Electrical Engineering Graduate Handbook
Electrical Engineering Graduate Handbook
Electrical Engineering Graduate Handbook
2014-2015
This handbook outlines the policies and procedures of the graduate program of
the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the
University of Virginia. It should be viewed as a supplement to the
University of Virginia Graduate Record, which summarizes the rules and
regulations of the University and the School of Engineering and Applied
Science (SEAS). http://www.seas.virginia.edu/advising/degreereq.php
Contents
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DISSERTATION DEFENSE
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FINANCIAL SUPPORT
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MICELLANEOUS
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With its excellent facilities and internationally recognized faculty, the Charles L. Brown Department of
Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Virginia has become a major player in the
development of cutting-edge technology and engineering personnel for the 21st century. We hope you like
what you see, and that you will contact us with any questions or comments that you may have.
John C. Lach,
Professor and Chair
Transfer of Credit
Master of Science candidates may transfer a maximum of 6 credits of approved graduate courses into
the program. Master of Engineering candidates may transfer 12 hours of graduate credit. Students in the
Commonwealth Graduate Engineering Program (CGEP) may include up to 15 hours of credit with grades of
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C or better from participating institutions (an overall GPA of 3.0 must have been maintained at the
participating institution). Students not enrolled in the Commonwealth Graduate Engineering Program may
only transfer courses with a grade of B or better. Students should discuss courses acceptable for transfer of
credit with their advisor; the transfer credit form can be found on the SEAS website. This form is required
for transferring courses along with a catalog statement of course level and the grading system that justifies
classification of these courses as graduate-level courses. An official copy of the transcript from the
institution where the course(s) was taken is required.
Graduate Course Drop Deadline
The last date for dropping a graduate course is determined by the Registrars Office. Check the
academic calendar for the current list of deadlines. (When deadlines are missed, students may petition the
Dean's Office for a W or WP upon concurrence of their instructor and advisor).
Incomplete Grades and Repeated Courses
A 10-day period past the end of the semester (end of the examination period) is automatically allowed
to remove an incomplete. Maximum extension to the end of the following semester (e.g., following Fall for
a Spring class) may be granted by special request to the Dean's Office. If a course is repeated both grades
are used in the GPA calculation.
Articulation Requirements
Graduate level electrical and computer engineering research is a broad discipline that utilizes skills from
many diverse fields. Students entering the graduate ECE program from a nonelectrical background are
welcome within the UVA ECE department. All students should have completed undergraduate coursework
in at least three of the following electrical and computer engineering undergraduate topic areas. This
background capability is required by the faculty to 1) exhibit sufficient core knowledge associated with
graduate-degree electrical engineers, and 2) to provide adequate preparation for graduate classes and
research.
Circuit Analysis
Linear Systems
Electronics
Control Theory
Optoelectronics
Device Physics
Power
Quantum Physics
Logic Design
Communication Theory
Signal Processing
Electronic Materials
Computer Architecture
Electromagnetics
Software Engineering
Engineering Mathematics
will be required to know (and possibly teach) broad fundamentals. You will be expected to know detailed
technical literature relevant to your project and know the fundamental concepts and breakthroughs that
brought your field to its current state of development. You will present your work in the form of project
reports, theses, dissertations, conference proceedings, and journal publications. You will give presentations
to faculty and students within the SEAS community and to wider audiences at conferences and colloquia.
These expectations will place your verbal, written, and technical communication skills under the
microscope. Before reviewers will take your work seriously, it must be free from spelling, grammatical,
typographical, and style errors. It must be readable and it must be presented according to the principles of
clear technical communication. To assist you in the continuous improvement of your communication,
mathematical, and scientific skills, the EE Graduate Committee strongly recommends the following:
1. Obtain a good dictionary (such as Websters Collegiate) and use it. Dont rely on your spellchecker.
2. Obtain a good technical grammar reference such as Science and Technical WritingA Manual of
Style, ISBN 0-415-92551-7.
3. Have access to a definitive reference on issues such as units, number usage, prefixes,
abbreviations, designations, and mathematical and scientific symbols. All of these items are
treated in the NIST publication: Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI). Have
access to a definitive reference for the symbols used in your field. Comprehensive symbols and
designations listings are available from the IEEE Standards Society.
4. Read at least one of the many texts available that review the procedure for writing technical
reports and scientific papers. Two very good works are:
5. How to Write and Publish a Scientific Paper (SCI-ENG T11.D33)
6. How to Write and Publish Engineering Papers and Reports
(SCI-ENG T11.M14).
7. You may often need to review mathematical topics or look up an integral or identity. A good
mathematical reference for engineers is:
8. The Handbook of Mathematical Formulas and Integrals
(ISBN 0-12-382251-3).
Involvement
All graduate students should attend the annual graduate-student orientation activities at the beginning
of fall semester. This is a good opportunity to meet with your peers, meet new graduate students, and be
reminded of the academic policies and procedures.
Library
You should get to know the services available from the Charles L. Brown Science and Engineering Library
(Clark Hall). The library contains current periodicals, and has considerable holdings of back issues of the
major journals. An inter-library loan service is offered for prints and books. The library website
(www.lib.virginia.edu/science) contains a wealth of information relating to databases for engineering and
the electrical sciences. You can schedule a research tutorial (from the website) with one of the librarians,
and tailor this tutorial to your research activities. A liaison is assigned by the library to each academic
department. The ECE liaison is Fred OBryant.
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IEEE
Graduate student membership and participation in IEEE activities is strongly encouraged. A student
member may attend the Central Virginia Section monthly dinner meetings that rotate between
Charlottesville, Waynesboro, and Lynchburg. There is also an active Student Chapter of IEEE, which sponsors
technical talks on career choices, employment areas, plant visits, and some social events. A small
membership fee is required. Stop by the office of the faculty advisor, Professor Harry Powell, in E203
Thornton Hall, and pick up an application form.
Seminars
The Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering sponsors weekly seminars featuring UVa faculty
and visiting scholars. All graduate students are required to attend unless they have a conflict due to classes
or research travel. Talks are designed to inform the nonspecialist about current research on a wide variety
of science and engineering topics. Announcements of seminars are emailed to faculty and students.
Final Examination
1) Student and advisor select an examining committee and date for the examination.
MS thesis examination requires a minimum of three UVA faculty members, one of whom will be the
thesis advisor. At least two members must be from SEAS. One research professional or faculty
member from outside UVA may be a fourth voting member on the committee, provided that his/
her qualifications are commensurate with that of a research faculty or equivalent rank.
2) Prepare thesis for distribution and reserve room. Select a conference room for your examination and
check availability with the ECE Graduate Office.
3) Announce the oral examination of the thesis.
4) Conduct masters thesis examination as scheduled. The format of the oral defense is a presentation by
the student followed by a question and answer period. The student presentation portion of the
defense should not exceed 45 minutes. In the event of an unsuccessful thesis examination, a majority
of the examining committee may recommend a further examinationafter the student has been given
time to prepare.
5) Request Examining Committee 14 days before the examination date.
6) Return Report on Final Examination and Thesis Assessment and to Graduate Office.
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5) Publications and presentation of scholarly work is an expected part of any graduate level research
program. At a minimum, all Ph.D. candidates are required to submit an article related to their research to
a refereed journal, prior to completing their dissertation defense. If the students advisor is not a coauthor of the paper, the advisor must provide the graduate committee with a note indicating the
advisors approval of the paper. (Please supply the ECE Graduate Office with a copy for your file).
Dissertation Defense
1) Apply for doctoral degree by entering intended graduation in SIS. Observe the due dates ,
For ME, MCS, MEP and MMSE degrees: http://seas.virginia.edu/advising/graduation_procedure_ME.php
For MS and PhD degrees: http://seas.virginia.edu/advising/graduation_procedure_MS_PhD.php
2) A public oral defense is required by the department after the student has completed his/her dissertation
to the satisfaction of his/her advisor. The Final Dissertation Examining Committee must include a
minimum of 3 SEAS faculty, a minimum of 4 U.Va. faculty, and a minimum of 5 total members. One of the
U.Va. faculty members must be from outside the students home department. The purpose of the
member from outside of the students home department is to ensure consistency across the University,
to help ensure fairness to the student and to prevent conflict inside the department. The outside
member must be UVA faculty. Students must furnish biographies for non-tenure track faculty members
(outside of SEAS) and industry professionals to include the highest degree attained, the year and
institution, and any relevant experience or research which would provide expertise needed for sitting on
the committee.
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3) Prepare the dissertation for distribution and reserve room. The completed dissertation must be
delivered to each member of the examining committee at least 14 days prior to the defense.
Announce the final examination of the dissertation using the standard format. Obtain an example
announcement format from the ECE Graduate Office. Send electronic version of your announcement to
yvw3d@virginia.edu.
5) Conduct doctoral dissertation final examination as scheduled. The format of the oral defense is a
presentation by the student followed by a question and answer period when all participating people
(including the committee members and other students and faculty members) are present. The student
presentation portion of the defense should not exceed 45 minutes.
6) Submit Report on Final Examination and Thesis and Dissertation Assessment form and (PhD only) a
certificate of completion of the on-line Survey of Earned Doctorates found at: https://sed.norc.org/
showRegister.do to the Graduate Office.
The report on Dissertation Final Examination and accompanying assessment form 7 days before scheduled
examination date bring form partially completed by the candidate to the ECE Graduate Office. Please refer
to the Graduation Procedures at the SEAS Graduate Deans office Website. Consult the Office of the
Associate Dean for Graduate Studies in Thornton Hall, Room A108, for submission deadlines for graduation
within the current semester.
requirements for this review meeting. Each student will receive written feedback from their PhD Advisory
committee not later than two weeks after the meeting takes place.
All submission to this review will take place through a COLLAB site set-up for this purpose. Failure to
complete these reviews will result in a registration bar being placed on the students until the review has
been completed.
Any student planning to study graduate course material on an independent basis under the supervision of
a faculty member must submit a syllabus for ECE 6993 or ECE 7993 to the ECE Graduate Office. This syllabus
may be in the form of a beginningofcourse memo and must be submitted no later than the beginning of
the semester in which the student registers for Independent Study. The syllabus must include textbooks and
references to be used during the study as well as a detailed outline of topics to be covered. Samples of
problems solved and/or copies of any reports written during the course must be provided for the student's
file along with the syllabus. All Independent Study courses must be completed within the period of the
normal semester, unless extenuating circumstances prevent the student from completing the work. No more
than one Independent Study course (3 credits) may be applied towards an M.S. or M.E. degree.
Master's Project (ECE 6995, 7995)
Subject to the approval of his/her advisor, an M.E. student may include three to six hours of project work
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in their degree program. MS and Ph.D students cannot use 6995 or 7995 to fulfill degree course
requirements. A project proposal must be submitted to the students advisor. When the project has been
completed, a copy of the project report must be supplied to the ECE Graduate Office for inclusion in your
academic file.
Electrical and Computer Engineering Seminar (ECE 6505)
This one-hour weekly seminar course features presentations given by ECE faculty members, to introduce
various research areas, topics, and advances in Electrical and Computer Engineering. It is a one-credit course
required for all first-year ECE graduate (ME, MS and Ph.D.) students. This course is offered only the Fall
semester.
Supervised Graduate Teaching Experience (ECE 6996)
Ph.D. students in the ECE Department must pass one semester of a guided teaching experience. The
department will issue a list of possible teaching opportunities for each semester and students may apply for
one of these positions. The ECE Graduate Office will select the faculty supervisor for each student in this
course. The graduate student will be evaluated by the faculty supervisor and assigned a pass/fail grade as
appropriate. As with all graduate-teaching positions at UVa the student must have passed the SPEAK Test in
order to fulfill this graduation requirement. Students should apply to the ECE Graduate Office at least 10 days
before classes begin. They will be assigned a course to assist and the student should contact the instructor
of the course to get permission to register for ECE 6996 Supervised Graduate Teaching Experience.
It is the facultys belief that this experience is valuable for the professional development of our Ph.D.
students. In addition, the department and its undergraduates benefit from additional teaching support. It is
expected that such an assignment will require about ten hours per week and may be a combination of
laboratory support, office hours for tutoring, grading assistance, or a combination.
Note: This requirement may not be met by serving as a TA (ECE 8897/ECE 9897) in the department. No
additional compensation is provided for this
one-time experience.
Financial Support
Financial support may be provided by the department in the form of a Fellowship, Graduate Teaching
Assistantship (GTA) or Graduate Research Assistantship (GRA). The student should consider such support an
honor and make every effort to meet the requirements specified for such support. Financial aid may be
terminated at any time if the department or the project supervisor feels the student is not performing to the
professional standards expected of a graduate engineer.
A student receiving a department fellowship will typically be required to provide some type of service for
this financial assistance. This service may include such jobs as helping a faculty member develop a new
research area or working as a graduate teaching assistant. The student should meet with the faculty
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member and report progress on a regular basis. Fellowships are generally given to supplement GRA and
GTA awards. Fellowships are usually paid monthly in eight equal installments during the academic year.
Graduate teaching assistants are assigned to specific laboratory courses and are expected to prepare
adequately before each laboratory meeting. Some preliminary preparation may be required before the
beginning of the semester. At the end of the semester, the GTA should check with the faculty member in
charge of the laboratory to make sure that all duties have been completed. The member of faculty
responsible for the course will issue detailed instructions for GTAs. Generally, first year international
students are not eligible for a GTA position, unless they pass the English Proficiency Test and SPEAK Test.
Graduate Research Assistantship support is provided for assistance on sponsored research contracts or
grants. This work not only aids the research project but may also provide a topic for the students thesis or
dissertation. The student is expected to complete the work specified by the project supervisor in a
professional engineering manner. The project supervisor and the student should discuss what is to be
expected from the student during the employment period and the student should expect to make a progress
report (verbal or written) every week. Masters students receiving financial assistance will normally be
required to be enrolled in the M.S. (thesis) program. This is particularly true for students receiving a GRA.
Financial aid is not automatically renewable from one year to the next. It is the students
responsibility to make arrangements with the project supervisor of his/her research regarding the
possibility of continued employment for the next academic year. Students interested in a GTA position
should contact the ECE Graduate Office.
All students receiving financial assistance are responsible for providing withholding tax information and
Social Security Card to the Payroll Office and completing Federal Employment Eligibility Form I9. Please
report to the Budget Office for the School of Engineering and Applied Science in Room A205, Thornton Hall.
Failure to do so will preclude being placed on payroll. All male students must complete the Selective Service
Form: this form is required by the Commonwealth of Virginia and your employment will be terminated if it is
not completed on time.
Miscellaneous
The following policies have been established concerning the use of equipment, supplies, and materials.
Keys
Keys to the building and to the student offices are available from the ECE Office in Room C215.
Offices
Offices will normally be assigned by the EE Main Office, C215 Thornton Hall. The office must be kept
neat and clean as we often show visitors through the department. Do not use scotch tape on the walls as it
will damage the wallboard when removed. Remember that someone else will occupy your office after you
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leave, so try to keep it nice. Office space is extremely limited, and can normally only be provided to those
with research or teaching assistantships.
Telephones/Fax Machine
Telephones are provided in some graduate student office areas. Necessary research related long distance
calls are made with a forced authorization code (FAC). The FAC number allows the cost of the call to be
directly charged to the research contract. FAC numbers may be obtained from the faculty investigator of the
research project. University policy prohibits personal long distance calls to be made at University expense.
Personal long distance calls must be made collect, or by credit card, or charged to your home telephone
number. A fax machine is located in the department mailroom in C222. Proper usage of the fax machine is
dictated by the same policies that apply for telephones.
Office/Lab Supplies
You should contact the faculty investigator of your project regarding research supplies.
Copy Machines
The photocopy machine can only be used with the proper copy card. The department copy card is for
specific teaching assignments and departmental business only. Each research investigator typically has his/
her own copy card. The copy form login sheet located on the counter top in the main ECE office is only used
for departmental copying and not for laboratory or research copying. The photocopy machine is available
from 9am-5pm Monday through Friday only.
Email, Word Processing & Computing Facilities
The Division of Information Technology and Communication (ITC) provides general purpose computing
resources for the University of Virginia. Please obtain an account (http://its.virginia.edu/home.php) promptly
and read your mail daily, as these will be primary methods by which the department will communicate
important information to you.
*If you wish to send email to all ECE graduate students, address your message to eegrads@virginia.edu
Travel
Your advisor can advise and assist you concerning research or Department-related travel.
Reimbursements for travel expenses are done online at http://www.virginia.edu/~travel.
Address Changes
Please update SIS, of any changes in your address or telephone number. It is important that we have an
address at which you can be reached during the holidays and summer as well as the academic year. If you are
graduating, please leave a forwarding home or business address.
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