The Vogenau School of Information Technology and Engineering

Qualifying Examinations


(last modified November 8, 2007)

Beginning in Fall 2000, qualifying examinations are the basis for the breadth requirement of the IT Ph.D. degree. The following statements are taken from the university catalog ( http://www.gmu.edu/catalog/ite/iprograms.html#TOC_H30):

To satisfy the breadth requirement of the Ph.D. degree, each student must pass a set of qualifying examinations designed to test a student's fundamental knowledge. These examinations correspond to the individual master's programs in the School of Information Technology and Engineering. For each such program, at least two written exams will be offered, with each exam being based on a reading list posted in the table below. The qualifying exams are not associated with specific courses although some courses (called primary courses in the table below) may help students prepare for these exams. However, students should understand that courses listed as primary courses may only cover a portion of the reading list. Thus, it is the student's responsibility to prepare for the exams according to what is specified in the reading list.

These exams are offered twice a year in specified locations on campus, typically near the beginning of the fall and spring semesters. Each exam is allocated 2 hours. The examinations are graded on a pass/fail basis. Each student must take a set of four exams from three different degree programs within two years of enrolling in the program, unless fewer than 24 credits of course work have been completed in that time. Otherwise, the exams must be taken no later than the first opportunity following the completion of 24 credits. A student has two chances to pass the qualifying exams.

Each student must pass a set of four different exams in two consecutive offerings of the exams. Four exams must be attempted in the first offering. Thus, the following passing scenarios are allowed: a) pass all four on the first attempt, b) pass three in the first attempt and one in the next, c) pass two in the first attempt and two in the next, d) pass one in the first attempt and three on the second, and e) pass all four on the second attempt. The exams attempted on the second offering need not be the same as in the first. A student who fails to pass the qualifying exams in any of these scenarios is dismissed from the Ph.D. in program. Students may reapply to the PhD in IT program after either receipt of the engineer degree in information technology or a period of three years, whichever is shorter.

After two unsuccessful attempts, a student is dismissed from the Ph.D. program.

For students who have chosen one of the concentrations within the Ph.D. program, more restrictive rules apply. Such students should review the requirements for their particular concentration.

The chart below provides information on the qualifying exams offered by each masters program. This list may evolve over time, but attempts will be made to minimize the changes. Where information is available, exams are designated as open-book or closed-book; in the near future, this information will be available for all of the exams.

Policies and Procedures for Taking Qualifying Examinations

For those wishing to take one or more of these exams, here are the current policies and procedures:

  • The exams will be offered twice a year: during the week preceding the Spring semester, and during the week preceding the Fall semester.
  • Exams will be offered at the following time slots: 4:30pm to 6:30pm Monday through Friday and 7:00pm to 9:00pm Monday through Thursday on the exam week.
  • If you wish to take one of these exams, you should submit a request to Laura Harrison in room 160, S&T2 building (lharrisc@gmu.edu, 703-996-1505) indicating the exams you wish to take. Your request must be approved by your advisor.
  • Requests for taking exams are due two months before the exam date. Exams will only be created in response to requests. The form is available here. (Acrobat Reader required.)
  • The week before the exams, you will be notified about which exam will be scheduled in which time period. You will also be told the location where the exam will be given.
  • Students are allowed to withdraw from exams with no reason ten days before the exam. Once this time limit has passed, students with circumstances beyond their control, i.e., illness, car accident, family illness or other family issues, are required to notify the associate dean at the earliest possible time and provide documentation to support their claim. The student will then be allowed to take the exam at the next available testing date. If the student is a no show for the exam or hasn’t contacted the associate dean to be excused, the student will automatically fail the exam.
  • You should bring with you writing materials (pens/pencils, paper) and a calculator (the exam instructions will indicate if you are allowed to use a calculator). If the exam is open book, you should also bring with you the appropriate reference materials. For more detailed information about an exam, please consult the individual program responsible for the exam.
  • Qualifying exams are double-blind. Exam takers are not supposed to know the identity of the faculty members who prepare the exams and exam graders will not know the identity of the student taking the exam. A number will be assigned to the student once his/her scheduling confirmation is sent. Students should use this number to identify themselves when taking the exam.
  • We do not provide copies of previous qualifying exams.

Grade appeal procedures: 

  • Students who wish to appeal their grades must contact the Coordinator for Graduate Student Services at the office of the Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Studies. Students will be allowed to view their exams, make notes, and fill out a grade appeals form.
  • No frivolous grade appeals (i.e., based on exam style or types of questions) will be granted.
  • The Associate Dean will interact directly with the faculty member(s) in charge of writing the exams and with other faculty members as appropriate and will then inform the student the result of the grade appeal.
  • Grade appeals must be submitted in writing within one week of receiving the grade. Results of grade appeals will be sent to the student as soon as possible.

Here are the scheduled dates for the qualifying exams (through Fall 2009): 

  • January 7-11, 2008
  • August 11-15, 2008
  • January 5-9, 2009
  • August 10-14, 2009

Options for Students who Fail the Qualifying Examinations

A student who does not pass a complete set of qualifying examinations after two attempts will be dismissed from the Ph.D. program. The student will, however, be given an opportunity to transfer to another degree program at the University. Such students may wish to consider switching to the Engineer degree in Information Technology. Students may re-apply to the Ph.D. program upon completion of the Engineer degree; the specific requirements for doing this are in the university Catalog, in the section for the Engineer degree in Information Technology.

Alternatively, students may re-apply to the Ph.D. program after a period of three years.

List of Qualifying Examinations

M.S. Program

Examination

Exam

Reading List

Civil & Inf. Engineering Geographical Information Systems in Engineering

Lo, C.P., and Yeung, A.K.W., “Concepts and Techniques of Geographic Information Systems,” Prentice Hall, 2006; ISBN 013149502X; open book; primary course CEIE 510

Design and Inventive Engineering

G. Pahl and W. Beitz, Engineering Design, Springer, 1996; open book; Primary course: CEIE 511

Water Resource Systems Analysis

L.W. Mays and Y.-K. Tung, Hydrosystems Engineering and Management, McGraw Hill, 1992; open book; primary course: CEIE 530

Introduction to Environmental Engineering

Gilbert M. Masters and Wendell P. Ela, Introduction to Environmental Engineering and Science (3rd ed.), Prentice Hall, 2007, ISBN: 0131481932; open book and open notes; primary course: CEIE 555

Traffic Engineering

Roger P. Roess, William R. McShane, and Elena S. Prassas, Traffic Engineering (2nd edition), Prentice Hall, 1998; open book; primary course: CEIE 561

Infrastructure Modeling

C. ReVelle and A.E. McGarity, Design and Operation of Civil and Environmental Engineering Systems, Wiley Interscience, 1997; open book; primary course: CEIE 601

Groundwater Systems Modeling

C.W. Fetter, Applied Hydrogeology, Prentice Hall, 1994; open book; primary course: CEIE 632

Urban Transportation Planning

M. Meyer and E. Miller, Urban Transportation Planning (2nd edition), McGraw-Hill, 2001, 2nd edition; open book; primary course: CEIE 562

Computer Eng.

(703) 993-1570

Computer Network Architectures and Protocols

Leon-Garcia and Widjaja, Communication Networks (2nd edition), McGraw-Hill; chapters 1, 2, 3 (section 3.9 only), 4 (section 4.1 only), 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, and appendix A; closed book; primary course: ECE 542

Sequential Machine Theory

M.W. Shields, An Introduction to Automata Theory, Blackwell (1987); Dean Kelley, Automata and Formal Languages, Prentice-Hall (1995), chapters 1-5; closed book; primary course: ECE 548

Computer Sci.

(703) 993-1530

 

Artificial Intelligence

http://cs.gmu.edu/exams/phdquals/#AI; closed book

Language Processing

http://www.cs.gmu.edu/exams/phdquals/#Languages; closed book

Algorithms and Theory of Computation

http://cs.gmu.edu/exams/phdquals/#Theory; closed book

Operating Systems  http://www.cs.gmu.edu/exams/phdquals/#Systems ; closed book 

Computer Networks

http://www.cs.gmu.edu/exams/phdquals/#Systems; closed book

Databases http://www.cs.gmu.edu/exams/phdquals/#DB; closed book
Software Construction http://www.cs.gmu.edu/exams/phdquals/#SoftwareConstruction ; closed book
Information Security and Assurance http://www.cs.gmu.edu/exams/phdquals/#Security; closed book
Software Modeling http://www.cs.gmu.edu/exams/phdquals/#SoftwareModeling; closed book; primary course: SWE 621

E-Commerce

(703) 993-1640

E-commerce Technology

"E-commerce: business, technology and society," 3rd edition,  Kenneth C. Laudon and Carol Guercio Traver, Prentice Hall, 2006, ISBN 0131735160, chapters 1-7; primary course: INFS 640; closed book

E-business Services

"Knowledge Management: Classic and Contemporary Works," eds. Daryl Morey, Mark Maybury and Bhavani Thuraisingham, MIT Press, ISBN 0-262-133384-9, chapters 1-3, 6, and 7.

and

"e-Business: Organizational and Technical Foundations, by Michael P. Papazoglou, Pieter Ribbers, Wiley, ISBN: 978-0-470-84376-5; chapters 1-4, 6-7, 10, 12-14, 17-20.

primary course: INFS 770; closed book exam.

Electrical Eng.

(703) 993-1570

Modern System Theory

W.L. Brogan, Modern Control Theory (3rd edition), Prentice Hall (1991); closed book; primary course: ECE 521

Sequential Machine Theory

Lecture notes available at http://teal.gmu.edu/~khintz/courses/ece_548/ece_548_home.html

These notes are based on the two texts, M.W. Shields, An Introduction to Automata Theory, Blackwell (1987); Dean Kelley, Automata and Formal Languages, Prentice-Hall (1995), chapters 1-5;

The basic topics are 1) the equivalence of hardware and software, and 2) the serial and parallel decomposition of machines.

The examination is open book, open notes.

Primary course: ECE 548

Inf. Security & Assurance

(703) 993-1640

Information Security and Assurance

 http://www.cs.gmu.edu/exams/phdquals/#Security;  The exam is closed book; primary course: ISA 562.

Inf. Systems

(703) 993-1640

Operating Systems

This exam is now the same as the Operating Systems exam in the Computer Science group.

Computer Networks

This exam is now the same as the Computer Networks exam in the Computer Science group.

Databases

http://cs.gmu.edu/exams/phdquals/#DB; closed book

Operations Res.

(703) 993-1670

Operations Research: Deterministic Models

W.L. Winston, Operations Research, Applications and Algorithms (4th edition), PWS-Kent (2004); ch. 3-9, 11; open book; primary course: OR 541

Operations Research: Stochastic Models

W.L. Winston, Operations Research, Applications and Algorithms (4th edition), PWS-Kent (2004); ch. 13, 16, 17, 20, 21, 24; open book; primary course: OR 542

Software Eng.

(703) 993-1640

Software Construction

http://www.cs.gmu.edu/exams/phdquals/#SoftwareConstruction ; closed book; primary course: SWE 619

Software Modeling

http://www.cs.gmu.edu/exams/phdquals/#SoftwareModeling; closed book; primary course: SWE 621

Software Testing

Software Testing; closed book; primary course: SWE 637

Statistical Sci.

(703) 993-3645

Applied Probability

http://mason.gmu.edu/~csutton/qualaplprob.html; STAT 544 can be taken to help prepare for the exam

Applied Statistics

http://mason.gmu.edu/~csutton/qualaplstat.html; course STAT 554 can be taken to prepare for the exam

Statistical Inference

http://mason.gmu.edu/~csutton/qualstatinf.htm; course STAT 652 can be taken in preparation for the exam

Systems Eng.

(703) 993-1670

System Engineering Design

D.M. Buede, The Engineering Design of Systems: Models and Methods, Wiley (1999); chapters 1-3 and 6-12; open book

AND

M. Fowler, UML Distilled: A Brief Guide to the Standard Object Modeling Language, 3rd Edition, Addison Wesley (2004); open book

 

OR

S.W. Ambler, The Object Primer: Agile Model Driven Development wih UML 2.0, Third Edition, Cambridge University Press, 2004. Standard Object Modeling Language, 3rd Edition, Addison Wesley (2004); open book

About 40% of the exam is based on structured analysis and design, 40% on object orientation, and 20% on a mixture of structured and object oriented efforts.

Primary course: SYST 520

Decision and Risk Analysis

Robert T. Clemen, Making Hard Decisions, Thomson Learning (1996); open book and open notes.

D. Schum, Class Notes for SYST 573. (Available from the Systems Engineering & Operations Research Dept. seor@gmu.edu); open book; primary course: SYST 573

Telecomm.

(703) 993-1570

Systems Engineering for Telecommunications Management

Sachdev, D.K., Business Strategies for Satellite Systems, 2004, ISBN: 9781580535922; closed book

Pratt, Bostian and Allnutt, Satellite Communications, Second Edition, Wiley, ISBN: 9780471370079; closed book; primary course: TCOM 521

Digital Communication Systems

Contact Jeremy Allnutt [(703) 993-3969, jallnutt@gmu.edu] for the reading list for this examination; closed book; primary course: TCOM 551

 

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