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Master
of Science
Table
of Contents - Introduction - Graduate
Degrees - Academic
Policies - Administrative
Policies - NucE
Faculty - Course
Descriptions - Facilities - Radiation
Science & Eng. Center
Admission
Provisional
Admission
Examinations
for Admission
Program
Requirements
Establishing
a Program of Study
Maintaining
Satisfactory Scholarship
Summary
of Degree with Thesis Requirements
Summary
of Degree without Thesis Requirements
Admission
Requirements
Completion
of an undergraduate degree in Nuclear Engineering or in another related
engineering or science discipline is required for admission to the M.S.
degree program in
Nuclear Engineering. Students should have at least a 3.00 (4.00 base) junior-senior
average
to be considered for admission.
Provisional
Admission
Provisional
admission is a temporary classification in which an applicant may remain
for a period of no longer than 2 semesters following admission or the time
it takes to accrue
15 credits, whichever comes first. If the deficiencies that caused the provisional
admission
are not corrected by this time, the student may be dropped from the program.
Examinations
for Admission
Test
of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). To qualify for admission, an
international student must achieve a minimum TOEFL score of 550 on the paper-based
test,
and a minimum score of 213 on the computer-based test. This requirement is
waived if the
student's native tongue is English or if the student received a baccalaureate
degree from an
institution in which the language of instruction was English.
Graduate Record Examination (GRE). All students must submit scores on the
general
aptitude tests of the GRE prior to admission consideration.
Program
Requirements
Each
of the following requirements must be met in order for the student to be
approved for graduation:
1) A minimum of 30 graduate credits must be earned. Only grades of A, B, and
C are accepted for graduate credit.
2) A minimum grade point average of 3.00 is required, not counting grades obtained
in NucE 600, Thesis Research.
3) At least twelve (12) 400- or 500-level course credits must be taken as NucE
courses.
4) At least twelve (12) of the 30 required credits must be in 500-level courses.
This includes any 500-level NucE courses taken to satisfy requirement #3
above. At least six of these credits must be NucE 500-level courses.
5)Specific course requirements
a) NucE 301, 302, 403, 450 or their equivalent. Students with an undergraduate
or graduate degree in Nuclear Engineering will usually have completed the
equivalent of NucE 301, 302, and 450. Some students may have the equivalent
of NucE 403. You need to review this with your advisor. Students whose baccalaureate
degree is not in nuclear engineering have two ways of fulfilling the undergraduate
requirement. If they enter in the Summer Session, they take NucE
297A/497A, a four-credit reactor theory course, which is considered an
acceptable substitute for NucE 301 and 302. The student can then
proceed to NucE 403 in the Fall Semester. It is recommended that
students who have not had reactor theory follow this path. If the
student enters in the Fall Semester, NucE 301 must be taken in the Fall
Semester and NucE 302 in the Spring Semester. Courses below the
400 level do not count toward the graduate program. The intention in
the NucE 450 requirement is to make sure the entering student has had
an adequate laboratory experience in (at least) radiation detection and
measurement.
b) The NucE 597X courses are allowed to fulfill part of the graduate degree
requirements. These typically are regular Nuclear Engineering classes which
are being taught on an experimental basis (and thus have no official course
number.) This requires special approval by the Nuclear Engineering Graduate
Faculty, for which a petition must be submitted.
c) NucE
596 and NucE 496 (Individual Studies) courses can be used in special circumstances
to fulfill part of the graduate degree requirements. This requires special
approval by the Nuclear Engineering Graduate Faculty, for which a petition
must be submitted.
The
petition must state clearly:
• the
rationale for taking the Individual Studies course, rather than regular courses,
• the
program of study defining the content of the course and the work to be performed
by the student in taking the course, and
• the
grading criteria whereby the student's work will be assessed.
The
petition must be submitted by the end of the first week of class of the semester
in which the course is to be taught. The graduate faculty
will evaluate the petition and render a decision by the second week of
classes. If the course is approved, the faculty member must document
the student’s work and the grading in the student’s file.
No
more than six (6) total credits of NucE 496 and NucE 596 courses may be applied
toward the graduate degree.
6) There are two options for the M.S. degree. Requirements for the Thesis
Option and the Non-Thesis Option follow:
a) Thesis
Option - six (6) credits of thesis research, NucE 600, and the submittal
of a thesis that meets the Graduate School requirements.
b) Non-Thesis
Option - an additional six (6) credits, for a total of 18 credits, of
500-level courses and the submittal of a scholarly paper that
must be approved by a faculty supervisor and the Program Chair.
7) The
remaining credits must be courses at the 400- and 500-level as selected by
the student with approval by the student's advisor as having significance
and
value for the degree program.
Establishing
a Program of Study
Within
the first month of enrollment in the Nuclear Engineering graduate program,
students need to prepare a program of study in consultation with their
academic advisor (see
form on page 15.) Such a plan will specify which courses the students will
take to fulfill their
graduate degree requirements. The plan needs to be signed by the academic
advisor and by
the graduate program coordinator, and will be added to the student’s
file. The program of
study can be changed at any time, with the signatures of the academic advisor
and the
graduate program coordinator.
Maintaining
Satisfactory Scholarship
A
minimum grade point average of 3.00 (excluding NucE 600 credits) is required
in
order to be granted a graduate degree in Nuclear Engineering. In addition,
at the end of the
initial semester, a student with less than a 3.00 average will be notified
by their faculty
advisor of future grade point average requirements. These requirements will
be developed by
the graduate faculty early in the next semester. The Program will review
each graduate
student's grade point average at the end of each semester. Minimum grade
point averages
required for continuation as a regular graduate student in Nuclear Engineering
are:
Graduate
Credits Earned
(other than 600-level credits) |
Minimum
Grade Point Average |
10
or greater |
2.60 |
20
or greater |
2.90 |
30
or greater |
3.00 |
If
in a review of the student's grade point average, the minimum requirements
are not
met, a letter (signed by the advisor) to the student from the Graduate Faculty
of Nuclear
Engineering will state:
a) The requirement(s) which the student has failed to satisfy.
b) The
requirement(s) which the student must meet by the end of the next semester.
c) If the next semester requirement(s) in b. is not met, the faculty will review
the
student's academic performance at a meeting convened prior to the end of
the
first two weeks of the subsequent semester. In the absence of extenuating
circumstances, the student will be dropped as a regular graduate student
immediately following the meeting.
If
a student is dropped as a regular graduate student in Nuclear Engineering,
continuing nuclear engineering study as a provisional student is possible.
The student must
be readmitted into the Graduate School as a nondegree student. Such admission
is subject to
the recommendation of the Program Chair of Nuclear Engineering, who will
act according to
the recommendations of the Graduate Faculty developed in (c) above. During
nondegree
student status, no research credit (NucE 600, 611) may be earned.
The
student may petition the Graduate Faculty of Nuclear Engineering for admission
as a regular graduate student when their cumulative graduate course grade
point average is
elevated to 3.00 or greater. A maximum of 10 graduate-level credits earned
while a
nondegree student will be counted in satisfying the graduate degree requirements
in Nuclear
Engineering.
If,
through the late drop process or other processes (e.g., auditing a course
instead of
taking it for credit), a graduate student on financial support falls below
the proper credit load,
that support will be lost.
Summary
of Master of Science Degree With Thesis Requirements |
It is the student's responsibility
to ensure that all requirements have been met in a timely manner. Please
read carefully the section of this manual titled Academic Policies. |
Requirement |
Person Responsible |
Suggested Completion Date |
|
Assign a faculty member to serve as faculty
advisor |
Program Chair |
Early in first semester |
|
Establish a program of study |
Student, with advisor approval |
Within first month of enrollment in NucE
grad program |
|
Activate your Intent to Graduate by calling
8639000. |
Student |
Prior to the Graduate School's deadline date* |
|
Pay thesis fee (at Registrar's Office,
112 Shields) |
Student |
Beginning of semester in which degree
is expected |
|
Submit draft copy of thesis to faculty
advisor |
Student |
Early in last semester |
|
Submit a complete draft of the thesis
to the Thesis Office for format review. |
Student |
Prior to the Graduate School's deadline date* |
|
Submit final, corrected, signed copy of
thesis to the Thesis Office |
Student |
Prior to the Graduate School's deadline date* |
|
Return keys and any books, software, supplies,
etc. to Nuclear Engineering |
Student |
Prior to departure |
|
Provide one hardcover bound copy of thesis to advisor
and one to Nuclear Engineering |
Student |
Prior to graduation |
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*Every
semester the Graduate School produces a calendar of deadline dates regarding
graduation and thesis approval. This calendar will be posted on the bulletin
boards in the
Reber Building, or a copy may be obtained from the Graduate Records Secretary.
This
calendar is also posted on the Web at: http://www.gradsch.psu.edu/calendar/gradcal.html.
Summary
of Master of Science Degree Without Thesis Requirements |
It
is the student's responsibility to ensure that all requirements have
been met in a timely manner. Please read carefully the section of this
manual titled Academic Policies. |
Requirement |
Person
Responsible |
Suggested
Completion Date |
|
Assign
a faculty member to serve as faculty advisor |
Program
Chair |
Early
in first semester |
|
Establish
a program of study |
Student,
with advisor approval |
Within
first month of enrollment in NucE grad program |
|
Activate
your Intent to Graduate by calling 863-9000. |
Student |
Prior
to the Graduate School's deadline date* |
|
Submit
draft copy of
scholarly paper to faculty
advisor |
Student |
Early
in last semester |
|
Contact
the Graduate Secretary to initiate the submission of the Report of
Master's Paper Draft Review to the Graduate School |
Faculty
Advisor in conjunction with the Student |
Prior
to the Graduate
School's deadline date* |
|
Submit
final copy of scholarly paper to the Program Chair. |
Student |
Prior
to the Graduate School's deadline date* |
|
Return
keys and any books, software, supplies, etc. to Nuclear Engineering |
Student |
Prior
to departure |
|
Provide
one hardcover bound copy of thesis to advisor and one to Nuclear Engineering |
Student |
Prior
to graduation |
|
*Every
semester the Graduate School produces a calendar of deadline dates regarding
graduation and thesis approval. This calendar will be posted on the bulletin
boards in the
Reber Building, or a copy may be obtained from the Graduate Records Secretary.
This
calendar is also posted on the Web at: http://www.gradsch.psu.edu/calendar/gradcal.html
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