Ph.D. REQUIREMENTS AND DEADLINES
CREDITS/GRADE REQUIREMENTS
A total of approximately 90 credits is required, 60 of which must be
earned at the University of Washington. The University requires 60 credits
earned before scheduling the General Exam, and requires a cumulative GPA
of 3.0 for graduation. Coursework taken toward the M.S. degree is
applicable toward the Ph.D. degree.
- 45 credits minimum must be from the Computer Science course list
- 15 credits may be in supporting fields such as: engineering,
mathematics, natural sciences, business administration, linguistics,
philosophy, psychology, or medicine.
Of the 90 credits required:
- 40 credits must be in 500 level courses or above
- 18 credits at the 500-level must be completed in order to pass the
breadth component of the Qualifying Evaluation. See the
document Ph.D. and M.S. Qualifying Requirement
for specific details of qualifying courses.
- At least 4 CSE
courses numbered 500 or above (or
graduate courses in related disciplines
approved by the Qualifying Committee)
must be completed for graded credit, in addition to the 6 courses taken to
satisfy the breadth component of the Qualifying Evaluation. At least
2 of these 4 additional courses must be CSE courses (or waivers of CSE
courses),
unless there is written approval by the student's research advisor and
the Qualifying Committee. Students may petition to count graduate
courses completed at other schools toward this requirement, if the
course is equivalent in
depth to a graded CSE graduate course. We will not consider
waivers for non-CSE graduate courses.
- 27 credits must be Computer Science 800 (dissertation)
TEACHING ASSISTANTSHIP REQUIREMENT
- Completion of two quarters of teaching assistantship within the
department.
PH.D. QUALIFYING, GENERAL, AND FINAL EXAM PROCEDURES
- Creditable Passage of the Ph.D QUALIFYING EVALUATION: See the
document Ph.D. and M.S. Qualifying Requirement
for specific details.
- COURSES: Select the Quals courses you
wish to take and complete these, remembering to consult with instructors
if there is doubt about course progress.
- PROJECT: Approximately TWO WEEKS before the oral presentation of
the project: 1) Determine a mutually agreeable time for the presentation
with the two faculty advisors. 2) Reserve
a conference room on the Web. The usual length for the oral
presentation is
about 45 minutes, with additional time for questions, so the room should
be reserved for an adequate period. 3) Notify the Graduate Advisor of the
date/time/title and the two faculty advisor names for announcement.
- At the beginning of each quarter except summer, an announcement will
be made asking students who have completed or are in the process of
completing the course and project requirements to sign up for passage of
the Qualifying Evaluation in that quarter. The faculty will meet later in
the quarter to make the decisions.
- A Master's degree is earned upon passing the Qualifying Evaluation.
To formally apply for the degree, submit a
Master's Degree
request
to the Graduate School during the first seven weeks of the quarter in
which the degree is to be completed. See the Graduate Advisor
for details.
- Creditable Passage of the GENERAL EXAM: This
oral exam is normally taken at the end of 3 years or 1.25 years after
the Qualifying Evaluation, whichever is later. In this exam the student
must demonstrate depth of knowledge on one principle subject. See the
document The General Examination for specific
details.
NOTE: Before scheduling the exam, the Graduate School requirements for
completion of 18 graded UW credits and a total of 60 credits must be met.
- As early as possible before the exam you must select and
officially set up your Ph.D. Supervisory Committee; choose a major
advisor, and at least two additional Computer Science committee members;
at least one member should be from outside the immediate area of research.
You must also identify a Graduate School Representative (GSR); the
Graduate School no longer makes this assignment. The GSR must be a UW
graduate faculty member who does NOT have adjunct status in the
department. Neither can the chair of the supervisory committee have an
adjunct appointment in the home department of the GSR. The GSR and the
supervisory committee chair cannot have a budgetary relationship. Notify
the Graduate Advisor of the committee names and she will submit
them to the Graduate School.
Graduate School Memo 13 details the
rules for membership on the Ph.D. Supervisory Committee.
IMPORTANT: Keep your GSR apprised of your progress and of your
expectations for your exam dates so that s/he can be sure to attend. The
student is responsible for finding a substitute for the GSR should s/he
not be able to attend the examination.
NOTE: This Ph.D. Supervisory Committee remains effective for the Ph.D.
Final defense unless changes are required. A committee must have at least
four members (including the GSR), who must be able to participate in the
General or Final Examination. (Teleconference participation is permitted
for all members of the committee except the GSR.) Once scheduled, the
exam will be considered official if a minimum of four members
attend or participate--the chairperson, the GSR, and two others. If
there are co-chairs, both must participate in the exam; they count as two
of the four members who must attend/participate. To make changes to the
committee, see the Graduate Advisor.
- Approximately two months BEFORE the exam, see your major faculty advisor
to obtain/discuss the papers on which you prepare your written report. When
you receive the papers or "charge", be sure to notify the Graduate
Advisor, who will note the beginning of the study period.
- At least THREE WEEKS BEFORE the exam, a Request for General
Examination must be submitted to the Graduate School the Request for
General Examination to schedule officially the exam. 1) Before the
three-week deadline, contact all committee members (including the GSR) and
determine a mutually agreeable time, 2)
reserve
a conference room on the Web,
3) contact the Graduate Program Advisor to prepare the Request for General
Examination form.
- At least TWO WEEKS BEFORE the exam your written review of the papers
should be given to your supervisory committee. *Important*: remind
all committee members of the exam date, and make sure all committee
members have a copy of your paper, including the GSR member.
- AFTER the exam: the warrant will be signed by the Supervisory
Committee, the Graduate Advisor will make a copy of the warrant for your
permanent file, and will deliver it to the Graduate School.
- Preparation of DISSERTATION acceptable to your Supervisory
Committee.
- Creditable Passage of the FINAL EXAM: This is a public oral presentation
and defense of your dissertation. In preparing for this exam you
must:
- Approximately 2 months BEFORE the exam, check the membership of
your Supervisory Committee, clarify who plans to attend the exam, begin
discussion of possible exam dates. Notify the Graduate Advisor of any
changes to the committee so that she can notify the Graduate School.
- Approximately one month BEFORE the Exam, appoint three faculty to the
Dissertation Reading Committee. These faculty are a subset of the
Supervisory Committee. The chair of the supervisory Committee usually
serves as the chair of the Reading Committee. Give the names to the
Graduate Program Advisor who will notify the Graduate School. Begin to
finalize discussions of the exam date with your committee.
- THREE WEEKS IN ADVANCE of the Final Exam date, you MUST officially
schedule the exam with the Graduate School. Ahead of the 3-week deadline,
contact each committee member to work out the time/date of the exam, and
reserve
a conference room
on the Web. Contact the Graduate Program Advisor to send the Request for
Final Examination, which must be submitted to the Graduate School that
will generate the warrant to be signed at the defense. Signatures (email
"signatures" are accepted) of all members of the Ph.D. Supervisory
Committee are required on the Request for Final Examination. *Important*:
remind all committee members of the exam date, and make sure all
committee members have a copy of your dissertation, including the GSR
member.
- After successfully completing the exam, the warrant will be
signed by the faculty present at the exam. The signatures of a minimum of
four members--chair(s), GSR, and other member(s)--are required for the
exam to be considered official by the Graduate School. The Graduate
Program Advisor will photocopy the warrant for the permanent student file
and deliver it to the Graduate School.
- The Graduate School must receive: 1) the signed warrant
2) the required copies of your dissertation 3) the Graduate School
survey packet.
- You must submit to the department: 1) An electronic copy of your
dissertation or a url to your dissertation (to the Graduate Advisor); your
advisor may also wish to have a copy.
DEADLINES TO GRADUATE:
- To graduate in current quarter everything must be turned in by the
LAST DAY OF THE QUARTER.
- You will graduate the following quarter if you submit everything
AFTER THE LAST DAY OF THE QUARTER. Late submission is possible without
registration for a $250 fee. See Graduate Degree
Late Fee.
- You have 60 days after taking the final exam to turn in your
dissertation. If the 60th day falls after the last day of the quarter,
you my avoid registration by paying the late submission fee described
above.
Check the UW catalog and departmental documents to confirm and
supplement these requirements. It is the student's responsibility to
meet all degree requirements.