Department of Computer and Information Science

 

Rules and Requirements for the Ph.D. Degree in Engineering Science (Computer Science)

Revised: February 14, 2005

General

The Ph.D. Degree program in Engineering Science is one of the graduate degree programs of the School of Engineering administered through the Graduate School of The University of Mississippi. Students in this program must comply with all rules and satisfy all the requirements set by the Graduate School and the School of Engineering. In addition, the Department of Computer and Information Science (CIS) has the following rules and regulations.

Application Deadlines

The application deadline for admissions and financial aid decisions are:

  • April 1, for summer term and fall semester admissions and financial aid
  • October 1, for spring semester admissions and financial aid

The applications available on those dates will be processed as promptly as possible, within one month of the closing date. Admission decisions will be based on the space available and the criteria and preferences explained elsewhere. Applications received after the deadline will be considered if space is available, but such applications will normally not be considered until the next appropriate application deadline.

Admission

The student must be admitted to the Ph.D. degree program by the Department of Computer and Information Science. To be admitted into the Ph.D. degree program a student must:

  • possess a bachelor's or master's degree in computer science or equivalent,
  • have a B average on all graduate work (3.0 on a 4-point scale),
  • submit a competitive score on the general GRE,
  • submit a minimum score of 575 on the TOEFL (for international students),
  • submit three letters of recommendation,
  • have demonstrated research ability.

Advisement

Upon acceptance into the program, each student will be assigned an interim advisor in the CIS department. It is the student's responsibility to obtain a permanent (dissertation) advisor in the CIS department no later than the beginning of the third term of study (excluding the summer term). Every student must obtain approval of his or her (interim or permanent) advisor for registration.

Course Requirements

A student must complete a minimum of 54 semester hours of approved graduate-level course work (excluding the 18 semester hours of dissertation research) beyond the bachelor's degree, subject to the following restrictions:

  1. The M.S. course distribution requirement must be satisfied.
  2. All students will be required to maintain a minimum graduate GPA of 3.0 until completion of the degree. If the student's GPA falls below 3.0, the student will be allowed to make up the deficiency in a probation period of one semester (Fall, Spring, or a full Summer) if the student is full-time, or another nine credit hours if the student is part-time. If the GPA at the end of this probation period is still below 3.0, the student will be dismissed from the degree program.
  3. A student may count up to three non-regular courses (9 hours) toward his or her degree. For the purpose of this document, a non-regular course is
    • an independent study, or
    • any other course not listed in the published class schedule (unless it was added and advertised by the department as open to all students).
    • A minimum of 18 semester hours must be regular courses at the 600-level (e.g., ENGR 6XX).
    • No more than 27 semester hours may be transferred from another university and applied toward the 54-hour course work requirement. See the Graduate School catalog for additional requirements.
    • No course numbered lower than 510 (in the University of Mississippi curriculum) may be counted toward the Ph.D. degree requirements. (In particular, CSCI 500, CSCI 501, CSCI 502, and CSCI 503 may not be counted toward the Ph.D. degree requirements.)

A student must complete a minimum of 18 semester hours of dissertation research (ENGR 797). These semester hours may not be taken until the student has passed the written comprehensive examination. No more than six semester hours of dissertation research may be taken before the student passes the preliminary oral exam (dissertation prospectus).

For successful research in the chosen area of specialization, the student may need to acquire specific background information and skills. Toward this end, the student's dissertation advisor and doctoral committee may require the student to complete course work at an appropriate level in the relevant fields. In some cases this may necessitate the student completing courses beyond the 54-hour minimum.

A final program of study must be approved by the doctoral committee no later than the time of the preliminary oral examination (dissertation prospectus).

Examinations, Dissertation and Doctoral Committee

A student must pass the written comprehensive examination and the preliminary oral examination (dissertation prospectus) before being considered a Ph.D. candidate.

Students may not take the comprehensive written examination until they have been admitted to the Ph.D. program in full standing.

In order to qualify for candidacy in the Ph.D. program, a student must pass four written comprehensive examinations in no more than two sittings. Three of these exams are in core areas of computer science. The fourth exam is in an application area and may be selected from the list of allowable applications areas below. The application area selected should ordinarily correspond to the student's intended dissertation area. When the intended dissertation area is covered by one of the core area exams, however, another application area may be chosen.

Each exam will include material from a related cluster of courses, as well as other material that has been judged appropriate. A reading list will be available for each exam area. Reading lists will be posted on the department website. The reading list for the fall sitting will be available no later than May 15. The reading list for the spring exam will be available no later than October 15. Each area exam will be written and graded by a committee of at least three faculty members, designated by the Graduate Committee. Exam results will be available within three weeks of the date of the exam.

Core area exams are:

  • Systems
  • Languages
  • Algorithms

Every student is required to pass all core area exams.

Available application area examinations are:

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Data Management and Retrieval
  • Graphics and Visualization
  • Software Engineering

Other areas may be requested by petition to the Graduate Committee.

Written comprehensive examinations will be offered twice per year, once near the beginning of the fall semester, and once near the beginning of the spring semester. The exam schedule will be determined by the Graduate Committee. Exams will be scheduled with one exam per day, spread out over a one week period. (For example, the schedule might be Thursday-Friday-Monday-Tuesday or Monday-Tuesday-Thursday-Friday.)

The student must notify the Graduate Committee, in writing or via email, of his/her intention to take the comprehensive examinations, no less than 30 days before the date of the exams. The student must specify exactly which exam(s) he/she wishes to take.

The exams will be designed as three hour exams. The time period for completion and turning in of each exam will be four hours, with no time extensions allowed.

At the first exam sitting, the student must take no more than four exams (three core area exams and one application area exam) and no fewer than three (three core area exams, or two core area exams and one application area exam).

A student who does not pass all four exams in his/her first attempt may sit for the remaining exam(s) (either failed or not yet attempted) at a second sitting.

A student may attempt no more than two exam sittings. These sittings must occur in consecutive regular semesters, unless a special exception is granted in advance by the Graduate Committee. Any exception request should be made no less than 30 days prior to the exam sitting which is to be skipped.

A student who has passed the written comprehensive examination must also pass a preliminary oral examination (dissertation prospectus) conducted by the student's doctoral committee. There must be at least one intervening semester between the semester in which the proposal defense is completed and the semester in which the final oral defense is given. The student's doctoral committee shall determine the acceptability of the dissertation research.

A student's doctoral committee will be appointed by the dean of the Graduate School upon the recommendation of the dissertation advisor and with the approval of the Graduate Committee of the Department of Computer and Information Science. The dissertation Advisor shall chair the doctoral committee. The doctoral committee shall consist of a minimum of four members, of which one must be outside the Department of Computer and Information Science and at least three must be from the Department of Computer and Information Science.

The candidate will be required to present his or her final dissertation results in a public defense before the faculty during the semester in which the candidate expects to complete his or her degree requirements. The candidate shall present a complete draft of the dissertation to each committee member, and one to the departmental secretary, at least three weeks prior to the anticipated date of the defense. The request for the final defense must reach the Graduate Dean's office 14 days prior to the anticipated date of the examination with the approval of the student's doctoral committee and the Graduate School.

Progress

At least one technical paper per year based on the dissertation research, suitable for publication in a refereed journal or national conference, must be prepared by a candidate before his or her dissertation can be considered acceptable. Each candidate shall also present a departmental seminar once a year.

The faculty of the CIS Department will review the progress of all PhD students (not just candidates) at a meeting during the last week of March each year. All PhD students must submit a summary of their progress toward the degree to the departmental secretary by March 15. The summary should contain a one-page description of activities for the last year. Copies of all reprints and technical papers should be attached. Information submitted for the review will become part of the student's permanent file.

Professionalism

All students are expected to conduct themselves with the highest academic integrity at all times. This means respecting and acknowledging the work of others while engaged in course work, funded research, paper writing and presentations, and writing of the dissertation. Plagiarism, falsification of data, and other forms of academic dishonesty are serious offenses. The University of Mississippi Research Misconduct Policy applies to all aspects of the CIS graduate program.

Residency

The student must complete a minimum of one year of full-time study (18 hours) in continuous residence and a minimum of two years of study (36 hours) at The University of Mississippi. Enrollment must be continuous: if students are not continuously enrolled, they will be dropped from the Ph.D. program. Continuous enrollment is defined as enrollment for at least three semester hours credit during two of the three terms of the calendar year: fall, spring, summer. Continuous residence is defined as enrollment for at least nine semester hours credit during two of three terms of the calendar year.

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Last Updated: Wednesday, January 18, 2006, 11:59:06 CST