New MATH and STAT Candidacy Requirements
(adopted May 20, 2003)
Admission to candidacy for the doctoral degree is granted by the
Graduate School
upon the recommendation of the MATH Graduate Committee. A student must be
admitted to candidacy within five years after admission to the
doctoral program and at least six months before the date on which the
doctoral degree will be conferred.
Before a student applies for admission to candidacy he or she must have:
- passed all three written qualifying exams at the Ph.D. level;
- maintained a 3.00 or better GPA in all formal course work;
- passed the Oral Candidacy Examination.
It is the responsibility of the student to submit an application for
admission
to candidacy to the Graduate Director when all the requirements for
candidacy have been fulfilled. Application forms may be obtained at the MATH
office. All work at other institutions offered in partial fulfillment of the
requirements for the doctoral degree must be submitted with the
application for admission to candidacy. Official transcripts of the
work must be on file in the Graduate School.
The student must complete his or her program for the degree, including
the foreign language examination, dissertation, and final examination
(defense), during the four year period after admission to candidacy.
The Oral Candidacy Examination
The candidacy examination is an oral examination which serves as a
test of the
detailed preparation of a student in the area of specialization, and seeks to
discover if he or she has a deep enough understanding to read the relevant
research literature in the field and the skills to carry out the
research for the dissertation. The examination is usually taken before
a student embarks on serious dissertation research. The examination
assumes further advanced course work beyond that required for the
qualifying exams. (Sample programs of such advanced course work
in various fields
may be found here.)
It shall follow the guidelines listed below.
- Planning the Exam: To plan the examination, the student,
with the help and approval of the prospective dissertation advisor,
must prepare
a prospectus for the examination. This prospectus defines the primary
and related areas to be covered in the examination. These areas should
be identified by course citations,
literature citations, tables of contents, or other appropriate means.
The prospectus should be filed with the Graduate Office before the
examination is scheduled, and should also record the proposed format
for the examination. Typical formats for the examination are either
a seminar-type presentation by the student (or possibly two such
talks) on one or more recent
research papers, followed by questions from the committee on the
presentation and related background material, or else a more
traditional oral examination on subjects or courses listed in the
prospectus.
- Examination Committee: The examination committee is
appointed by the Graduate Director (or if the Graduate Director is
unavailable for an extended period, his or her designated
representative) upon recommendation
of the student's prospective dissertation advisor. The Graduate
Director may if necessary consult with one or more
field committee chairs in the area of specialization.
The examination committee must consist of at least three members,
at least one (usually the prospective dissertation advisor)
representing the area in which the student plans to specialize. Usually
all three of these will be faculty members from the Mathematics Department,
but when there is a good academic reason, the student can petition the
Graduate Committee to allow one to be from a related department
(such as physics or computer science) or an outside institution (such
as another university, NASA, NIH, NIST, NCHS, etc.).
Disputes regarding the makeup of the examination committee will be
referred to the Graduate Committee. Each committee member must
agree to abide by the prospectus for the examination.
- Possible Outcomes: Upon completion of the examination,
the examination
committee decides to pass, fail, or defer a decision on the student. In the
last-named case, the manner in which the decision is to be resolved must be
specified in the report of the committee. The distinction between "fail" and
"defer a decision" is based on the committee's evaluation of the
probability of successful completion of the Ph.D. degree.
- Repeating the Exam: Upon failure, the Candidacy
Examination may be repeated only once. Exceptions to this rule are
granted only under extraordinary
circumstances and upon petition to the Graduate Committee.
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