertation Guide for details
at http://www.fis.ncsu.edu/grad_publicns/thesdis/
University Rules on
Residence Requirements, Time Limits, and GPA
- Continuous Enrollment Policy: You are required
to maintain continuous registration, i.e., be enrolled each semester,
excluding summer sessions, until you graduate. You may request
a leave of absence for up to a year. Such requests must be made
at least one month before the start of the leave of absence, and
must be approved by your advisory committee, the Mathematics Graduate
Program Director, by the Graduate School. If you graduate in the
second summer session, then you must be enrolled for either the
first or second summer session.
- Doctoral students are allowed a maximum of six
calendar years from admission to the doctoral program to pass
the Preliminary Oral Examination, and a maximum of ten calendar
years to complete all degree requirements.
- A 3.0 Grade Point Average is required for graduation.
- Residence requirement: You must earn two "residence
credits" in consecutive semesters. You earn one residence credit
for a semester by registering for 9 credit hours of courses; 2/3
of a residence credit for a semester by taking 6-8 credit hours;
and 1/3 of a residence credit for a semester by taking less then
6 credit hours. Thus, you can satisfy this requirement by enrolling
for two consecutive semesters in which you take 9 credits each
semester, or for three consecutive semesters in which you take
6 credits each semester. More information is in the Graduate
Catalog .
- Minimum number of credits for students who enter
the PhD program in Summer 1997 and thereafter: 72. (This requirement
may be waived for students who have completed all other requirements.)
Support
If you are a mathematics graduate student supported
by a half-time teaching assistantship, a research assistantship,
or a fellowship, normally the Mathematics Department commits
itself to continue to support you in one of these categories.
If you are supported by a lecture assistantship or one-third-time
teaching assistantship, normally the Mathematics Department commits
itself to continue to support you in one of these categories.
The Mathematics Department sometimes offers limited term TAs
for one or two semesters in order to meet special needs. These
TAs are clearly described as for a limited term and carry
no commitment on the part of the Department to renew. Students
who are offered a TA upon acceptance, but then take an RA may
move back to a TA if they are satisfying the two conditions below.
Students who come to NCSU without a TA offer and then move onto
an RA are not guaranteed a TA if they wish to leave the RA. They
may request TA support. Some entering students in Biomathematics
or Operations Research are offered mathematics TAs. The length
of these appointments ranges from 1 to 2 years.
Continued support is contingent upon:
- maintaining satifactory academic progress
- satisfactory performance
of your assistantship duties.
Normally, PhD students are not supported as half-time
teaching assistants after their sixth year of graduate study
in the Mathematics Department (fourth year for students who come
with the approximate equivalent of an NC State master's degree).
Students who exceed this time limit are sometimes offered positions
as lecture assistants or one-third-time teaching assistants,
with no commitment of future support. Unsupported students are
sometimes offered positions on an as-needed basis, again with
no commitment of future support.
Minimum Progress
to Remain in Good Academic Standing
- All students must maintain a Grade Point Average
(GPA) of 3.0 or better.
- By the end of your first year,
you should be eligible, according to University rules, to independently
teach mathematics courses. This requirement may be met by a combination
of graduate mathematics credits earned elsewhere, and credits
toward the PhD earned at NC State, totaling 18 hours (six courses).
In order to meet its teaching responsibilities,
the Mathematics Department needs almost all teaching assistants
beyond the first year to be able to teach courses. A few exceptions
to the 18-hour requirement can be made for students for whom
this requirement poses a hardship (for example, students who
need to take one or more undergraduate courses). If you cannot
meet the 18-hour requirement, you should consult the Graduate
Program Director as early as possible.
- You should take the written qualifying examination
before the start of your third academic year (second academic
year if you already have the approximate equivalent of an NC State
master's degree in mathematics or applied mathematics), and pass
it before the beginning of your sixth semester in the program
(fourth semester if you already have the approximate equivalent
of an NC State master's degree in mathematics or applied mathematics).
- You should pass the Preliminary Oral Examination
within two years of passing the written qualifying examination
.
- At all times, you should have made sufficient progress
so that it is reasonable to assume that the examinations will
be passed on schedule, and that all requirements for the PhD will
be completed by the end of your support period.
Summer Support
Mathematics graduate student half-time TAs and RAs
who are in good academic standing and have conscientiously fulfilled
the duties of their position have first priority for summer teaching
assistantships and grading positions. Within this group, first
year students, students planning to take the PhD Written Qualifying
Exam in August, and students planning to finish PhD dissertations
or master's projects over the summer have top priority. Others
are given priority based on seniority.
After this group, unsupported mathematics graduate
students, supported mathematics graduate students who are not
in good standing, and then TAs from other departments are considered.
First year students who are U.S. citizens or permanent residents,
but are not North Carolina residents, generally need to spend
their first summer in North Carolina to establish residency.
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