Admission
The CEE department admissions requirements for the PhD program are as follows:
- Have a master’s degree in Civil Engineering, Environmental Engineering, or closely related engineering science discipline from an accredited college or university. Exceptional applicants with a bachelor’s degree may be admitted to the PhD program provided they complete requirements of the MS degree in the CEE department before obtaining the PhD degree.
- Good academic standing in the academic institution last attended.
- A minimum grade point average (GPA) of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale on all coursework attempted as an upper division student (beyond 60 semester credit hours).
- A minimum graduate record examination (GRE) percentile ranks of 35% (score of 147) on the verbal reasoning section and 70% (score of 155) on the quantitative section. For valid GRE tests taken prior to August 2011, minimum of 410 on the verbal reasoning section and 710 on the quantitative reasoning section.
- Three letters of recommendation form academics or professionals attesting to the doctoral study potential of the applicant.
- Statement of purpose describing reasons for pursuing the PhD degree and career goals.
- International students whose native language is not English will be required to pass TOEFL examination and demonstrate proficiency in English prior to admission per university guidelines. The minimum score is 550 (paper-based), 213 (computer-based) or 80 (internet-based) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). This requirement may be waived for students who have obtained a prior degree from a U.S. institution.
PhD Degree Requirements
The PhD degree in Civil Engineering is a research degree designed to produce a scholar and is granted only to students who have demonstrated mastery in a specialty in civil engineering and capacity to conduct original and independent scholarly work.
Curriculum
The PhD curriculum includes a total of 51 semester hours, consisting of coursework and dissertation research. For all courses in the curriculum, students must satisfy prerequisites to enroll in a course. Students entering the major without a civil or environmental engineering degree also must satisfy a set of articulation courses. Students are expected to enroll in Graduate Seminar (CGN 5935 ) each semester they have full-time status.
The specialty (depth) area courses provide students advanced training in a specific civil engineering sub-discipline and support the student in attaining mastery in a specialty area. Courses in the specialty area may include related courses from other departments.
The supplementary electives are intended to assist the student with developing complementary multidisciplinary skills and knowledge. Supplementary electives may include courses from other civil and environmental engineering areas outside of the chosen specialty, other engineering disciplines, the sciences, advanced mathematics and statistics, computer/ computational science, urban and regional planning, and geography.
Major Professor and supervisory committee
The PhD student selects a major professor and a Supervisory Committee by the beginning of the second semester. The major professor must agree to serve as the student’s academic advisor and thesis supervisor and must be a full-time CEE faculty with Graduate Faculty/Directive status.
The PhD student will identify the Supervisory Committee in consultation with the Major Professor. The Supervisory Committee consists of four (4) full-time faculty members, one of whom must be from outside of the CEE department and serves as the University Representative. All committee members must have Graduate Faculty/Directive status. Additional members may be appointed to the Committee, if deemed appropriate by the major professor. The Supervisory Committee, chaired by the major professor, oversees and supervises the student’s dissertation research effort, administers the PhD Preliminary Examination, recommends doctoral candidacy, attends the oral defense of the dissertation, approves the written dissertation, and recommends granting of the degree.
Plan of Study
The PhD student, in consultation with his/her major professor, is required to submit an approved Plan of Study to the departmental Graduate Committee by the end of the first semester. The Plan of Study includes a list of proposed courses, a time schedule for completion of these courses, and a summary of the proposed dissertation topic. Upon recommendation of the Graduate Committee, the Department Chair will approve the proposed Plan of Study. The Plan of Study is used by the student and major professor as a guideline throughout the student’s PhD study and must be updated and approved if changes occur.
Requirements for Candidacy
Students are admitted to candidacy for the PhD degree only after passing the Preliminary Examination and certified to the University Registrar. A student becomes eligible to register for dissertation credits only after the student becomes a candidate for the doctoral degree.
Preliminary Exam
Following completion of all or a major portion of the course work defined in the Plan of Study, the supervisory committee must issue certification to the Graduate Committee that the student has maintained a minimum 3.0 GPA, demonstrated sufficient progress towards mastery of a sub-discipline and has developed a command of requisite research tools to begin independent research in the area of the proposed dissertation. Once certified, students will be permitted to take the Preliminary Examination (see Request for Preliminary Exam form).
The Preliminary Examination will be in both written and oral format, and will be prepared by the student’s supervisory committee. The examination will be administered by the committee and will comply with the requirements of the College and the University in which the student is registered.
The written portion of the Preliminary Examination will consist of two parts:
- A written examination based on the student’s coursework. The written examination will be in “Take Home” format. Each committee member will separately administer a 24-hour “Take Home” written examination, preferably on subsequent days.
- A written proposal describing the proposed research work for the student’s dissertation.
The proposal should be in a format suitable for research proposals submitted to funding agencies. The proposal will be graded as “passed” or “failed” by the supervisory committee members. The student cannot pass the preliminary exam unless the proposal is graded as “passed”. In order to receive the “passed” grade on the proposal, at a minimum, the proposal should include the following components: abstract, problem statement, research objectives, critical literature review, research plan and tasks, intellectual merit and broader impact, expected outcomes, and timeline for completion.
The oral portion of the Preliminary Examination will involve a presentation by the student on the written proposal and dissertation research. The supervisory committee shall report the outcome to the Graduate Committee, and designated College and University authorities as: “passed,” “failed,” “additional work to be completed,” or “to be re-examined”. Students are admitted to candidacy for the Ph.D. degree only after passing the Preliminary Examination. If any student requires re-examination, the outcome can only be reported as “passed” or “failed.” Any student who fails re-examination will be dismissed from the program.
Dissertation
The most important element of the doctoral program is original and fundamental research resulting in a Doctoral Dissertation. Students will enroll in dissertation credits (CGN 6980) only after the successful completion of the Preliminary Examination and admittance to doctoral candidacy. The student selects the dissertation topic in consultation with the major professor and supervisory committee. The supervisory committee must approve the dissertation research topic by the student successfully writing the dissertation proposal and presenting it to the committee. To be acceptable, the dissertation must comprise original research constituting a significant contribution to knowledge to the discipline and represent a substantial scholarly effort on the part of the student.
It is the responsibility of the student to comply with the required dissertation format of his/her university and the deadlines and requirements for dissertation submission <see http://www.famu.edu/index.cfm?graduatestudies or http://www.gradstudies.fsu.edu/>.
At the completion of the dissertation research and when the complete dissertation is ready for review by the Supervisory Committee, the Major Professor will authorize the distribution to committee members. The dissertation should be complete in every respect, including data analysis, figures and tables. The Supervisory Committee can recommend editorial and/or substantive changes after review and the oral dissertation defense. The dissertation should be provided to the major professor and the examining committee (supervisory committee) at least ten (10) days before the date of the dissertation defense examination.
The PhD student is required to present the dissertation at a department Graduate Seminar at a time scheduled by the faculty seminar coordinator.
Journal Manuscripts
In partial fulfillment of the PhD degree requirements, a PhD student must prepare at a minimum two (2) manuscripts for peer-reviewed journal publication, of which at least one (1) should have the status of “Accepted.”
Dissertation Defense
An oral examination in the form of a dissertation defense is mandatory and is part of degree requirements. The student must satisfactorily pass this oral examination, as determined by the major professor and supervisory committee, before submission of the final dissertation to the university.
- The dissertation defense will be scheduled only with approval of the major professor, supervisory committee, and the department. The approvals are documented in the Request for Dissertation Defense Examination form. The student will be permitted to schedule the thesis defense only if the student has: 1) completed the research work, 2) written a complete dissertation, and 3) completed the journal manuscripts requirement.
- The defense should be scheduled before the final dissertation submission deadline with sufficient time to allow for revisions; see university deadlines.
- The oral presentation of the dissertation is announced and open to the public.
- The oral defense consists of two parts: 1) a defense presentation that include appropriate use of visual aids and duration of 45-55 minutes and 2) oral examination by the supervisory committee.
- The outcome of dissertation defense determined by the Supervisory Committee and is reported by the major professor to the department in the Dissertation Defense Outcome Form.
Suggested Timeline and Checklist
A suggested timeline for completion of PhD degree requirements and milestones checklist is provided below.
Suggested PhD Timeline.
Students may need to enroll in additional hours to maintain full-time status each semester.
Semester 1:
- 9 hours of approved coursework;
- Complete RCR training*
- Identify dissertation topic
Semester 2:
- 9 hours of approved coursework
Note:
*See Section 4.3 RCR Training
Ph.D. Milestones Checklist
The list is indicated by Milestone or Action, and When.
- Select an Academic Advisor; Identify dissertation topic
- Complete RCR training: First Semester
- Submit approved Plan of Study: By beginning of second semester, or completion of 9 credit hours
- Request transfer credit (if applicable): By completion of 9 credit hours
- Complete RCR training: By end of first year
- Request preliminary exam; Take preliminary exam (written and oral) and write proposal: By end of third semester
- Journal manuscript 1 accepted for publication: Submit by semester prior to graduation or earlier
- Submit approved Degree Certification form: Semester prior to graduation
- Apply for graduation with university: Beginning of final semester
- Request dissertation defense; Dissertation oral defense:
- Final semester
- Submit approved final PhD dissertation: Final semester; check university for deadlines
- Prepare complete journal manuscript 2: Final semester
- Complete Exit Survey: End of final semester