THE GRADUATE CURRICULUM IN MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
The
Department of Materials Science and Engineering (MSE) at UVa offers the degrees
of Master of Materials Science and Engineering (MMSE), Master of Science (MS)
and Doctor of Philosophy (PhD). The MS
and PhD degrees involve extensive research, leading to a thesis or
dissertation, respectively. The MMSE
degree does not include a thesis and is often achieved by off-grounds graduate
students enrolled in the SEAS distance-learning program. The program of study for each of these
degrees has been developed consistent with the principles of academic
excellence as a foundation for cutting-edge research and cross-disciplinary
learning. The starting point for each of
the three degree programs is the MSE core curriculum.
The MSE Graduate Records Coordinator will distribute this policy statement to all entering graduate students and will assist each student in understanding the Departmental requirements. In all instances a graduate student program of study is governed by the SEAS policies and guidelines presented in the Graduate Record, unless a more restrictive policy is presented below.
Upon admission to the MSE department, students select
either the MS or PhD track. The PhD
stipend is received by a student after the MSE Qualifying Examination is
passed, or the MS degree is attained. An
MS candidate may switch to PhD status, or PhD candidate to MS status, at any
time.
All MSE graduate students must complete a four-course core comprised of
o
Electronic and Crystal Structure of Materials MSE 601
o
Thermodynamics and Phase Equilibria of Materials MSE 623
The MS degree in MSE intends for the successful student to demonstrate the ability to do independent research in engineering or applied-science with close faculty guidance. In addition to research, this degree program requires that the student achieve an overall grade point average of at least 3.0 in the 25 course credits beyond the BS level to be distributed as follows.
Course requirements for the MS degree in MSE are:
4 MSE core courses 12
credits
4 elective courses from MSE,
SEAS or UVa Sci/Math 12 credits
Maximum of 2
courses at 5xx in MSE
Maximum of 3
courses at 5xx in total
Minimum
of 2 courses in MSE beyond core
Graduate seminar 1 credit
Ř The program of study includes one credit of MSE seminar (MSE 701 or MSE 702).
Ř
The program of study includes four electives
beyond the MSE core. These electives shall be at the 5xx, 6xx and 7xx levels,
approved by the graduate student’s advisor, and selected from SEAS-course
offerings or other UVa Science/Mathematics courses. Up to six credits of 5xx MSE courses, with a
maximum of nine credits of
Ř MSE 605 and MSE 606 may be taken for elective credit only by those students who do not have an undergraduate degree in MSE, or upon petition to the MSE Graduate Director by the graduate student’s advisor.
Ř Students who have earned graduate course credits at UVa or at another institution may transfer up to six credits into the MSE MS program of study. Transferred courses may be used to satisfy part of the MSE core requirement, if deemed equivalent by the faculty member teaching the course, or to satisfy the elective requirement, subject to approval by the MSE Graduate Director and the Associate Dean of Graduate Studies. The student must document the syllabus content of a transferred MSE core course, and the 6xx or 7xx level of a transferred elective course. Transferred courses may have been taken in MSE or in another field of engineering or science, but may not have been applied to achieve any other earned degree.
Ř The time sequence of core and elective classes is defined by the student and advisor, considering that core courses provide an important foundation for elective courses and research.
Ř The MS degree requires at least six credits of research, under the supervision of a faculty advisor, and culminating in a written thesis that is presented and defended in a public forum.
Ř The four core-courses, thesis, and public defense of thesis are departmental requirements for the MS degree and cannot be waived.
Ř The MS candidate must write and defend publicly his/her thesis at a time that precedes the deadline for the SEAS binding receipt by at least four weeks. The MS defense will conclude with a faculty evaluation and decision on thesis acceptability and additional requirements, if any.
Ř After public defense of the MS thesis, each MS student will be assessed by faculty with respect to the ability to perform graduate-level engineering research, proficiency at technical writing, and oral presentation skills.
The MS degree program of study must be
approved by the MSE Graduate Director.
The MSE faculty will review any appeal of this decision. Ideally, the MS degree program of study
should be formalized and approved during the student’s first year in the MS
program.
The MMSE degree in MSE emphasizes classroom learning, and requires that the student achieve satisfactorily 30 course credits beyond the BS level.
Course requirements for the MMSE
degree in MSE are:
4 MSE core courses 12 credits
6
elective courses from MSE, SEAS or UVa-Sci/Math 18 credits
Maximum of 2
courses at 5xx in MSE
Minimum of 2
courses in MSE, beyond core
Maximum of 3 courses at 5xx in total
Ř MSE 605 and MSE 606 may be taken for elective credit only by those students who do not have an undergraduate degree in MSE, or upon petition to the MSE Graduate Director by the graduate student’s advisor.
Ř The program of study must be approved by the MSE CGEP advisor or student’s advisor and by the MSE Graduate Director.
Ř Up to six credits of electives may be earned in faculty-supervised independent study or advanced topics courses. Such studies may include laboratory work.
Ř Each MMSE student will be assessed by faculty with respect to proficiency at technical writing, oral presentation skills and engineering analysis.
The MS degree program of study must be approved by the MSE Graduate Director. The MSE faculty will review any appeal of this decision. Ideally, the MS degree program of study should be formalized and approved during the student’s first year in the MS program. CGEP students are urged to work closely with the MSE CGEP advisor to ensure an appropriate plan of study.
The PhD degree in MSE intends for the successful student to produce tangible-intellectual achievement(s) from independent research at a frontier in the engineering or applied science of materials. As a foundation, the PhD degree in MSE requires that the student achieve satisfactorily at least 38 course credits beyond the BS level, and distributed as follows.
Minimum course requirements for
the PhD degree in MSE are:
4 MSE core courses 12 credits
8 elective courses from MSE, SEAS or UVa-Sci/Math 24 credits
Maximum of 2
courses at 5xx in MSE
Minimum of 4
courses in MSE beyond core
Minimum of 2 courses in MSE at 7xx
Maximum of 3
courses at 5xx in total
Graduate Seminar
2 credits
Ř
The program of study includes two credits of MSE
graduate seminar. (MSE 701 and MSE 702).
Ř
At least six of the 24 elective credits must be
earned in 7xx MSE courses at UVa.
Ř
No more than six elective credits may be earned
in faculty-supervised independent study courses. Independent study credits will not count as
part of the six credits of electives at the 7xx level.
Ř
MSE 605 and MSE 606 credits may not be counted
among the 24 credits of elective courses required for a PhD in MSE. Students entering the PhD program without a
BS or MS in MSE are encouraged to consider taking MSE 605 and MSE 606 to
reinforce core understanding of materials science. Students with a BS or MS in MSE should
generally not take MSE 605 or MSE 606.
Ř
The student’s PhD committee will review his/her
program of study, and advise the student and MSE Graduate Director on suggested
courses beyond this minimum requirement.
Ř
Each PhD student, with consent of the student’s
advisor, may petition the MSE Graduate Director to receive the MMSE degree upon
completion of 30 course credits on the path to the PhD. All conditions to the MMSE degree described
above apply.
Ř The program of study includes eight elective courses (24 credits) beyond the MSE four core courses. These electives are at the 5xx, 6xx and 7xx levels, and are selected from SEAS-course offerings or other UVa Science/Mathematics courses.
Ř Students entering the PhD program without an MS degree may transfer up to 12 credits of graduate course work to be applied to their plan of study, provided those courses were not used to earn another degree, subject to approval by the Graduate Director and the Associate Dean of Graduate Studies.
Ř Students entering the PhD program with an MS degree from another institution are required to complete the four-course MSE core or to demonstrate that they have taken the equivalent courses elsewhere. Students are also required to complete four courses for credit chosen from MSE, SEAS, or UVa-Science/Math courses at the 5xx, 6xx, or 7xx level. At least two of these four courses must be in MSE at the 7xx level.
Ř The PhD-degree program of study must be approved by the PhD advisory committee and the MSE Graduate Director. Ideally, the degree program of study should be formalized and approved during the student’s first 18-months in the PhD program.
Ř The PhD candidate must pass a qualifying examination consisting of both written and oral components and which includes both general and comprehensive elements.
Ř The PhD candidate must write and defend publicly a proposed research plan that is the foundation for his/her dissertation. This proposal must be completed 12 months or more before the public defense of the PhD dissertation.
Ř The PhD candidate must write and defend publicly his/her dissertation at a time that precedes the deadline for the SEAS binding receipt by at least four weeks. This defense will conclude with a PhD advisory committee plus faculty-only evaluation and final decision on dissertation acceptability and requirements.
Ř The PhD degree requires at least 25 credits of research, under the supervision of a faculty advisor, culminating in a written dissertation that is presented and defended in a public forum.
Ř For all PhD students, the MSE core course foundation, qualifying examination, research proposal, dissertation, and public defense of dissertation are departmental requirements that cannot be waived.
Ř Recommendation: One of the eight elective courses should be math intensive, consistent with a list established by the MSE faculty1 and allowing for transfer of an equivalent course.
Ř Recommendation:
The PhD candidate’s advisory committee should tailor the program of courses to
reflect the importance of both depth and breadth in MSE.
Each PhD candidate will be assessed by faculty after public
defense of the dissertation with respect to the ability to form a research
plan, ability to perform original research, proficiency at technical writing,
and oral presentation skills.
PhD Qualifying
Exam
Preliminary Examination
All
PhD students, including students who have earned an MS from another department
or university, must pass, or be exempted from, a written preliminary
examination before taking the MSE qualifying examination. The content of the preliminary exam is based
on the four MSE core courses.
The purpose of the preliminary examination is
for students to demonstrate knowledge of core material. The preliminary exam is:
Ř Waived for students with a combined GPA of
at least 3.5 in the four MSE core courses
and having no course grade below a B.
Ř
Is typically
taken by PhD students in June of the first year following completion of the four course core.
In preparation for the preliminary exams,
students may study independently or in groups, may use former qualifying exam
questions, and may use material from their core courses, in addition to any
other reference materials. A student who
fails the preliminary exam on the first attempt may retake the exam once at the
following offering. If a student fails
the preliminary exam twice, the student will not be allowed to continue in the
PhD program.
Qualifying Examination
The purpose of the qualifying examination is
twofold. First, is for the student to
demonstrate, through both written and oral presentation, the integration of a
core body of knowledge in Materials Science and Engineering. The second purpose is for students to
demonstrate the ability to apply MSE core knowledge to research, including the
ability to state a problem clearly, to propose a solution, to utilize the
scientific literature as a means of self-learning, and to recognize the
limitations and implications of the work.
Each PhD student must pass, or be exempted
from, the written preliminary examination before taking the MSE qualifying
examination.
The PhD
qualifying examination:
Ř
Is typically taken by students in August, two
years after enrolling with the BS
Ř
Contains written and oral components.
Ř Is given over a 4-6 week period; prior preparation for the exam is neither encouraged nor expected.
Ř Emphasizes MSE knowledge synthesis and research practice including literature usage.
Ř Consists of a common research topic for all students.
Ř
Is broad, open-ended, and appropriate for a
range of GRA research experience and interest.
Students enrolling with
a MS degree take the qualifying exam in August, one year after enrolling in the
PhD program.
Students may neither consult nor work with other students during the qualifying exam. A student who fails the qualifying exam on the first attempt may retake the exam once. If a student fails the qualifying exam twice, the student will not be allowed to continue in the PhD program.