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Degree Requirements | Ph.D. in Mathematics Graduate Handbook | Department of Mathematics and Statistics - Nevada Today

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Course work

Candidates for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, must satisfy all general requirements of the Graduate School. These include

  • Completion of a minimum of 72 hours of graduate credits, including at least 48 hours of course work.
  • At least 30 of the course credits must be at the 700 level, and at most 24 may be dissertation credits.

Required courses

The following courses or their equivalents must be satisfactorily completed for the doctoral degree in mathematics.

Courses in Pure Mathematics

  • MATH 640– Topology (3 units)
  • MATH 713 – Abstract and Real Analysis I (3 units)
  • MATH 714 – Abstract and Real Analysis II (3 units)
  • MATH 715 – Complex Function Theory I (3 units)
  • MATH 731 – Modern Algebra I (3 units)

Course in Applied Mathematics and Probability

  • MATH 701 – Numerical Analysis and Approximation I (3 units)
  • MATH 735 – Advanced Linear Algebra (3 units)
  • MATH 751 – Operations Research I (3 units)
  • STAT 705 – Probability Theory (3 units)

Dissertation Credits and Approved Electives

  • MATH 799 – Dissertation (24 credits required)
  • Approved electives, based on research interests (optional, up to 21 credits)
  • 12 credit maximum of independent studies (optional)

Electives and Transfer of MS Coursework

Electives will be approved by the student’s Dissertation Committee (Section 5). Appropriate courses outside the Department of Mathematics and Statistics may be approved, depending on the student’s research interests.

Students entering with a master’s degree may receive up to 30 credits for previous course work (excluding thesis credits), and these credits may satisfy some course requirements with the approval of the Graduate Director.

Qualifying Exams

After the 1st year, and ideally by the end of their 2nd year, but no later than by the end of their 3rd year, every student must pass three written Qualifying Exams. The purpose of the Qualifying Exams is to verify that the student has acquired the necessary general knowledge, to serve as the basis for her/his dissertation research.

Each Qualifying Exam will be based on a syllabus of topics, available on the department’s web page or by request from the Graduate Director. The syllabi are based on material covered in classes relevant to each subject, the classes for each exam are listed below. The syllabi may also include foundational material from the undergraduate curriculum. Each Qualifying Exam is a 3 hour long, written exam, and the exams will be offered at least once per semester. During the semester the student takes her/his last qualifying exam, she/he must be enrolled in MATH 795, the “Comprehensive Exam” course.

Students must pass the Qualifying Exam in

  • Analysis ((based on MATH 713& 714, or on MATH 713 & 715),

and two Qualifying Exams from this list:

  • Algebra (based on MATH 731, 732),
  • Topology (based on MATH 641, 741, 742),
  • Numerical Analysis and Approximation (based on MATH 701, 702),
  • Operations Research (based on MATH 687, 751, 752), or
  • Probability (based on STAT 705).

Students will be allowed a maximum of two attempts at each of the exams in the first three years of the Ph.D. program. Each exam can be passed at M.S. level (low pass) or Ph.D. level (high pass). To proceed with the Ph.D. program all exams must be passed at the Ph.D. level. If all exams are passed at least at the M.S. level but not all at the Ph.D. level, and other requirements for the M.S. degree are
satisfied, the student will end her/his program with an M.S. degree in Mathematics.

M.S. degree along the way to Ph.D.

Students in the Ph.D. program in Mathematics may earn an M.S. degree in Mathematics along the way to their Ph.D., by satisfying the current M.S. degree requirements. Students qualify in the semester in which all degree requirements for the master's degree have been met. Students may not receive a master’s degree along the way to the Ph.D. if the student has earned a previous master’s degree at any
time and units from that degree are counted towards the Ph.D.

To satisfy the requirements for the M.S. degree, the student has to in addition to satisfying the course requirements, either write a Master’s Thesis (and take the required 6 thesis credits, which will not count toward her/his Ph.D. degree), or enroll in 1 credit of MATH 795 (the “Comprehensive Exam” course) and pass the Comprehensive Exam (based on four 700-level courses, one of which must be
MATH 713). 

Admittance to candidacy

To be admitted into Ph.D. candidacy, after successfully completing the first two years of coursework and passing three written Qualifying Exams, a student must pass the Oral Exam in the area of specialty (Section 7). Students will be expected to complete their oral exam by the end of their 7th semester. The exam is directed by the student's Dissertation Advisor and Dissertation Committee  (Section 5).

Ph.D. Dissertation

A student will prepare a Ph.D. dissertation supervised by the Dissertation Advisor and approved by the student's Dissertation Committee, followed by an oral public presentation. The dissertation is then submitted to the Graduate School for approval.

Graduate School Academic Requirements

Good Standing

Each graduate course must be completed with a grade of "C" or better for the credit to be acceptable toward an advanced degree.

In addition, students must maintain good standing with an overall cumulative graduate credit GPA of at least 3.0 on a scale of 4.0. Students must have a minimum GPA of 3.0 in order to meet graduation eligibility. All graduate students must maintain a cumulative graduate GPA of 3.0. If their GPA drops below 3.0, they are either placed on probation or dismissed. Undergraduate courses will not count towards graduate GPA.

Probation

If the student’s cumulative grade-point total is between 2.31 and 2.99, the student is placed on probation. The student must then raise her/his cumulative graduate GPA to 3.0 by the end of the following semester or the student will be dismissed from graduate standing. Thesis, dissertation, S/U graded credits, and transfer credits have no impact on a student’s GPA.

Dismissal

If the graduate grade-point total is 2.30 or lower, the student is dismissed from graduate standing, or if the graduate GPA remains below 3.0 for two (2) consecutive semesters, the student is dismissed from graduate standing.

Dismissed students are no longer in a graduate program but may take graduate-level courses as a Grad Special. Students wishing to complete their degree must obtain approval to take graduate-level courses, raise their graduate GPA to at least 3.0 and then re-apply to a graduate program. Any courses taken to raise their GPA will be included in the graduate special/transfer credit limitation (9 credits for master’s degrees).

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