phd thesis submission

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Thesis & Dissertation Submission

Thesis / dissertation submission.

Information about the thesis and dissertation submission process can be found by navigating the topics below. The Academic Services Coordinator can be contacted via email at: [email protected]

Thesis/Dissertation Submission

The PhD dissertation represents independent scholarly work that makes an original contribution to knowledge. It is a demonstration that the PhD candidate has achieved  sufficient mastery in the field to pursue independent research and scholarship. A dissertation for a professional doctorate or a master’s thesis represents advanced scholarly work in keeping with the standards of the field.

Continuous Enrollment

When a program requires a dissertation or thesis, registration in dissertation or thesis coursework is required for at least two semesters. Enrollment in 594 Master’s Thesis or 794 Doctoral Dissertation ensures continuous enrollment until the thesis or dissertation has been submitted to the Graduate School. Degrees will be awarded in the semester in which all requirements have been met, including approval of the final version of the thesis or dissertation and submission of supporting documents with authorized signatures. Documents are processed and manuscripts are read in the order received.

Dissertations and Theses

Main navigation.

Congratulations on being close to the finish line with your dissertation or thesis.

After you’ve applied to graduate and enrolled, dissertations and theses may be submitted online through the Dissertation & Thesis Center in Axess.  

Once you finish submitting your dissertation or thesis in Axess, and it has been approved by the university, the submission is considered final and no further changes are permitted. 

The electronic submission process is free of charge and allows you the ability to check your pre-submission requirements and when ready, upload a digital copy of your dissertation or thesis. 

You can learn more about the center on the How to Use the Dissertation & Thesis Center webpage.

  • FAQs: Dissertation & Theses
  • How to Submit Your Signature Page
  • How to Use the Dissertation & Thesis Center
  • How to Request to Use Copyrighted Material

Note: The online submission process is not available for master's theses or undergraduate honors theses. Please consult with your department directly regarding submission procedures.

Follow these guides to ensure you meet all the requirements for submitting your dissertation or thesis. 

  • Prepare Your Work for Submission
  • Submit Your Dissertation or Thesis
  • Steps After Submission

Submission Deadlines for Conferral

You must apply to graduate and enroll before you can access the Dissertation & Thesis Center in Axess.

The Dissertation & Thesis Center opens to submissions on the first day of instruction each quarter for which the student has applied to graduate.

The quarterly deadlines are set as late in the quarter as possible, providing the time necessary for review of the dissertation or thesis, including review of final degree requirements by the Registrar's Office and the departments. 

You are strongly encouraged to submit your work at least two weeks prior to the deadline to ensure that all requirements can be met in time for the conferral of your degree. 

Once you finish submitting your dissertation or thesis in Axess, and it has been approved by the university, the submission is considered final and no further changes are permitted. 

After the final reader approves the dissertation, it typically takes about seven (7) business days for the university to process the submission.  

Deadlines by Quarter

Dissertation deadlines are strictly enforced.  No exceptions are made. By noon on the final submission deadline date, all of the following steps must be completed:           

  • The student enrolls and applies to graduate;
  • The student confirms the names of reading committee members in Axess, and designates a Final Reader;
  • The student submits reading committee signatures;
  • The student completes the necessary University Milestones;
  • The student’s candidacy is valid through degree conferral;
  • The student submits the final dissertation or thesis in Axess;
  • The designated Final Reader certifies the final draft of the dissertation or thesis submitted in Axess.

For help, contact the Student Services Center .                                                                        

For faculty and staff information on Dissertations, visit Inside Student Services.

Theses and Dissertations

Defense and submission.

Sign on door that says "Dissertation in Progress"

Below is an overview of the main steps in preparing, defending, and submitting your thesis or dissertation. For detailed instructions on each step, see The Graduate School's  Guide for Electronic Submission of Thesis and Dissertation (PDF) , in addition to this video recording from a workshop given on the subject. 

  • Schedule your defense and apply for graduation in DukeHub ( defense and graduation deadlines ).  
  • At least 30 days before your defense: Confirm or update your defense committee.  
  • Give your thesis/dissertation to your advisor for inspection, and prompt your advisor to send a letter to [email protected] stating that it is complete and ready to defend. Note: For students in School of Medicine Ph.D. programs, their advisor letters are generated through T3.  
  • Request your DGSA to send a departmental defense announcement to  [email protected] . Note: For students in School of Medicine Ph.D. programs, their departmental defense announcements are generated through T3.  
  • At least 2 weeks before your defense: Submit your complete, correctly formatted dissertation/thesis to ProQuest (initial submission). Also provide it to each member of your committee.  
  • Optional: After you receive an email through ProQuest from the Graduate School administrator who reviewed your thesis/dissertation format, you may make an appointment for a brief, virtual meeting with the administrator to discuss any questions you have about the defense process or the recommended formatting revisions.  
  • A few days before your defense, The Graduate School will generate your final examination certificate and email it to the chair/co-chair(s) of your examination committee and the DGSA of your department. Note:  For students in School of Medicine Ph.D. programs, their final examination certificates are generated and released through T3.  
  • Defend your dissertation. After your final examination, your committee members will vote on whether you passed or failed. Your chair and DGS will record the votes on your final examination certificate, sign it, and submit it to The Graduate School. Your committee may vote that you passed but still require minor edits or corrections before final submission.  
  • As soon as possible after your defense, submit to [email protected] the Non-Exclusive Distribution License and Thesis/Dissertation Availability Agreement (“embargo agreement”) signed by yourself and your thesis/dissertation advisor.  
  • Within 30 days after your successful defense, or by the established final submission deadline (whichever is first): Submit the final version of your dissertation/thesis to ProQuest.

Guide for Electronic Submission of Thesis and Dissertation (PDF)

We provide the following templates for your convenience and to help you eliminate common formatting errors. However,  all submitted theses and dissertations must meet the specifications listed in the ETD guide . The manuscript must be a completed document, formatted correctly, with no sections left blank.

  • Word Template for Thesis/Dissertation (Word)
  • LaTeX Template for Thesis/Dissertation (ZIP)

Notes about the LaTeX Template

  • This LaTeX template is for both master's and Ph.D. students. Master's theses must also have an abstract title page.
  • Neither The Graduate School nor OIT supports LaTeX beyond providing this template.

Ph.D. and master’s students are required to apply for graduation in  DukeHub  by the established application deadline for the semester in which they plan to graduate.

Review the full graduation guidelines on the  Graduation Information and Deadlines  page. 

When you submit your thesis or dissertation electronically, you will also permit Duke University to make it available online through  DukeSpace  at Duke Libraries. See the pages below for more information about ETDs:

  • ETDs Overview
  • ETD Availability
  • ETD Copyright Information 
  • ETD Technical Help 

Check out the writing support  offered by The Graduate School, such as writing spaces, consultations, and access to online writing workshops, communities, and resources.

/images/cornell/logo35pt_cornell_white.svg" alt="phd thesis submission"> Cornell University --> Graduate School

Thesis & dissertation.

Student writing

  Understanding Deadlines and Requirements

The final requirement in earning a graduate degree is the completion and defense of the master’s thesis or doctoral dissertation. Understanding the steps and associated deadlines in the thesis/dissertation submission and degree conferral process is necessary to establish a successful plan and realistic timeframe.

2024 Thesis/Dissertation Submission to the Graduate School Deadlines:

  • For May 26, 2024 conferral, deadline is May 1.
  • For August 31, 2024 conferral, deadline is August 1.
  • December 31, 2024 conferral, deadline is December 1.

See our  Planning Timeline  for more detailed information.

  Writing Your Thesis/Dissertation

The Graduate School offers several writing resources to help you get started, meet your goals, and complete your thesis/dissertation on time. 

Before You Begin:

  • Guide to Writing Your Thesis/Dissertation
  • Fields Permitting the Use of Papers Option
  • Required Sections, Guidelines, and Suggestions
  • Formatting Requirements
  • Fair Use, Copyright, Patent, and Publishing Options

Resources for Writing:

  • Thesis & Dissertation Templates
  • Writing from A to B

  Scheduling and Taking Your Final Exam

Once you have submitted your draft thesis/dissertation to your committee you are ready to defend. This involves scheduling and taking your final exam (“B” exam), an oral exam/dissertation defense for Ph.D. candidates, or (“M” exam), an oral exam/thesis defense for Master’s candidates.

  • About Exams
  • Defending Your Thesis or Dissertation
  • Taking Exams

 Submitting Your Thesis/Dissertation

Policy requires the thesis/dissertation be submitted within 60 days of the final exam. The Graduate School uses a service called ProQuest to administer the electronic thesis/dissertation (ETD) submission and committee approval process. Once you have made any necessary revisions and the thesis/dissertation is final, you are ready to begin the approval and submission process.

Before initiating the submission process, students are required to complete an ORCID iD and complete the Survey of Earned Doctorates.

  • Open Researcher and Contributor ID (ORCID iD)
  • Survey of Earned Doctorates 
  • Thesis & Dissertation Submission Process
  • Submission Fees
  • Graduation Requirements 

PhD Thesis Guide

This phd thesis guide will guide you step-by-step through the thesis process, from your initial letter of intent to submission of the final document..

All associated forms are conveniently consolidated in the section at the end.

Deadlines & Requirements

Students should register for HST.ThG during any term in which they are conducting research towards their thesis. Regardless of year in program students registered for HST.ThG in a regular term (fall or spring) must meet with their research advisor and complete the  Semi-Annual PhD Student Progress Review Form to receive credit.

Years 1 - 2

  • Students participating in lab rotations during year 1, may use the optional MEMP Rotation Registration Form , to formalize the arrangement and can earn academic credit by enrolling in HST.599. 
  • A first letter of intent ( LOI-1 ) proposing a general area of thesis research and research advisor is required by April 30th of the second year of registration.
  • A second letter of intent ( LOI-2 ) proposing a thesis committee membership and providing a more detailed description of the thesis research is required by April 30th of the third year of registration for approval by the HST-IMES Committee on Academic Programs (HICAP).

Year 4 

  • Beginning in year 4, (or after the LOI-2 is approved) the student must meet with their thesis committee at least once per semester.
  • Students must formally defend their proposal before the approved thesis committee, and submit their committee approved proposal to HICAP  by April 30 of the forth year of registration.
  • Meetings with the thesis committee must be held at least once per semester. 

HST has developed these policies to help keep students on track as they progress through their PhD program. Experience shows that students make more rapid progress towards graduation when they interact regularly with a faculty committee and complete their thesis proposal by the deadline.

Getting Started

Check out these resources  for finding a research lab.

The Thesis Committee: Roles and Responsibilities

Students perform doctoral thesis work under the guidance of a thesis committee consisting of at least three faculty members from Harvard and MIT (including a chair and a research advisor) who will help guide the research. Students are encouraged to form their thesis committee early in the course of the research and in any case by the end of the third year of registration. The HST IMES Committee on Academic Programs (HICAP) approves the composition of the thesis committee via the letter of intent and the thesis proposal (described below). 

Research Advisor

The research advisor is responsible for overseeing the student's thesis project. The research advisor is expected to:

  • oversee the research and mentor the student;
  • provide a supportive research environment, facilities, and financial support;
  • discuss expectations, progress, and milestones with the student and complete the  Semi-Annual PhD Student Progress Review Form each semester;
  • assist the student to prepare for the oral qualifying exam;
  • guide the student in selecting the other members of the thesis committee;
  • help the student prepare for, and attend, meetings of the full thesis committee, to be held at least once per semester;
  • help the student prepare for, and attend, the thesis defense;
  • evaluate the final thesis document.

The research advisor is chosen by the student and must be a faculty member of MIT* or Harvard University and needs no further approval.  HICAP may approve other individuals as research advisor on a student-by-student basis. Students are advised to request approval of non-faculty research advisors as soon as possible.  In order to avoid conflicts of interest, the research advisor may not also be the student's academic advisor. In the event that an academic advisor becomes the research advisor, a new academic advisor will be assigned.

The student and their research advisor must complete the Semi-Annual PhD Student Progress Review during each regular term in order to receive academic credit for research.  Download Semi Annual Review Form

*MIT Senior Research Staff are considered equivalent to faculty members for the purposes of research advising. No additional approval is required.

Thesis Committee Chair

Each HST PhD thesis committee is headed administratively by a chair, chosen by the student in consultation with the research advisor. The thesis committee chair is expected to:

  • provide advice and guidance concerning the thesis research; 
  • oversee meetings of the full thesis committee, to be held at least once per semester;
  • preside at the thesis defense; 
  • review and evaluate the final thesis document.

The thesis committee chair must be well acquainted with the academic policies and procedures of the institution granting the student's degree and be familiar with the student's area of research. The research advisor may not simultaneously serve as thesis committee chair.

For HST PhD students earning degrees through MIT, the thesis committee chair must be an MIT faculty member. A select group of HST program faculty without primary appointments at MIT have been pre-approved by HICAP to chair PhD theses awarded by HST at MIT in cases where the MIT research advisor is an MIT faculty member.**

HST PhD students earning their degree through Harvard follow thesis committee requirements set by the unit granting their degree - either the Biophysics Program or the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS).

** List of non-MIT HST faculty approved to chair MIT thesis proposals when the research advisor is an MIT faculty member.

In addition to the research advisor and the thesis committee chair, the thesis committee must include one or more readers. Readers are expected to:

  • attend meetings of the full thesis committee, to be held at least once per semester;
  • attend the thesis defense; 

Faculty members with relevant expertise from outside of Harvard/MIT may serve as readers, but they may only be counted toward the required three if approved by HICAP.

The members of the thesis committee should have complementary expertise that collectively covers the areas needed to advise a student's thesis research. The committee should also be diverse, so that members are able to offer different perspectives on the student's research. When forming a thesis committee, it is helpful to consider the following questions: 

  • Do the individuals on the committee collectively have the appropriate expertise for the project?
  • Does the committee include at least one individual who can offer different perspectives on the student's research?  The committee should include at least one person who is not closely affiliated with the student's primary lab. Frequent collaborators are acceptable in this capacity if their work exhibits intellectual independence from the research advisor.
  • If the research has a near-term clinical application, does the committee include someone who can add a translational or clinical perspective?  
  • Does the committee conform to HST policies in terms of number, academic appointments, and affiliations of the committee members, research advisor, and thesis committee chair as described elsewhere on this page?

[Friendly advice: Although there is no maximum committee size, three or four is considered optimal. Committees of five members are possible, but more than five is unwieldy.]

Thesis Committee Meetings

Students must meet with their thesis committee at least once each semester beginning in the fourth year of registration. It is the student's responsibility to schedule these meetings; students who encounter difficulties in arranging regular committee meetings can contact Julie Greenberg at jgreenbe [at] mit.edu (jgreenbe[at]mit[dot]edu) .

The format of the thesis committee meeting is at the discretion of the thesis committee chair. In some cases, the following sequence may be helpful:

  • The thesis committee chair, research advisor, and readers meet briefly without the student in the room;
  • The thesis committee chair and readers meet briefly with the student, without the advisor in the room;
  • The student presents their research progress, answers questions, and seeks guidance from the members of the thesis committee;

Please note that thesis committee meetings provide an important opportunity for students to present their research and respond to questions. Therefore, it is in the student's best interest for the research advisor to refrain from defending the research in this setting.

Letters of Intent

Students must submit two letters of intent ( LOI-1 and LOI-2 ) with applicable signatures. 

In LOI-1, students identify a research advisor and a general area of thesis research, described in 100 words or less. It should include the area of expertise of the research advisor and indicate whether IRB approval (Institutional Review Board; for research involving human subjects) and/or IACUC approval (Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee; for research involving vertebrate animals) will be required and, if so, from which institutions. LOI-1 is due by April 30 of the second year of registration and and should be submitted to HICAP, c/o Traci Anderson in E25-518. 

In LOI-2, students provide a description of the thesis research, describing the Background and Significance of the research and making a preliminary statement of Specific Aims (up to 400 words total). In LOI-2, a student also proposes the membership of their thesis committee. In addition to the research advisor, the proposed thesis committee must include a chair and one or more readers, all selected to meet the specified criteria . LOI-2 is due by April 30th of the third year of registration and should be submitted to HICAP, c/o Traci Anderson in E25-518.

LOI-2 is reviewed by the HST-IMES Committee on Academic Programs (HICAP) to determine if the proposed committee meets the specified criteria and if the committee members collectively have the complementary expertise needed to advise the student in executing the proposed research. If HICAP requests any changes to the proposed committee, the student must submit a revised LOI-2 for HICAP review by September 30th of the fourth year of registration. HICAP must approve LOI-2 before the student can proceed to presenting and submitting their thesis proposal. Any changes to the thesis committee membership following HICAP approval of LOI-2 and prior to defense of the thesis proposal must be reported by submitting a revised LOI-2 form to HICAP, c/o tanderso [at] mit.edu (Traci Anderson) . After final HICAP approval of LOI-2, which confirms the thesis committee membership, the student may proceed to present their thesis proposal to the approved thesis committee, as described in the next section.

Students are strongly encouraged to identify tentative thesis committee members and begin meeting with them as early as possible to inform the direction of their research. Following submission of LOI-2, students are required to hold at least one thesis committee meeting per semester. Students must document these meetings via the Semi- Annual PhD Student Progress Review form in order to receive a grade reflecting satisfactory progress in HST.ThG.

Thesis Proposal and Proposal Presentation

For MEMP students receiving their degrees through MIT, successful completion of the Oral Qualifying Exam is a prerequisite for the thesis proposal presentation. For MEMP students receiving their degrees through Harvard, the oral qualifying exam satisfies the proposal presentation requirement.

Proposal Document

Each student must present a thesis proposal to a thesis committee that has been approved by HICAP via the LOI-2 and then submit a full proposal package to HICAP by April 30th of the fourth year of registration. The only exception is for students who substantially change their research focus after the fall term of their third year; in those cases the thesis proposal must be submitted within three semesters of joining a new lab. Students registering for thesis research (HST.THG) who have not met this deadline may be administratively assigned a grade of "U" (unsatisfactory) and receive an academic warning.

The written proposal should be no longer than 4500 words, excluding references. This is intended to help students develop their proposal-writing skills by gaining experience composing a practical proposal; the length is comparable to that required for proposals to the NIH R03 Small Research Grant Program. The proposal should clearly define the research problem, describe the proposed research plan, and defend the significance of the work. Preliminary results are not required. If the proposal consists of multiple aims, with the accomplishment of later aims based on the success of earlier ones, then the proposal should describe a contingency plan in case the early results are not as expected.

Proposal Presentation

The student must formally defend the thesis proposal before the full thesis committee that has been approved by HICAP.

Students should schedule the meeting and reserve a conference room and any audio visual equipment they may require for their presentation. To book a conference room in E25, please contact Joseph Stein ( jrstein [at] mit.edu (jrstein[at]mit[dot]edu) ).

Following the proposal presentation, students should make any requested modifications to the proposal for the committee members to review. Once the committee approves the proposal, the student should obtain the signatures of the committee members on the forms described below as part of the proposal submission package.

[Friendly advice: As a professional courtesy, be sure your committee members have a complete version of your thesis proposal at least one week in advance of the proposal presentation.]

Submission of Proposal Package

When the thesis committee has approved the proposal, the student submits the proposal package to HICAP, c/o Traci Anderson in E25-518, for final approval. HICAP may reject a thesis proposal if it has been defended before a committee that was not previously approved via the LOI-2.

The proposal package includes the following: 

  • the proposal document
  • a brief description of the project background and significance that explains why the work is important;
  • the specific aims of the proposal, including a contingency plan if needed; and
  • an indication of the methods to be used to accomplish the specific aims.
  • signed research advisor agreement form(s);
  • signed chair agreement form (which confirms a successful proposal defense);
  • signed reader agreement form(s).

Thesis Proposal Forms

  • SAMPLE Title Page (doc)
  • Research Advisor Agreement Form (pdf)
  • Chair Agreement Form (pdf)
  • Reader Agreement Form (pdf)

Thesis Defense and Final Thesis Document

When the thesis is substantially complete and fully acceptable to the thesis committee, a public thesis defense is scheduled for the student to present his/her work to the thesis committee and other members of the community. The thesis defense is the last formal examination required for receipt of a doctoral degree. To be considered "public", a defense must be announced to the community at least five working days in advance. At the defense, the thesis committee determines if the research presented is sufficient for granting a doctoral degree. Following a satisfactory thesis defense, the student submits the final thesis document, approved by the research advisor, to Traci Anderson via email (see instructions below).

[Friendly advice: Contact jrstein [at] mit.edu (Joseph Stein) at least two weeks before your scheduled date to arrange for advertising via email and posters. A defense can be canceled for insufficient public notice.]

Before the Thesis Defense 

Committee Approves Student to Defend: The thesis committee, working with the student and reviewing thesis drafts, concludes that the doctoral work is complete. The student should discuss the structure of the defense (general guidelines below) with the thesis committee chair and the research advisor. 

Schedule the Defense: The student schedules a defense at a time when all members of the thesis committee will be physical present. Any exceptions must be approved in advance by the IMES/HST Academic Office.

Reserve Room: It is the student's responsibility to reserve a room and any necessary equipment. Please contact imes-reservation [at] mit.edu (subject: E25%20Room%20Reservation) (IMES Reservation) to  reserve rooms E25-140, E25-141, E25-119/121, E25-521. 

Final Draft: A complete draft of the thesis document is due to the thesis committee two weeks prior to the thesis defense to allow time for review.  The thesis should be written as a single cohesive document; it may include content from published papers (see libraries website on " Use of Previously Published Material in a Thesis ") but it may not be a simple compilation of previously published materials.

Publicize the Defense:   The IMES/HST Academic Office invites the community to attend the defense via email and a notice on the HST website. This requires that the student email a thesis abstract and supplemental information to  jrstein [at] mit.edu (Joseph Stein)  two weeks prior to the thesis defense. The following information should be included: Date and time, Location, (Zoom invitation with password, if offering a hybrid option), Thesis Title, Names of committee members, with academic and professional titles and institutional affiliations. The abstract is limited to 250 words for the poster, but students may optionally submit a second, longer abstract for the email announcement.

Thesis Defense Guidelines

Public Defense: The student should prepare a presentation of 45-60 minutes in length, to be followed by a public question and answer period of 15–30 minutes at discretion of the chair.

Committee Discussion:  Immediately following the public thesis presentation, the student meets privately with the thesis committee and any other faculty members present to explore additional questions at the discretion of the faculty. Then the thesis committee meets in executive session and determines whether the thesis defense was satisfactory. The committee may suggest additions or editorial changes to the thesis document at this point.

Chair Confirms Pass: After the defense, the thesis committee chair should inform Traci Anderson of the outcome via email to tanderso [at] mit.edu (tanderso[at]mit[dot]edu) .

Submitting the Final Thesis Document

Please refer to the MIT libraries  thesis formatting guidelines .

Title page notes. Sample title page  from the MIT Libraries.

Program line : should read, "Submitted to the Harvard-MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology, in partial fulfillment of the the requirements for the degree of ... "

Copyright : Starting with the June 2023 degree period and as reflected in the  MIT Thesis Specifications , all students retain the copyright of their thesis.  Please review this section for how to list on your title page Signature Page: On the "signed" version, only the student and research advisor should sign. Thesis committee members are not required to sign. On the " Accepted by " line, please list: Collin M. Stultz, MD, PhD/Director, Harvard-MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology/ Nina T. and Robert H. Rubin Professor in Medical Engineering and Science/Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.

The Academic Office will obtain Professor Stultz's signature.

Thesis Submission Components.  As of 4/2021, the MIT libraries have changed their thesis submissions guidelines and are no longer accepting hard copy theses submissions. For most recent guidance from the libraries:  https://libguides.mit.edu/mit-thesis-faq/instructions  

Submit to the Academic Office, via email ( tanderso [at] mit.edu (tanderso[at]mit[dot]edu) )

pdf/A-1 of the final thesis should include an UNSIGNED title page

A separate file with a SIGNED title page by the student and advisor, the Academic Office will get Dr. Collin Stultz's signature.

For the MIT Library thesis processing, fill out the "Thesis Information" here:  https://thesis-submit.mit.edu/

File Naming Information:  https://libguides.mit.edu/

Survey of Earned Doctorates.  The University Provost’s Office will contact all doctoral candidates via email with instructions for completing this survey.

Links to All Forms in This Guide

  • MEMP Rotation Form (optional)
  • Semi-Annual Progress Review Form
  • Letter of Intent One
  • Letter of Intent Two

Final Thesis

  • HST Sample thesis title page  (signed and unsigned)
  • Sample thesis title page  (MIT Libraries)
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  • Thesis Formatting Manual
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Formatting Requirements

  • Submission Process

Thesis and Dissertation Credit

Thesis track master's students and all PhD students are required to submit their final thesis or dissertation to the Graduate School after the work has been successfully defended and deemed complete by the committee.  All students must complete  the submission process by the deadlines posted on the academic calendar for the desired semester of graduation. 

Details on the submission and formatting process can be found below.   The Graduate School has not prescribed a particular style to be followed in writing a thesis/dissertation. The style chosen must be appropriate to the student’s field of study. However, the Graduate School has adopted standards for form and organization. These standards are outlined in the formatting manual linked on this page.  

Formatting and Submission Resources

  • Thesis and Dissertation Formatting Manual
  • ProQuest Submission FAQ
  • UNH Connors Writing Center
  • Automatic Table of Contents
  • Page Numbering
  • Landscape Pages

Other Resources

  • Intent to Graduate
  • UNH Commencement
  • UNH Scholars Repository

The Graduate School offers a free formatting review to all students submitting a thesis or dissertation.  This review is not required, but is strongly suggested.  To obtain a review, please email your thesis/dissertation, either in PDF or with a sharing link, to [email protected] with 'Thesis Review' as the subject line. Reviews may take up to a week depending on the time of year. 

Students should become familiar with the formatting requirements that are outlined in the thesis manual .  The formatting specifications are based on universal formatting required by many colleges and universities around the country.  These requirements are also mandated by the publisher to ensure that all thesis and dissertations have a consistent format.

Students should not rely solely on previously bound copies of theses for answers on formatting issues. While bound copies may provide ideas for possible procedures, format requirements may have changed. If you have a question, please contact the Graduate School. 

The Graduate School does not create or host any formatting templates (Overleaf, LaTeX, etc.).  Any templates that may exist were created by prior students.  Students are advised caution when using previously created templates as formatting requirements may have changed. 

Final Submission

The final approved thesis/dissertation must be submitted to the Graduate School through ProQuest via the UNH ETD Administrator website by the appropriate deadline as published in the Graduate School calendar. Publishing options include traditional publishing (free) as well as open access publishing (additional cost).  The benefits of each can be found on the ProQuest website.  Students can opt to embargo their thesis (hold publication) if needed, which will delay publishing for a specified period of time.  Bound copies are available for purchase through ProQuest at the time of submission. Students should check with their department to determine if a bound copy is required. All fees are to be paid by the student at the time of submission.

Students are advised not to wait until the last minute to submit their work. Submissions must be received by the published deadline for your intended graduation term unless the Graduate School has granted an extension. The specific deadline for submission for each graduation date is published on the UNH Academic Calendar as well as on our calendar page .

*Under no circumstances will a submission be accepted after the graduation date has passed.

The final version of the thesis must be submitted electronically to the Graduate School via the secure UNH ProQuest ETD Administrator website: http://www.etdadmin.com/unh . Submissions should be made only after a student has successfully passed the defense and has made all the necessary corrections required by their committee. In addition to the ProQuest submission, students will also need to submit the Thesis Submission Form as well as a copy of their signed signature page to the Graduate School Dean's Office .  

ProQuest Thesis/Dissertation submission: Submit the completed and approved thesis/dissertation through ProQuest.  You will be able to choose from two publishing options and will be able to purchase bound copies if desired.

Signature Page: The signature page is created by the student and should be based on the sample template that we provide in the thesis formatting manual.  This page should be signed by all committee members as confirmation that the thesis/dissertation has been approved.  As we understand that not all faculty may be local or able to sign in person, digital or otherwise electronic signatures are permitted.  A hard copy signature page is not required.  The final page should be submitted to the Graduate School as  PDF file. 

Final Submission Form: This form/checklist, found linked at the top of this page, is to be filled out and submitted by the student as confirmation that all steps in the process have been completed.

The submission form and signature page can be submitted as PDF files to [email protected] (preferred).  Pages can also be submitted in person or mailed to the Graduate School Dean's Office in Thompson Hall.

These materials can be submitted in any order.  Once all materials have been received the Graduate School will review the submission.  If there are changes needed, the student will be notified and will be able to make the necessary changes and resubmit.

Students can choose between Traditional Publishing (no cost) or Open Access Publishing.  More information about the publishing options can be found on the ProQuest website at the time of submission.   All publishing fees are the responsibility of the student. 

Thesis/dissertation submissions will be sent for publishing after all degrees are awarded.  Publishing normally takes 8-10 weeks.  Once published, the thesis/dissertations will be made available online through ProQuest as well as through the UNH Library Scholar's Repository.  

Note: If the student opted for an embargo, then release will not be completed until the embargo expires.  In the case of an infinite embargo, the submission will never be made available. 

Students can request bound copies at the time of submission.  The Graduate School does not require students to purchase copies to complete the submission process.  However, some departments may still require/request copies.  Students can select any format for personal bound copies, however, for university use the 8 1/2 x 11 hardcover is recommended.  Payment for any bound copies is the responsibility of the student. 

After publication, bound copies will be printed and mailed to the address the student provided at the time of submission. Students can also order additional bound copies at any time through the ProQuest portal once publication is completed. 

Please contact [email protected] with any questions.

A thesis requires the completion of between 6-10 thesis credits.  Some departments have more specific requirements.  Students who enrolled for more than 10 credits will need to work with the Graduate School to withdraw the excess credits.  

Once the thesis is approved and submitted the department will submit a request to award the CR grade for thesis completion.  The Graduate School monitors thesis grades closely, but it is not unusual for thesis grades to remain incomplete until immediately before the degree is awarded. 

PhD students are required to register for Doctoral Research (999) each semester until their degree is awarded.  Once the dissertation is submitted and approved the department will submit a request to award the CR grade for the dissertation.  Please note that only the most recent registration of 999 will be given a CR.  All other registrations will have a IA grade. 

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Submission, Examination and Completion

Submission, examination and completion.

phd thesis submission

Thesis Submission Deadline

Submitting your thesis is the final act before examination. Your thesis must be submitted before the end of your period of study and will show on MyPGR as your “expected completion date”. There is no minimum period of study (except for the DEdPsy, DClinPsy, DClinRes, DClinPrac, DClinPrac (Res)). Funded students are encouraged to submit their thesis by the end of their funding period, which may be earlier than the maximum period of study. Maximum periods of study for all programmes are specified in the periods of study scheme in the ' Statement of Procedures: Periods of Registration and Changes to Registration Status for Graduate Research Students '.

Nomination of Examiners

Before a postgraduate researcher submits their thesis for examination, examiners must be appointed. In the UK system there are normally two examiners, one from within your own University (the internal examiner) and one from outside (the external examiner). In some cases more than two examiners. It is your supervisor’s responsibility to nominate suitable examiners and (if appropriate) a Non Examining Independent Chair (NEIC). Your supervisors may discuss examiners with you. Examiner(s) should be nominated at least three months before the expected submission date . Your supervisors, or anyone previously involved in the supervision of your research, cannot act as examiners, although they may be present during the viva as a non-speaking observer.  The internal should be someone in or close to your field of study but are not required to be in the same department. The external examiner must be an expert in the same research field.  Once examiners have been appointed and the thesis submitted neither you nor your supervisors should have direct contact with the examiners, except to arrange the formalities of examination. It is the responsibility of the internal examiner to arrange, with the external, the NEIC if applicable and the student, the examination of the thesis.  The examiners will read the thesis, provide preliminary reports on it, and then meet the student for an oral examination (‘viva voce’ or ‘viva’) if applicable.

The contacting of external examiners by students regarding any aspect of their programmes of study is prohibited and will be treated as an offence under the University's Disciplinary Procedures. External examiners are requested to inform the PGR Admin Office should such an occurrence take place.

For more information please see the University's Code of Good Practice: Boards of Examiners for Degrees by Research.

Presentation of Thesis

PGR theses/dissertations are submitted in electronic format as a PDF file. Supporting material such as datasets, visual or audio material, if applicable, may be submitted as supplementary files in any standard file format. You do not need to plan for a hard copy of the thesis to be printed, as we no longer accept hard copy thesis submission.

Please ensure that your electronic thesis conforms to the formatting requirements outlined in the Presentation of theses/dissertations for degrees in the Faculty of Graduate Research: statement of procedures .

For students on ' by Practice' research degrees in the Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences , please read the supplementary information about ' by Practice' thesis requirements , available here .

Your thesis may be printed and sent to your examiners by the PGR Administration Office as a hard copy document if requested by an examiner. We may print a standard A4 copy for an examiner upon request so please indicate any printing requirements (i.e. colour pages) in your  Submission Form

If you wish to have a hard copy of your thesis, you will need to make your own arrangements for printing it. Print Services may be able to do this for you.

If you are considering submitting your thesis in an alternative or non-traditional format, you should refer to the PGR Alternative Thesis Guidance and FAQs . 

Students will be required to complete the Change Format of Thesis form, which should be returned to the PGR Support Team by the following deadline:

  • Doctorate programmes: 24 months after your programme start date.
  • Research Maters (MPhil, MbyRes): 12 months after your programme start date.

For HASS programmes, additional information is available in the HASS  Faculty PGR Handbook . 

Submission of thesis

Please note: the following submission process applies to all PGR students across our Exeter and Cornwall Campuses, and all enquiries should be sent to [email protected] .

When you are ready to submit your thesis:

  • Please email a completed ‌ Submission Form  to [email protected] .  Where signatures are required in Parts A and B please include either scanned signatures or provide accompanying emails from the relevant signatories to be accepted in lieu of a scanned signature.  Please advise if your thesis will comprise multiple files.
  • You will receive an email from the PGR Administration Office acknowledging receipt of your submission form. A submission folder will then be created in your name, and you will receive an explanatory email containing a link to the folder where you can submit an electronic copy of your thesis and any supplementary files. You will not be able to submit your thesis until you receive this link.
  • When you receive the email containing the link to your submission folder, please upload your full thesis in PDF format (where possible) to the Submission Portal.  Please also upload any supplementary files.
  • The PGR Administration Office will check your submission and contact you if there are any problems with your submitted document(s).  Please note that we will check whether the files open and are legible. Your submission will not be checked for completeness or proof-reading.
  • Once your electronic thesis has been checked and accepted for examination your submission folder will be locked and you will be notified by email.
  • If your Board of Examiners has already been appointed, your thesis will be sent to your examiners immediately and your Internal Examiner will contact you in the following weeks to discuss the arrangements for your viva voce exam.
  • If your examiners have not yet been appointed, or your External Examiner has been asked to sign a confidentiality agreement prior to receiving your thesis, there may be a delay between the submission of your thesis and the date it is sent to your examiners for examination.  You will be informed if this is the case.

We would like to make you aware of the normal timelines that apply for the examination process as they may impact on your post-study plans .  Unfortunately, we cannot guarantee any changes to accommodate your needs .  Once you have submitted your thesis for examination we aim to send it to the board of examiners within seven days .  On receipt, they start scheduling a viva which can take place anytime within the next three months. After the viva takes place, the board has three weeks to return the viva report and it may take an extra week to obtain Dean’s approval. For amendments, please refer to 12 - Handbook for Examination of Postgraduate Research programmes - Teaching Quality Assurance Manual - University of Exeter and note that, upon receiving your amendments, examiners will be permitted up to 6 weeks for minor amendments or 8 weeks for major amendments to return a decision.  

If you are an MbyRes or MPhil student the above will only apply if a viva has been deemed necessary which is not the case in all instances.  

Resubmission of a Thesis

If you are re-submitting your thesis for a second examination, please follow the submission process above.  You will also need to pay a resubmission fee via the student finance team via the Make a Payment webpage . Please note that SID is not able to take payments by phone or in person- please use the make a payment webpage. Details of the amount to be paid will be confirmed separately after your first examination.

Please note, this does not include submissions for minor or major amendments or for outstanding amendments, none of which constitute a ‘resubmission’ and for which there is no fee to pay. Submission information for these categories will be sent to you with your list of amendments.

Submitting Minor or Major Amendments (not including Resubmission of thesis)

  • Notify the PGR Administration Office at [email protected] that your amended thesis is ready for submission.
  • You will receive an email from the PGR Administration Office acknowledging your message.   A submission folder will then be created in your name, and you will receive an explanatory email containing a link to the folder where you can submit an electronic copy of your thesis and any supplementary files. You will not be able to upload your thesis until you receive this link.
  • When you receive the email containing the link to your submission folder, please upload your full thesis in PDF format to the Submission Portal.  Please also upload any supplementary files.
  • The PGR Administration Office will check your submission and contact you if there are any problems with your submitted document(s).  Please note, that we will check whether the file opens and is legible. Your submission will not be checked for completeness or proof-reading.
  • Once your electronic thesis has been checked and accepted for approval by your examiner(s) your submission folder will be locked and you will be notified by email.
  • Your amended thesis will be sent to your examiners for review.

Examination (Adjustments, Alternative Assessments and viva requirements)

Examination 

It is important that you prepare for the viva. You are recommended to visit the University’s Researcher Development Online service, which has an e-learning course on ‘Preparing for your Viva’, and Researcher Development also has a ‘Preparing for your Viva’ session.

Please refer to the TQA Chapter 12 - Handbook for Examination of Postgraduate Research programmes and in particular, “section 7: The examination” for the detail about the examination policies. Below is some guidance for staff and students about the arrangements for the examination.

The University calendar also confirms the assessment requirements and further details about the examination.

We offer flexibility in the format for viva voce examinations:

  • Virtual viva: where every attendee uses an online platform to attend the viva – no two attendees are in the same room
  • Blended viva: where at least one attendee joins by video link, but two or more attendees are in the same room
  • In-person viva: where all attendees are in the same room and there are no remote attendees

Whilst we will do our best to accommodate your preferences, there may be circumstances where one or more attendee must participate remotely. It is expected that decisions about attendance at the viva will be made in the contact of the University’s Sustainability Policy  and with particular regard to prioritising low-carbon solutions such as video link as opposed to travelling to campus.

To agree that an examination may proceed with a virtual or blended viva, your Faculty DPGR needs to:

  • make sure that it is feasible for all participants to proceed in the proposed format, which includes appropriate communications technology access, which must be satisfactorily tested in advance, to minimise the likelihood of any disruptions to communications in the viva;
  • If you have an ILP: make sure that any adjustments to the viva required can still be made.

We're aware that circumstances can change even if appropriate arrangements are in place for your viva to proceed, please do get in touch with your PGR support team if you have concerns that this will no longer be feasible for you (please mark your email as urgent if your viva is due to take place within two weeks of making contact).

Read about the experiences of some of our past students who have completed their viva through the Doctoral College Blog :

  • Preparing For Your Viva – Our Top Tips
  • Viva Survivor: a drama in four acts
  • Preparing for your online viva, by Hannah Littler .

Reasonable Adjustments

The University is committed to the provision of individual reasonable adjustments to academic study and assessment to ensure that barriers to learning are removed, so that students do not face discrimination arising from disability. Reasonable Adjustments may be required to formal assessments (including upgrade and thesis/dissertation examination by Viva Voce and the assessment of other taught modules of the Professional Doctorates), supervisory meetings, data collection etc in order help students to overcome barriers to learning.

Students with a disability or long-term health condition are encouraged to discuss their needs and requests for reasonable adjustments to learning or examination with the AccessAbility Team (Exeter campuses) or the Accessibility Team (Cornwall campuses) prior to their examination/assessment being scheduled. The AccessAbility/Accessibility team will create or update your Individual Learning Plan which will recommend adjustments. There are a range of adjustments which can be accommodated in the examination/assessment process depending on the needs of the student. In rare circumstances, some adjustments cannot be implemented and if this is the case, we will work with yourselves and Disability services to come up with an alternative. 

Please refer to the TQA, Inclusive Practice within Academic Study for further details.

When is a Viva Required?  

The University does not necessarily require MbyRes and MPhil students to undergo a viva. A viva examination is necessary in one of the following cases:

  • a viva examination is judged to be necessary by one or more of the examiners
  • there is substantial disagreement between the examiners
  • the examiners are inclined to make a recommendation other than award of the degree for which the work was submitted (in such circumstances, the examiners may still require the satisfactory completion of minor amendments appropriate to the award in questions.)
  • the student is keen to have a viva examination.

The examination of PhD thesis requires a viva in all instances.

Please bear in mind that there will be a period of time elapsing between submission of your thesis and the examination, as the examiners need to read it and write their preliminary reports. The examiners also need to write their recommendations after your viva regarding amendments. In addition, you may need to spend some time making these amendments, which will have to be approved by the examiner(s).  All this takes time, which is why it is very important to try to submit your thesis prior to your viva as soon as possible, if this is academically appropriate.

Outcomes of Examination

On the basis of reading your thesis and the oral examination, the examiners will produce a joint report with a recommended outcome. At the first examination of an MbyRes, MPhil and PhD the recommendation will be:

  • the degree may be awarded,
  • the award of the degree should be subject to minor amendments (such as corrections of typographical, spelling and grammatical errors and /or limited revisions of material in the thesis). Minor amendments should be made within 12 weeks of receipt of the examiners’ instructions regarding what changes are required.
  • the award of the degree should be subject to major amendments , where more extensive revisions than that implied by a decision of minor amendments need to be made, but which will not normally require any significant extension of the original research to be undertaken. Major amendments need to be completed within 6 months of receipt of the examiners’ instructions regarding what changes are required.
  • Resubmission of thesis. This is where more substantial work is required for the thesis to meet the requirements for the award in question, and students will be given 18 months to complete amendments suggested by the Board of Examiners. At the end of the resubmission period, the student may be asked to attend a second viva.

Following resubmission, there are other possible outcomes of the examination. For full details and regulations, see the Code of Good Practice: Boards of Examiners for Degrees by Research

Completion, Award and Graduation

After the examination and any required amendments have been approved, the examiners will recommend that the relevant research degree should be awarded. Once this has been confirmed by the University’s Senate the research degree can be said to be completed.

Open Research Exeter (ORE)

Once you have been recommended for award by your board of examiners you will need to submit your final thesis to Open Research Exeter (ORE) before your award can be formally approved.

Once you have received email confirmation that you have successfully deposited your thesis into ORE, the final stage in the award process is the formal approval of your award by the University Executive Board (UEB).

UEB Award Lists for research students are prepared and signed by the Vice Chancellor every Monday throughout the year. Where the Monday is a Bank Holiday this will be done on the Tuesday. No UEB will be held during the University Closure period at Christmas.

You will be sent an email by the Postgraduate Administration Office once your award has been formally approved.

International Students - Research students holding a valid Student or Tier 4 visa, who have completed a degree at a UK Higher Education Provider, are able to apply for a Graduate visa that allows them to remain in the UK and work, or look for work, for 3 years after they have completed a PhD.

For full details of the Graduate route including when to apply visit Graduate Route | International Student Support | University of Exeter

Your graduation day is a special occasion to celebrate your academic achievements at the University of Exeter.

The University will have a summer graduation, normally in July, in both Exeter and Cornwall, and a winter graduation, normally in December, in Exeter only.

Should your award date have already passed, or be in the run-up to the graduation dates, you will be invited to register for the day via your Exeter and personal email addresses. It is important that you ensure you are eligible to graduate by having you award formally approved by the Vice Chancellor's Executive Group (VCEG) approximately one month before the date of the graduation, and any outstanding academic-related debt cleared approximately 2 weeks before the date of the graduation. Should either of requirements not be completed you will need to wait until the next graduation date.

For more information about Graduation Ceremonies and to register to attend please visit the Graduation website .

Degree certificate

You can choose whether to receive your degree certificate at a Graduation Ceremony or in absentia which means that your certificate will be posted to your home address. It is important to note that your certificate can only be issued after the official date of award, and once you have received email confirmation from the Postgraduate Research Office.

Your certificate will display your full name, and the full details of your degree.

For information about the Graduation Ceremonies and to register to attend please visit the Graduation website .  

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Submitting your thesis for examination (PhD, EdD, MD, BusD, MLitt, MSc)

Format of the thesis, the thesis must:.

be written in British English, apart from quotations and recognised technical formulae

be in A4 portrait format

use one-and-a-half spaced type

include any photographs or other illustrations scanned into the text

be saved in the electronic format and naming style specified by your Degree Committee

Examiners are not expected to edit work. They will deal with errors of fact and typographical errors that affect the meaning of your work, as well as larger structural issues. The extent to which the text has or has not been properly prepared may influence their recommendation concerning the award of the degree. You are therefore advised to check your thesis thoroughly prior to submission to ensure clear, formal British English has been used throughout and that there are minimal typing and/or spelling mistakes.

How and when to present the thesis for examination

You must submit an electronic copy of your thesis for examination, and any required accompanying documents, to your Degree Committee by your submission deadline (which can be found under 'Thesis Submission details' on the Academic tile in your CamSIS self-service). If you are not a self-funded student, the terms and conditions of your funding may require you to submit your thesis earlier than the date shown in CamSIS. If you are unsure what your funder-expected submission date is, you should contact your Funding Administrator. You are required to submit your thesis for examination by your deadline even if the date falls over a weekend or holiday period.

Your Degree Committee should provide you with guidance for electronic submission; please contact them directly if you require any assistance.

The thesis you submit to your Degree Committee will be the thesis forwarded to the examiners for examination. It is not possible to 'retract submission' or to send a revised copy directly to your examiners. Therefore you should carefully check the file(s) you upload when submitting your thesis.

Postgraduate students must keep a minimum number of terms of research before they can submit (for example, 9 for the full-time PhD or 15 for the part-time PhD or EdD) unless they have been granted an allowance or exemption of terms . If you attempt to submit too early and have not had an allowance or exemption of terms approved, your thesis submission will not be accepted or will be kept on hold and not forwarded to your examiners until the first day of your 9th (full-time) or 15th (part-time) term.

Requirements

You must include the following bound inside your thesis:

Please ensure the pages are in the correct order. This is very important - if these preliminary pages are in a different order in your final hardbound thesis to your thesis submitted for examination, this could cause problems and delay approval for your degree.

1. A title page displaying:

the full title of the thesis

your full legal name (as it appears on your passport, marriage certificate or deed poll)

your college

the date of submission (month and year)

a declaration stating: "This thesis is submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy/Doctor of Education/Doctor of Business/Doctor of Medicine/Master of Science/Master of Letters (as appropriate)."

2. A declaration in the preface stating:

'This thesis is the result of my own work and includes nothing which is the outcome of work done in collaboration except as declared in the preface and specified in the text. It is not substantially the same as any work that has already been submitted, or, is being concurrently submitted, for any degree, diploma or other qualification at the University of Cambridge or any other University or similar institution except as declared in the preface and specified in the text. It does not exceed the prescribed word limit for the relevant Degree Committee.'

The declaration does not need to be signed . For more information on the word limits for the respective Degree Committees see Word Limits and Requirements of your Degree Committee )

3. An abstract/summary of your thesis

4. [if applicable] the list of additional materials that were approved for submission alongside the thesis

You must also submit the following documents (not included inside the thesis):

Required: One declaration form

Optional: Research Impact Statement If pandemic, war/conflict, or natural disaster have significantly impacted on your research, you are invited to submit a Research Impact Statement with your thesis using the template provided. The purpose of the statement is for you to describe any restrictions or difficulties experienced in undertaking your research as a result of pandemic, war/conflict, or natural disaster, and to provide details of any alternative arrangements made to complete the work for your thesis. Further details for students and supervisors can be found in the Research Impact Statement guidance  and the Research Impact Statement form can be downloaded here . 

Inclusion of additional materials

Students other than those in the Faculty of Music must seek permission through their  CamSIS Self Service page if they wish to submit additional materials for examination alongside their thesis. Additional materials are integral to the thesis but in a format that cannot be easily included in the main body of the thesis (for example, 3D graphics). You should refer to the ' Policy on the inclusion of additional materials with a thesis ' before making an application to include additional materials. This process should be initiated prior to the thesis submission. If a thesis is submitted with additional materials and without permission to include them, it will be held by the Degree Committee until approval is confirmed.

Please bear in mind that if you are granted permission to submit additional materials, you are required to upload the same materials to the University repository, Apollo , when you submit your approved thesis  post-examination (doctoral candidates only). Therefore, the inclusion of additional material that contains uncleared third-party copyright or sensitive material may affect the access level that is most appropriate for your thesis.

Submitting a revised thesis

If you are resubmitting your thesis following a viva outcome of being allowed to revise and resubmit the thesis for examination for a doctoral degree, you need to follow the same procedure as for the original thesis submission .

What happens following submission of the thesis for examination 

When you submit your thesis for examination the Degree Committee will check the submission, acknowledge receipt, and inform Student Registry you have submitted. The Student Registry will update your CamSIS record.

The Degree Committee will forward your thesis to your examiners. If you have not received confirmation of the date of your viva (oral examination) within six weeks of submitting your thesis, or if you have any questions with regard to your thesis at this stage, you should contact your Degree Committee. 

Your Examiners should not ask you for a printed copy of your thesis or other material in advance of your viva (oral examination). If they do, please seek advice from your Degree Committee.

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Thesis/Dissertation

To graduate with a master’s (thesis program) or doctoral (dissertation program) degree, students are required to submit an Electronic Thesis/Dissertation (ETD) and a Committee Approval Form to the Graduate School through the  UW ETD Administrator Site . ETDs are distributed by ProQuest/UMI Dissertation Publishing and made available on an open access basis through UW Libraries  ResearchWorks Service .

The Graduate School partners with the UW Libraries to provide comprehensive resources for students as they write, submit, and publish academic theses or dissertations. These pages outline information and policies related to preparing your thesis/dissertation, including formatting, deadlines, copyright and distribution decisions, and, ultimately, graduation. We also encourage you to review the  ETD Library Guide  for additional information.

For comprehensive information on preparing to graduate, please refer to our graduation requirements information page .

Writing Your Thesis or Dissertation

Etd resources.

As a starting point, students submitting an ETD are encouraged to review the below resources:

  • Hacking the Academy: UW Theses & Dissertations (Recording of July 29, 2020 event) This session helps students think through their options for how and when to share their work, including the copyright and publishing considerations they may need to take into account.
  • Electronic Theses & Dissertations with the UW Libraries The University Libraries welcomes you to this self-guided course on electronic theses and dissertations (ETDs) at the UW. In this five-part learning experience, you will learn a lot about the ETD process including how the submission process works, how to give and receive recognition for your work, how to find and interpret publisher policies and how to read and inspect publishing contracts.

Formatting Guidelines

After you submit your ETD, the Graduate School will review your document as part of the graduation process at the end of each quarter. We will review for information accuracy, consistency, and to ensure your ETD meets the formatting requirements described below. There are three required sections (pages) that must be included at the beginning of your manuscript: 1) Title Page, 2) Copyright Page, 3) Abstract. Templates for these sections are provided below.

Apart from these first three pages, the Graduate School does not adhere to any specific formatting or publishing requirements unless explicitly stated by the ProQuest Author Guide: Preparing Your Manuscript for Submission (provided below). You should refer to the citation, formatting, and style specifications of your discipline and the guidance of your supervisory committee.  Note: theses and dissertations must be submitted in PDF format.

For a complete overview of the graduation process, please review  Preparing to Graduate .

Required Sections:

  • Must include all items listed in the sample title page and placed in the same order
  • May be the first or second page of your document
  • Title of document
  • Author’s Full Name
  • Name of degree as it will appear on your diploma
  • Year of graduation
  • Names of chair/committee members (do not include signatures or professional titles, e.g. Dr. or PhD, before/after faculty names)
  • Program authorized to offer degree (school or department)
  • Name and year must match title pages
  • List the year of graduation
  • Place abstract after copyright and title page

Master’s Thesis Approval Form:

You are required to upload a completed and signed Master’s Thesis Approval Form into the UW ETD Administrator (ProQuest) site; the Approval Form is part of your ETD submission. This Approval Form is a separate PDF and should not be included as a page in the thesis or dissertation itself.

  • Master’s Thesis Approval Form

Electronic Doctoral Dissertation Approval:

Final Exams scheduled after March 3, 2020 include a link for Reading Committee Members to approve the dissertation online at MyGrad Committee View.

ETD Formatting Resources:

  • Thesis/Dissertation Formatting Checklist  – a quick reference guide of the formatting do’s and don’ts provided below.
  • ProQuest Dissertation Publishing — Author Guide: Preparing Your Manuscript for Submission
  • ProQuest Online Submission FAQs
  • Master’s Thesis Title Page – Fillable PDF Template 
  • Doctoral Dissertation Title Page – Fillable PDF Template
  • Word Templates  – Alex Mamishev, Professor in Electrical Engineering maintains a Word file that other students may find useful when formatting their document.

Common ETD Formatting Revisions Requested

To ensure timely graduating, take some time before you submit to review this information and ProQuest’s document formatting guidelines. These are all common errors and revisions the Graduate School will request when reviewing ETD formatting. You will be required to resubmit if revisions are needed. Be precise, and consistent as you format your document.  Many formatting errors result from following a fellow or former student’s example, so it’s important to review the most current templates and guidelines.

Title Page, Copyright Page, Abstract

Language requirement.

Your document must be written in English ( policy 1.1.4.3 ). If you need to write your document in another language to accommodate the main audience, you must get prior approval to do so by  submitting a petition the dean via MyGrad . If the petition is approved, the required sections (title page, copyright page, abstract) must still be written in English.

Plagiarism is using words, ideas, diagrams, and other content from publicly available work without appropriately acknowledging the sources of these materials. This definition constitutes plagiarism whether it is intentional or unintentional and whether it is the work of another or your own, previously published work.

Plagiarism is a very serious offense that the University of Washington does not tolerate. Evidence of plagiarism may prevent granting of your degree.

Submitting and Publishing

Submitting for dissemination and access.

The Graduate School and the Libraries require that all UW theses and dissertations be submitted electronically for management efficiency, cost control, ease of dissemination, and long-term preservation reasons. In addition, your ETD must eventually be made available openly on the web. Your ETD will be hosted in both UW’s institutional repository,  ResearchWorks , and in  ProQuest’s ETD Database .  Consequently, you will need to indicate your choices in two sections about how your ETD is made available. Most students choose to make their work available immediately, but you can choose to limit access  temporarily  before making it available openly.

Students may restrict access to their theses and dissertations…

  • while seeking to publish journal articles or books based on them,
  • to protect intellectual property during the patent application process, or
  • to prevent the disclosure of sensitive or classified information.

During the submission process, you will select ProQuest and ResearchWorks (Institutional Repository, or IR) publication options. The options are summarized on a table below, followed by selected scenarios to assist you in making your decisions.

IMPORTANT: The metadata describing your ETD, including the citation and abstract, is openly available  immediately— regardless of the embargo or restriction status. This information is searchable by Google, Bing and other search engines, so take care that neither the descriptive information nor the text contain confidential or sensitive information.

Selecting Access Options

Selected etd access scenarios.

The UW Libraries and the Graduate School are committed to the goal of sharing graduate students’ research as soon and as widely as possible, while allowing students to temporarily limit access to their theses and dissertations for such reasons as to support formal publication in journal article or book form or to allow time for filing patents. Below are some examples of how students may wish to use these options to support their publishing or intellectual property-protection goals.

Discussion of Scenarios

  • Journal Article Publishing. In recent years graduate students – especially in scientific, medical and technical fields — have increasingly been publishing results of their research in journals.
  • The “Research Article” Dissertation. In some disciplines students may be expected to publish 2 or more journal articles during the course of their studies and submit them as the core of their thesis or dissertation — along with an introduction, literature review, and conclusions. Because this has become so common, most journals now permit authors to immediately republish their articles within their theses or dissertations as long as they provide the full article citation and a statement that an article is being “reprinted with permission” of the journal. However, some other journals allow the practice but require that an article not appear on an open access basis before a delay of 6 or 12 months. The Libraries strongly suggests that students become familiar with the policies in place at the journals in which they would like to publish their work, and choose appropriate access restrictions if needed when they submit their ETD’s.
  • Book Publishing. Some students in such humanities and social science disciplines as history and political science may hope to publish a revised version of their dissertation as their first book. As they consider that possibility they may be concerned they might undermine their prospects by making their dissertations widely available via ProQuest and/or on an open access basis.Before deciding whether or for how long to limit access to their work based on these concerns, The Libraries recommends students become familiar with the arguments and evidence put forward on these issues. For example, Cirasella and Thistlethwaite 3 and Courtney and Kilcer 4 provide excellent discussions of issues and review recent literature, while William Germano’s classic From Dissertation to Book 5 and Beth Luey’s Revising Your Dissertation 6 offer important insight into what might be involved during the dissertation revision process. While the Libraries recommends that most students hoping to publish their dissertations as books make them widely available while they work toward that goal, they should feel free to consider choosing otherwise, such as “Immediate Access” for ProQuest and limiting to UW for five years – at the end of which students may request additional time.
  • Patent Protection Strategies. Students whose theses or dissertations describe work for which patent protection might be appropriate should contact Jesse Kindra at CoMotion ( [email protected] or 206 616-9658) prior to submitting their work to ProQuest and choosing access restrictions. Depending on the circumstances, a student may choose to completely withhold access for one year, but should recognize that doing so will prevent anyone else at the UW from having access to it during the restricted access period. To exercise this option, students should delay releasing their work to ProQuest for 1 or 2 years, and then choose “No access for 1 year, then make Open Access” from the Institutional Repository (IR) Publishing Options menu for the UW copy. In unusual circumstances, requests for access to be withheld an additional year may be considered. To make such a request, students should describe the reason(s) for it in an email to [email protected] prior to expiration of the original embargo period.

1 Marisa L. Ramirez, Joan T. Dalton, Gail McMillan, Max Read and Nancy H. Seamans, “Do Open Access Electronic Theses and Dissertations Diminish Publishing Opportunities in the Social Sciences and Humanities,” College and Research Libraries 74 (July 2013): 368‐80, http://crl.acrl.org/content/74/4/368.full.pdf+html .

2 Marisa Ramirez, Gail McMillan, Joan T. Dalton, Ann Hanlon, Heather S. Smith and Chelsea Kern, “Do Open Access Electronic Theses and Dissertations Diminish Publishing Opportunities in the Sciences?” College and Research Libraries 75 (November 2014): 808-21, http://crl.acrl.org/content/75/6/808.full.pdf+html .

3 Jill Cirasella and Polly Thistlethwaite, “Open Access and the Graduate Author: A Dissertation Anxiety Manual,” pp. 203-224 in Open Access and the Future of Scholarly Communication: Implementation (Kevin L. Smith and Katherine A. Dickson, eds.: Rowman and Littlefield, 2017), http://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_pubs/286/ .

4 Kyle K. Courtney and Emily Kilcer, “From Apprehension to Comprehension: Addressing Anxieties about Open Access to ETD’s,” pp. 225-244 in Open Access and the Future of Scholarly Communication: Implementation (Kevin L. Smith and Katherine A. Dickson, eds.: Rowman and Littlefield, 2017).

5 William Germano. 2013. From Dissertation to Book, 2d. ed. : University of Chicago Press.

6 Beth Luey (ed.). 2008. Revising Your Dissertation: Advice from Leading Editors. University of California Press.

Publishing Agreements

When you submit your ETD for review and publication, you will be required to read and accept two separate publishing agreements. You will also have to decide whether to publish your work right away or to delay its release. Additional pages within this section will outline all the considerations to keep in mind, when deciding how to make your work available to the scholarly community.

All students writing a thesis or dissertation should review the UW Libraries Copyright Research Guide . Understanding copyright law is another critical aspect as you write your thesis or dissertation.  As you compose your work, ask yourself the following questions:

  • Have you referenced others’ work? If so, you either need to get explicit permission from the rights holder or to determine that your use is Fair.
  • Have you previously published any part of the work? If you’ve signed your copyright over to your publisher, you will need permission to use your material in your thesis.

Ordering Paper Copies

There are no required fees , although you have the option to register your copyright via ProQuest for a fee. If you want to order bound (paper) copies of your document, you may do so through the UW Copy Centers or through ProQuest. Questions should be directed to the UW Copy Centers or to ProQuest at 1.800.521.0600 ext. 77020 — available 8 a.m.–5 p.m. EST, Monday through Friday (excluding U.S. holidays).

Frequently Asked Questions

I created an account in the etd administrator site, but i’m not ready to submit my etd. can i come back to my account later.

Yes. If you need to finish your submission later (for instance, if you need to update your PDF file before uploading it), you can save your information and come back to finish. No information will be lost.

I submitted my ETD but would like to make an edit to the document. How can I edit my submission?

Once your thesis/dissertation is submitted, no additional changes to the document are allowed with the exception of a major data error in the document. In this circumstance, a letter outlining the necessary changes is required from your supervisory committee chair.

What will the Graduate School be reviewing after I submit my ETD?

Submissions are reviewed by GEMS advisors for formatting requirements for the three required sections — title page, copyright page, abstract — before they are delivered to ProQuest for publication. We are checking for accuracy and consistency. Refer to the Formatting Guidelines section on this page for detailed information.

I submitted my ETD and haven't heard anything yet. When will it be reviewed?

We try to review all ETDs as they are received, but if you submit early in the quarter it may not be acted on immediately. If you need to confirm completion of your degree requirements to an external agency or employer, please access the request for letter of certification in the forms section of our Additional Resources page (once your degree has posted to your UW transcript, we can no longer issue this letter). In general, ETDs are reviewed in the last two to three weeks before the quarter ends and after the last day of the quarter. When your submission has been accepted by a GEMS advisor, you will receive email confirmation.

How can I tell if my ETD was submitted and received by the Graduate School?

When your ETD is successfully submitted and pending review, the status will read “submission in review.”

When will my ETD be made available for access?

This depends on the type of access restrictions you selected when creating your account. However, your submission will be delivered to ProQuest for publishing four to six weeks after graduation and you will receive email confirmation when this has occurred. It should be available in UW ResearchWorks around the same time.

When will the printed dissertation / thesis copies I ordered from ProQuest be ready?

After you receive the email confirmation that UW has “delivered” your submission (ETD) to ProQuest, you should please refer to the ProQuest customer service guidelines for the expected delivery date of your order.

What if I am missing a faculty signature for my thesis or dissertation, or I have encountered difficulties in uploading my ETD? Must I pay the graduate registration waiver fee and graduate in the following quarter?

If you encounter these types of situations, contact Graduate Enrollment Management Services (206.685.2630 or  [email protected] ) as early as possible and no later than the last day of the quarter in which you intend to graduate.

Additional Resources

  • Electronic Theses and Dissertations (ETDs) Guide  (start here!)
  • Copyright and Fair Use
  • Open Access
  • Scholarly Publishing
  • ProQuest/UMI Agreement — Traditional Publishing Agreement
  • University Agreement — UW Libraries Thesis and Dissertation Submission Agreement
  • UW Human Subjects Division (HSD)
  • UW CoMotion

phd thesis submission

Academics | Candidacy & Defense

Thesis submission.

The deadline to submit for the May degree conferral has passed. The deadline to submit for the August degree conferral is noon CDT on Friday, August 9, 2024. Be sure to upload your Signed Title Page and Original Approval of Candidacy form at the website here after submitting your thesis through thesis.rice.edu .

Students must submit the final thesis to the Office of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies no later than six months from the date of the defense. However, in order to qualify for a specific degree conferral date, the submission deadline for that semester must be met. See the academic calendar for deadlines. The General Announcements has complete information on thesis defense .

Am I ready to submit?

If your thesis is defended but not final (e.g., changes to your thesis are required), within one week, you must follow the steps as described in Part 1 below. Once you have defended and all changes are made, you must then submit your thesis within six months of your defense. Instructions for both scenarios are listed below. If you are ready to submit your thesis within a week of your defense, you may complete all of the steps in both parts at once. If you choose to do this, you'll need to include all of your supplementary documents as described in Part 2. Do not press "submit" until you have reviewed both sets of instructions. Please contact us if you have trouble accessing the thesis site.

How will the new online thesis verification and submission generally work?

  • Once your thesis defense announcement has been registered with the Office of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies via events.rice.edu/rgs , it will be posted online by the GPS office, provided it is approved.
  • Thesis Title Page through AdobeSign. Both you and your graduate program administrator will be notified when this is ready. If your committee changes prior to your defense , please ask the department chair, program director, or director of graduate study to notify GPS as soon as possible. The new committee will need to be approved, and we will need to generate a completely new Approval of Candidacy form and Thesis Title Page form to be completed via AdobeSign.
  • On the day of your defense, you should fill out the electronic Original Approval of Candidacy form. It will then go to your committee for signing after your successful defense. Once the committee has signed the Original Approval of Candidacy, the AdobeSign process will come back to you for the next steps.
  • Once your thesis has been approved in its final form, you will return to the AdobeSign form and complete your Thesis Title page. Once completed, it will be sent to your committee again to sign and recognize that your final thesis is approved for submission. Your committee can sign in parallel. Your graduate administrator will receive notifications for every signature and you will receive a notification when the title page has been signed in full. Please contact your graduate administrator if you would like an update on the progress of your thesis title page.
  • When all of the committee members have signed the Thesis Title Page, the GPS office will receive a final copy of the form to be validated when you finalize your thesis defense.

You’ll get notifications in each phase. Once all committee members have signed both forms, you’ll receive a final PDF via email. To prep for upload to thesis.rice.edu , you will need to separate this PDF into two documents. Because the PDF is protected, you’ll follow some specific instructions here (Microsoft) or here - after opening the .pdf using a browser such as Google Chrome (Mac) to do this. To separate the pages of a protected PDF, go to print, then select "Microsoft Word to .pdf" as the printer name. Once you’ve separated the pages into the two documents, upload to thesis.rice.edu as outlined in the processes here .

Once your thesis is final and everything has been verified in thesis.rice.edu , you must fill out the webform here . This replaces what is normally a visit to GPS and Office of the Registrar for final submission.

For tips on how to approach an online thesis defense, click here .

How do I submit?

If your thesis is defended but not complete (e.g., you need to make changes), follow the instructions in Part 1 within one week of your defense.

If your thesis is defended and all changes have been made, submit your thesis using Part 2 below within six months of your defense.

If your thesis is defended and no changes were necessary, complete all of the steps in Part 1 and 2.

Questions? Email [email protected] .

Part 1: Within a week of your defense

  • Navigate to thesis.rice.edu
  • Click "Start your submission"
  • Login with your NetID and password
  • Follow the instructions on the site, using the guides for assistance

Verify that all the information is accurate before moving forward.

Assent to the terms of the agreement by checking the appropriate boxes.

  • Enter your thesis title, graduation date, abstract, and keywords. The information entered here should match the information in your document.
  • Supply the names of your committee members.

If you’ve used the online thesis submission process, once all your committee members have signed virtually, you will receive the PDF of the Original Approval of Candidacy form. Print this form, digitally separate the two pages and upload them to thesis.rice.edu:

  • The Original Approval of Candidacy is uploaded as an administrative file, and
  • The defended version of the manuscript is uploaded as the "Manuscript in PDF".
  • The title page should not be signed or submitted until the advisor confirms that the thesis is in its final form and ready to submit.

For guidelines on supplemental files, please click here .

  • Confirm that your information is correct and click the "Confirm and Submit Button".
  • This initial submission (Part 1) is not final. Your submission will be sent to GPS for an initial review. You will still be able to edit your submission, thesis, and uploaded documents following the GPS review, typically within two business days.
  • If you need to make changes to your submission at this point, do not start a new submission. Contact [email protected] to have your thesis status changed so you can make edits.
  • Once GPS acknowledges your defense, your status will be changed to "Defended, Not Final." Please review the thesis format guidelines if you have not already done so prior to submitting the final copy of your thesis.
  • Within six months of your defense, you must upload and submit the final copy of your thesis and all supplemental documents. This is Part 2. Once you submit a final copy of your thesis and your signatures have been received, and you’ve completed the required electronic Thesis Submission webform (see Part 2), you will not be permitted to alter your thesis.
  • Please make all corrections prior to submitting your thesis. The online webform referenced above replaces the visit to GPS and the Office of the Registrar.

Part 2: Changes made, ready to submit

Please note all thesis and administrative files must be PDFs.

  • Create a single PDF of your thesis, including the signed electronic Thesis Title Page form. Please review the thesis format guidelines if you have not already done so.
  • Separate your electronic Original Approval of Candidacy.
  • Doctoral only: complete the Survey of Earned Doctorates and create PDF of the certificate you'll receive upon completion.
  • Open http://thesis.rice.edu in your web browser.
  • Select "Start your submission."
  • Login with your Rice NetID and password.
  • If you have already started a submission previously, select the action "Edit" or "Continue" to continue a previous submission. Otherwise, select "Start a new submission."

If any of the information is incorrect or needs to be updated, email [email protected] .

  • Upload defended and corrected copy of your thesis as your primary document. This action will archive the defended version.
  • You must include your signed electronic Thesis Title Page form as the first page of your final version of your thesis.

Upload the following required documents as ADMINISTRATIVE FILES:

  • Your signed Original Approval of Candidacy
  • Survey of Earned Doctorates Certificate (Doctoral only)
  • Supplemental files are optional and may include non-PDF materials, such as videos, that complement your thesis.

Add a note here if there have been any changes in your thesis submission data.

  • Complete the webform here . This replaces what is normally a visit to GPS and the Office of the Registrar for final submission.
  • GPS will review the thesis submission and sign the form accordingly.
  • You'll receive the form back as a receipt once complete.
  • GPS will also sign the Original Approval of Candidacy form, and you and your graduate program administrator will receive a copy.
  • The thesis will be published with the electronic title page if there are no embargoes.

Updated November 2023

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Dissertations and Theses

The dissertation is the hallmark of the research expertise demonstrated by a doctoral student. It is a scholarly contribution to knowledge in the student’s area of specialization. By researching and writing a dissertation, the student is expected to demonstrate a high level of knowledge and the capability to function as an independent scholar. 

A thesis is a hallmark of some master’s programs. It is a piece of original research, generally less comprehensive than a dissertation, and is meant to show the student’s knowledge of an area of specialization.  

Document Preparation

PhD and master’s students are responsible for meeting all requirements for preparing theses and dissertations. They are expected to confer with their advisors about disciplinary and program expectations and to follow Graduate School procedure requirements.

The Graduate School’s format review is in place to help the document submission process go smoothly for the student. Format reviews for PhD dissertations and master’s theses can be done remotely or in-person. The format review is required at or before the two-week notice of the final defense. 

Access and Distribution

Ohio State has agreements with two organizations— OhioLINK   and   ProQuest/UMI Dissertation Publishing —that store and provide access to Ohio State theses and dissertations.  

Examinations

Graduate degree examinations are a major milestone in all graduate students’ pursuit of their graduate degree. Much hinges on the successful completion of these examinations, including the ability to continue in a graduate program. 

The rules and processes set by the Graduate School ensure the integrity of these examinations for graduate students, the graduate faculty, and for Ohio State. 

Final Semester

During your final semester as a graduate student there are many activities that lead up to commencement and receiving your degree. Complete the final semester checklist and learn more about commencement activities.

Graduation Calendar

Select your expected graduation term below to see specific dates concerning when to apply for graduation, complete your examinations and reports, submit approved thesis and dissertation, commencement, and the end-of semester deadline.

Applications to Graduate Due 1  : January 26, 2024

Examinations and Reports completed by 2  : April 12, 2024

Approved thesis and dissertation submitted and accepted by 3  : April 19, 2024

Commencement 4  : May 5, 2024

End of Semester Deadline 5  : May 6, 2024

Applications to Graduate Due 1  : May 24, 2024

Examinations and Reports completed by 2  : July 12, 2024

Approved thesis and dissertation submitted and accepted by 3  : July 19, 2024

Commencement 4  : August 4, 2024

End of Semester Deadline 5  : August 19, 2024

Applications to Graduate Due 1  : September 6, 2024

Examinations and Reports completed by 2  : November 22, 2024

Approved thesis and dissertation submitted and accepted by 3  : November 27, 2024

Commencement 4  : December 15, 2024

End of Semester Deadline 5  : January 3, 2025

Applications to Graduate Due 1  : January 24, 2025

Examinations and Reports completed by 2  : April 11, 2025

Approved thesis and dissertation submitted and accepted by 3  : April 18, 2025

Commencement 4  : May 4, 2025

End of Semester Deadline 5  : May 5, 2025

1  Applications to graduate include current semester or End-of-Semester deadline. Applications must be received by close of business.

2 Format reviews may occur electronically or in person at the Graduate School during announced business hours.  Both options require submitting a digital version of the dissertation or DMA document draft in a PDF format to  [email protected] .  

3  Approved documents must be submitted via OhioLINK and accepted by the Graduate School by the close of business before the Report on Final Document will be processed.

4  Students not attending commencement must complete the commencement section on the Application to Graduate to indicate how their diploma should be disbursed.

5  A degree applicant who does not meet published graduation deadlines but who does complete all degree requirements by the last business day prior to the first day of classes for the following semester or summer term will graduate the following semester or summer term without registering or paying fees

Still Have Questions?

Dissertations & Theses 614-292-6031 [email protected]

Doctoral Exams, Master's Examination, Graduation Requirements 614-292-6031 [email protected]

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Academic Services

Doctoral thesis submission

For postgraduate research students: what you need to know about submitting your thesis for assessment and information on submitting your final thesis to the Library.

Submitting your thesis for assessment

Covid-19 arrangements.

All PGR s are required to submit their thesis electronically both for assessment and for final submission of thesis. Further advice for postgraduate research students on issues related to Covid-19 are available on the University's dedicated webpage.

Coronavirus (Covid-19)

Submission advice

Your College Office is the first point of contact for advice on submitting your thesis.

If your programme of studies is in the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences (CAHSS), use the College's thesis submission guide.

CAHSS Thesis Submission Guide

If your programme of studies is in the College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine (CMVM), see the College wiki.

CMVM Postgraduate Research wiki

If your programme of studies is in the College of Science and Engineering (CSE), see the College SharePoint site.

CSE Academic Affairs Assessment

Assessment criteria

Grounds for the award of postgraduate research degrees are found in the Postgraduate Degree Regulations in the DRPS . Doctoral theses are assessed under the University's Postgraduate Assessment Regulations for Research Degrees.

Degree Regulations and Programmes of Study - DRPS

phd thesis submission

Additional guidance

University guidance on thesis format and binding and other information relevant to thesis submission.

phd thesis submission

Thesis submission forms

Prior to submission, you must inform your supervisor of your intention to submit your thesis for assessment.  The Notice of Intention to Submit form asks your supervisor to confirm that you have discussed your intention to submit with them .  College offices can advise on thesis submission procedures.

Notice of intention to submit

You are not required to submit a lay summary with your notice of intention to submit.

phd thesis submission

The thesis containing an abstract and lay summary must be submitted to your College Office. 

Final thesis submission

After you have successfully completed your examination, you must submit the final electronic copy of your thesis to your College Office and deposit a copy on PURE.  Your College Office will invite you to submit your final thesis and provide guidance on how to do this. More information can be found on College webpages, the University Library’s theses website,  or by contacting your College Office. 

Once you have submitted your thesis, the College will arrange for your award letter to be issued and for your thesis to be sent to the University Library.

More information on how to deposit the electronic copy of your PhD or MPhil thesis is available from the Library.

University Library's theses website

Contact for regulations advice

Advice on degree and assessment regulations is available from Academic Services.

Susan Hunter

Academic policy officer, contact details.

Related Links

Forms for students

Main navigation

  • Graduate Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • General requirements
  • Preparation of a thesis
  • What is myThesis?
  • Next steps (Master’s)
  • Next steps (Doctoral)
  • myThesis FAQ for students
  • myThesis FAQ for units
  • Thesis examination
  • Doctoral oral defence
  • Final Thesis Submission
  • Thesis Writing and Support Resources
  • Letters of Completion/PGWP
The next deadline for initial and final thesis submissions is April 15 th . For initial thesis submission, your myThesis status should be “Eval. Authorized by GPD” by midnight, April 15 th . This means your submissions was approved by the supervisor(s) and GPD.

Initial Thesis Submission

Master's students, doctoral students.

Click the button below to access myThesis:

Important Information about deadlines and registration

For each of the three annual dates for conferring degrees/convocation, there are corresponding deadlines for initial submission and for deposition of the final, corrected version of the thesis. For specific dates of initial and final submission, please consult the deadlines page .

  • Please note: some Units* enforce earlier submission deadlines than those listed by GPS, always check with your respective Graduate Unit.

Initial submission by the indicated deadline for a particular granting of degrees does not guarantee graduation, nor does it exempt you from registration fees. You must be registered in the appropriate degree program at the time of initial thesis submission.

An initial thesis submission will prompt the GPS Thesis Unit to automatically add your name to the graduation list for either the current or following term. Thesis students do not apply to graduate as a thesis submission is an indication of readiness for evaluation and subsequent completion of degree.

Students who are no longer registered at McGill must be readmitted to be eligible for thesis examination.

You may submit your thesis at any time during the year.

  • If you are submitting a revised thesis, please follow these instructions.

*Unit refers to a department, a division, a school, an institute, or a Faculty/University-wide program.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 4.0 International License . Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies, McGill University .

Department and University Information

Graduate and postdoctoral studies.

The University of Hong Kong - Graduate School

  • Current Students

Thesis Submission

Turnitin check on theses.

  • Workflow of Compulsory Plagiarism Check on RPg Theses 

Thesis Examination Procedure

  • Flowchart of Thesis Examination Procedure

Guidelines on Thesis Submission

  • Regulations Governing the Format, Binding and Presentation of Theses for Higher Degrees by Research 
  • Preparation, Submission and Examination of Theses (From the Graduate School Handbook)
  • Preparing and Submitting Your Thesis: A Guide for MPhil and PhD Students
  • The Library's Subject Guides on Writing Theses and Dissertations
  • Submission of Dataset of Research (if applicable)
  • Editing of Abstracts of Research Postgraduate Theses 
  • Electronic Thesis Submission (Final Thesis) 
  • Printing of Final Bound Thesis 
  • 2. Thesis submission
  • Information and services
  • Higher Degree by Research

If you have submitted your thesis for examination via UQ eSpace please read this document for information on how your examination will progress.

  • iThenticate similarity report
  • UQRDM upload
  • COVID Impact Statement
  • After your thesis is submitted

1. Overview

Uploading your thesis for examination is a 2-step process:

  • iThenticate Similarity Report: Generate and share your iThenticate similarity report with your principal advisor.
  • UQRDM Upload : Upload files separately: Thesis + Abstract + iThenticate report + COVID impact statement (DOCX, 28.7 KB) (if applicable). Note: name your files based on the content type (thesis, abstract, etc.).

Should you require assistance, please contact the Graduate School .

You can find instructions on how to track the examination via the HTE request on our systems training hub guide . 

If you feel you are not ready to submit, read our Thesis Submission Date and Scholarship Extension information.

  • 1. Thesis preparation
  • 3. Thesis examination
  • 4. Award of degree
  • Thesis submission date and scholarship extension

Need assistance?

Chat to the Graduate School Team

phd thesis submission

PhD thesis submission

WUR Library supports you in disseminating your PhD thesis. Your thesis will be archived in the WUR PhD theses database. The Library also ensures that your PhD thesis is distributed to a range of search engines and that it is available in Narcis.

When submitting your thesis, you need to do the following three things:

1. Register for a DOI

  • The title pages of your thesis must list a DOI (Digital Object Identifier). This number makes it easy to find and to reference your thesis. On this website you can find further information on how to request a DOI . For any other questions please contact the Doctorate secretariat of the PhD services .
  • Once you have submitted your thesis to the Library, the Library will finalise the formal registration of the DOI. The DOI can then be used to access your thesis. Your thesis will also be available under My Publications on your MyLibrary page.

2. Submit your thesis

2.a submitting paper copies, at least two weeks before your public defense, you must submit 15 paper copies (including one copy for the library) of your phd thesis to the  doctoral service centre in atlas..

Visiting address: Atlas, building no. 104, room no. D001. Droevendaalsesteeg 4, 6708 PB Wageningen.

2.b Submitting a digital copy

In addition, you must submit one digital copy of your thesis to wur library. the digital copy must be in pdf format. the digital copy must include your thesis, your propositions and your thesis’ front and back covers, in one pdf file. password protection should be disabled. please also check the correct publication name in the pdf properties., together with the digital copy, you need to send a summary (text file) of your phd thesis with a maximum length of 999 words (approx.3 pages in word). we will add the summary to the description of your thesis. you can submit the thesis (pdf) and the summary (text file) in one of the following ways:, via email attachments to [email protected], use surf filesender , to send the files to [email protected] (recommended), 3. request an embargo period - if needed.

Most scientific journals use plagiarism-detection software on new submissions. If your PhD thesis is publicly available through WUR Library, this software will flag your thesis as potentially plagiarised. Most journal publishers do allow you to publish part(s) of your thesis as articles, even when the thesis is publicly available. Make sure you mention in your cover letter to the journal that your manuscript is part of a publicly defended PhD thesis.

If you expect problems with journal plagiarism checks, the Library can put an embargo period on your PhD thesis. During the embargo period, the full text of your thesis will not be visible online and will not appear in plagiarism-detection software. The embargo will last for 1 year. One month before the embargo period expires, we'll email you or your supervisor to ask if you want to extend the embargo period. If you do not extend the embargo, or if you or your supervisor do not reply to the email within a month, the embargo will be lifted and your PhD thesis will become publicly available through the Wageningen University & Research PhD theses database. You can send a request for an embargo period to [email protected] .

To ensure that we can reach you during this process, please send us the following two email addresses: your private email address, especially if you will no longer be affiliated with WUR in the future, and the email address of a permanent WUR staff member associated with your PhD research, e.g., your supervisor. You can send these to [email protected]

Have you thought of publishing your data?

You may also wish to publish your thesis data. This is not required by Wageningen University & Research, but it  is required by some funders and journals. The Library can help you with publishing your datasets so that you can refer to the data in your thesis. More information on this webpage .

Should you have any questions, do not hesitate to contact us at [email protected]

UCC University College Cork

Graduate studies office oifig na staidéar iarchéime.

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  • Study Research
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  • Livestream Sessions PG Expo 2024

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  • Current Research Students
  • Research Thesis Submission

Doctorate Thesis Submission Steps

On this page.

When can I submit?

Please make sure you are aware of your start date. If you have made changes to your registration (for example leave of absence) this will change your submission date. Research students start in January, April, July or October, and usually agree a registration period of 3 or 4 years from their start date.

Students can submit any time in their last year of study. Students must begin planning for thesis submission 6 months before their submission date. 

phd thesis submission

Students receiving a recommendation of award on condition of major or minor amendments should liaise with their internal examiner and supervisor regarding completion of the amendments. RECOMMENDATIONS EXPLAINED Award, no amendments needed Student progresses to the next step which is final e-thesis submission. Find your deadline here. Award, on condition minor amendments are carried out

  • Students liaise with their internal examiner to confirm the amendments needed.
  • Student carries out amendments and sends them to their internal examiner for review.
  • Internal Examiner confirms approval of corrections to the Graduate Studies Office using the upload facility and confirms to the student that they can progress to final e-thesis submission online via CORA .

Award, on condition major amendments are carried out

  • Student liaises with their internal examiner to confirm the amendments needed.
  • Student carries out amendments and sends them to both their internal examiner and external examiner for review.
  • Internal examiner and the external examiner confirms approval of corrections to the Graduate Studies Office using the upload facility and confirms to the student that they can progress to final e-thesis submission  online via CORA .
  • The original examiners report along with the confirmation from examiners regarding major amendment completed are submitted to the next ACGSC meeting (see dates) for final approval.

Reject, but permit submission of a revised thesis

  • Student is required to undertake a major rewrite of all or a significant part of the thesis.
  • This process should be completed within 12 months and the candidate must be registered as a student.
  • The new thesis needs to be  submitted as a PDF online for a new examination (see step 1).

Reject, but allow the award of a lower degree A research Masters degree is awarded in lieu of a Doctorate as the thesis stands, or such a degree is awarded subject to minor or major amendments. A recommendation will need to be made on the grade of award of the lower degree (on the original thesis). Reject No degree is awarded as the thesis is very seriously and inherently deficient. MORE INFORMATION

For detailed information here . 

Graduate Studies Office

Oifig na staidéar iarchéime.

BHARATHIAR UNIVERSITY

Coimbatore - 641046, centre for research and evaluation, instructions online application for thesis submission.

  • Kindly read the instructions carefully before you start filling the application form.
  • Register Online at http://erp.b-u.ac.in/erp/scholar/public/
  • The Online Application should be filled and submitted online.
  • Print the online application and handover the printed online application to the Centre for Research and Evaluation, Controller of Examination Building, Bharathiar University, Coimbatore after the prescribed period of research and three moths before the date of submission of thesis. Another copy of the synopsis application should be submitted to the Registrar, Bharathiar University, Coimbatore.
  • Thesis File (below 5MB)
  • Thesis Certificate(Download Certificate here)
  • Declaration Certificate(Download Certificate here)
  • CERTIFICATE OF GENUINESS OF THE PUBLICATION(Download Certificate here)
  • � NO DUE CERTIFICATE� from the Head of Department (applicable only to the University Department candidate).
  • . �NO DUE CERTIFICATE� obtained from the Registrar, Bharathiar University if the Ph.D. scholar is from a Recognised Research Institution or doing Ph.D. under independent study external registration
  • The copy of the challan towards remittance of thesis fee of Rs.6000/- prescribed for those candidates registered on or after 01-04-2001 and the late thesis submission fee, if any, to the Bharathiar University Exam Fund Account in the Bank of India branch at Bharathiar University or Demand Draft drawn on any of the scheduled banks in the Coimbatore City favouring the Registrar, Bharathiar University stating clearly the purpose of remittance.
  • Attested copy of the University communication granting extention of time for submission of the thesis
  • A CD containing the thesis copy in PDF format.
  • The penalty fee for the late submission of Ph.D. Thesis is Rs.500/- (if it exceeds six months from the date of submission of the Synopsis) for every six months till the date of submission of thesis.
  • Actual Postal Expense is to be paid by the candidate at time of the submission of consolidated Report. A fee of Rs.500/- Is to be paid by the candidate for Provisional Certificate along with the Viva voce report.

PhD thesis offer 2024- Call for Application of a CIFRE-ANRT thesis submission

Job information, offer description.

The TEAM 5 (BRIC U1312, https://www.bricbordeaux.com/en/bric-team/recherche-translationnelle-en-cancerologie-cutanee-et-maladies-cutanees-rares/ ), which is co-headed by Dr. Rezvani and Pr. Beylot-Barry, is composed of about 40 researchers, clinicians, lecturers, technicians and engineers, with a synergistic interaction with Bordeaux University Hospital teams. This labelled INSERM team is seeking to recruit a new PhD student on a project entitled “ Study the mechanisms underlying the appearance of hypo and hyper-pigmented areas in skin”. This project will be carried out in collaboration with NAOS ILS under a CIFRE contract.

Summary of the project:

Skin, the largest organ of the human body, protects body against external aggressions (chemical, physical, microbiological, pollution, UV...). One of the protective mechanisms against the deleterious effects of UV radiation is melanin, which is produced by melanocytes within the basal layer of the epidermis, then transferred to neighboring keratinocytes before being degraded in the upper layers of the epidermis. Its distribution results in a homogeneous macroscopic pigmentation of the skin. In certain pathologies, the production-transfer-degradation cycle is disrupted, leading to the appearance of hypo- or hyper-pigmented areas. These pathologies have a significant psychological impact. In this project, we aim to identify the mechanisms involved in the appearance of hypo- and hyper-pigmented spots and to find new therapeutic targets. To this end, omics approaches (spatial transcriptomics and proteomics, etc.) will be applied on biopsies taken from hypo- and hyperpigmented areas, as well as from clinically healthy adjacent areas.

The technologies enabling spatial analysis of gene and protein expression are recent, and new bioinformatics methods specific to this type of data are proposed [PMID: 36147664]. Rapid advancements in spatial transcriptomics provide increasingly vast and complex datasets, allowing subcellular resolution and a comprehensive understanding of cellular interactions. However, processing and analyzing these massive datasets pose significant computational challenges, primarily due to the size of the data, which can reach tens of terabytes per sample. Additionally, integrating various analysis methods, such as statistical modeling and machine learning techniques, with current biological knowledge is essential for proper data interpretation. Moreover, interactive visualization and sharing of analysis results present technical obstacles, necessitating the development of new tools and platforms to facilitate collaboration and access to spatial data.

In order to identify the biological processes involved in the occurrence of hypo- and hyperpigmented patches, the PhD candidate will evaluate and compare existing analytical tools for each type of "omics" in light of the challenges mentioned above and will develop a method for multi-omics integration with biomedical knowledge bases (gene/gene interactions, gene/drug interactions). Additionally, the spatial dimension will lead the PhD candidate to investigate and integrate knowledge on intercellular communication. Finally, the PhD candidate will develop visual metaphors and an exploration and visualization tool for data and results.

The PhD student will be trained by a thesis supervisor expert in skin biology and a co-supervisor expert in bioinformatics. Additionally, this thesis will be conducted within the framework of a CIFRE scholarship, providing a unique opportunity for the PhD student to gain valuable experience in both academic and industrial environment.

Requirements

We are seeking a talented and motivated PhD student with a background in bioinformatics* to join our dynamic research team. (S)he will play a crucial role in processing, analyzing, and interpreting multi-omics datasets generated from our experimental models and patient samples using single-cell RNA sequencing and spatial transcriptomics.

* Student holding a master's degree in bioinformatics or equivalent (or computer science with a strong inclination towards biology), with the following skills:

  • Knowledge in bioinformatics, (bio)statistics, and biology
  • Knowledge in omics data analysis would be appreciated
  • Proficiency in Linux/Unix environment
  • Proficiency in R language and a programming language (Python, C, ...)
  • Motivation to work in a multidisciplinary environment
  • Rigor and synthesis skills, as well as ability to work in a team.

Applicants should send a single PDF file (single-spaced, 11-point Arial) containing:

-Concise CV (2 pages)

-2 recommendation letters

This document should be sent to [email protected] .

Call opening: May 1, 2024

Deadline for applications: 31 May 2024

Interview with member of scientific committee of TRIO2 and NAOS ILS: During June

Notification of selected candidate & CIFRE ANRT thesis submission: During July 2024

Additional Information

Work location(s), where to apply.

  • Scholarships

Arts Graduate Research Publication Support Grant

University of Melbourne

Application is required. Check eligibility

Key scholarship details

Application status

Not open yet

Applications open

Applications close

31 Dec 2023

Benefit amount

Up to $5,000

Eligible study level

Graduate research

Eligible student type

Domestic and international students

Eligible study stage

Current study

Benefit duration

This grant supports eligible Graduate Researchers in the Faculty of Arts after submission of the thesis for examination. The grant supports them to prepare scholarly publications such as journal articles, book chapters, books and non-traditional research outputs while awaiting the outcome of their examination.

A one-off payment up to $5000 for PhD candidates and $2500 for MA by Research candidates.

Approximately 50

Eligibility and selection criteria

Eligibility.

To be eligible for this grant you:

  • must be enrolled in a graduate research degree in the Faculty of Arts at the time of application
  • may not have been lapsed, reinstated or approved for late submission)
  • must have registered an ‘Intention to submit’ the thesis for examination and submitted the thesis in 2024
  • must be within the maximum candidature for the degree
  • must have the written support of your supervisor.

Selection criteria

Applicants who meets the eligibility criteria and provides the required supporting documents will receive the grant

This grant is subject to the Faculty of Arts Graduate Research Support Grant Terms and Conditions .

In addition to the above you must also:

  • agree to the University sharing your name and the name of your course with the donor of this scholarship
  • provide a brief report on the benefits of the scholarship and give permission for the University to provide the report, your name and course details to the donor

Study level:

Student type:

Study stage type:

Study area:

Arts, humanities and social sciences

Need help understanding the process?

Application, how to apply.

To apply for this grant, please review the application guidelines for Arts Graduate Research Publication Support Grant and submit your application.

Applications open:

Applications close:

The information listed here is subject to change without notice. Where we have listed information about jointly run scholarships programs, please also see our partners' websites. Information describing the number and value of scholarships awarded is indicative.

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IMAGES

  1. Submission of the Ph.D. Thesis

    phd thesis submission

  2. Seebah PhD Thesis Final Submission[1]

    phd thesis submission

  3. Application Form For Submission of PHD Thesis

    phd thesis submission

  4. Thesis submission and PhD final exam instructions for PhD students

    phd thesis submission

  5. BHARATHIAR UNIVERSITY PHD THESIS SUBMISSION FORM

    phd thesis submission

  6. Thesis Submission Tutorial

    phd thesis submission

VIDEO

  1. Thesis Submission Be Like

  2. e thesis submission to central library

  3. Write your thesis Submission 2 Literature Review Method

  4. PhD thesis printing from Patel Printers Mumbai

  5. PhD

  6. Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Submission Tutorial

COMMENTS

  1. Thesis & Dissertation Submission

    Information about the thesis and dissertation submission process can be found by navigating the topics below. The Academic Services Coordinator can be contacted via email at: ... The PhD dissertation represents independent scholarly work that makes an original contribution to knowledge. It is a demonstration that the PhD candidate has achieved ...

  2. Submitting Your Thesis/Dissertation : Graduate School

    Submission of the final thesis/dissertation must be within 60 days of the final exam. Students who miss the 60 day submission deadline are ineligible to register in future terms. The Graduate School uses ProQuest to administer the electronic thesis/dissertation (ETD) submission and committee approval process that results in publication in ...

  3. PDF Guidelines for The PhD Dissertation

    Every PhD candidate in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences is required to successfully complete and submit a dissertation to qualify for degree conferral. This document provides information on how to submit your dissertation, requirements for dissertation formatting, and your dissertation publishing and distribution options.

  4. Dissertations and Theses

    2023-24. Thursday, September 12. Dissertation deadlines are strictly enforced. No exceptions are made. By noon on the final submission deadline date, all of the following steps must be completed: The student enrolls and applies to graduate; The student confirms the names of reading committee members in Axess, and designates a Final Reader;

  5. Theses and Dissertations

    Below is an overview of the main steps in preparing, defending, and submitting your thesis or dissertation. For detailed instructions on each step, see The Graduate School's Guide for Electronic Submission of Thesis and Dissertation (PDF), in addition to this video recording from a workshop given on the subject. Schedule your defense and apply for graduation in DukeHub (defense and graduation ...

  6. A Guide to Writing a PhD Thesis

    A Guide to Writing a PhD Thesis. A PhD thesis is a work of original research all students are requiured to submit in order to succesfully complete their PhD. The thesis details the research that you carried out during the course of your doctoral degree and highlights the outcomes and conclusions reached. The PhD thesis is the most important ...

  7. Thesis & Dissertation : Graduate School

    Policy requires the thesis/dissertation be submitted within 60 days of the final exam. The Graduate School uses a service called ProQuest to administer the electronic thesis/dissertation (ETD) submission and committee approval process. Once you have made any necessary revisions and the thesis/dissertation is final, you are ready to begin the ...

  8. PhD Thesis Guide

    Thesis Proposal and Proposal Presentation. Thesis Defense and Final Thesis Document. Links to All Forms in This Guide. This PhD Thesis Guide will guide you step-by-step through the thesis process, from your initial letter of intent to submission of the final document. All associated forms are conveniently consolidated in the section at the end.

  9. Thesis and Dissertation Resources

    Formatting Requirements; Submission Process; Thesis and Dissertation Credit; Thesis track master's students and all PhD students are required to submit their final thesis or dissertation to the Graduate School after the work has been successfully defended and deemed complete by the committee.

  10. Submission, examination and completion

    The examination of PhD thesis requires a viva in all instances. Please bear in mind that there will be a period of time elapsing between submission of your thesis and the examination, as the examiners need to read it and write their preliminary reports. The examiners also need to write their recommendations after your viva regarding amendments.

  11. Submitting your thesis for examination (PhD, EdD, MD, BusD, MLitt, MSc

    What happens following submission of the thesis for examination. When you submit your thesis for examination the Degree Committee will check the submission, acknowledge receipt, and inform Student Registry you have submitted. The Student Registry will update your CamSIS record. The Degree Committee will forward your thesis to your examiners.

  12. Thesis/Dissertation

    Don't follow the PhD Dissertation template if you are submitting a Master's Thesis. ... some disciplines students may be expected to publish 2 or more journal articles during the course of their studies and submit them as the core of their thesis or dissertation — along with an introduction, literature review, and conclusions. ...

  13. Thesis Submission

    Part 2: Changes made, ready to submit. Step 1: Prepare files for upload. Step 2: Login to thesis.rice.edu. Step 3: View your application. Step 4: Upload the final version of your thesis. Step 5: Upload your administrative and supplemental files. Step 6: Send a message (optional)

  14. Dissertations and Theses

    The Graduate School's format review is in place to help the document submission process go smoothly for the student. Format reviews for PhD dissertations and master's theses can be done remotely or in-person. The format review is required at or before the two-week notice of the final defense. Dissertation and Thesis Submission.

  15. Thesis or dissertation submission

    Submit a hold request. On or before the last working day of your intended month of graduation, submit a Thesis/Dissertation Hold Request form (requires login). To complete the form you'll need the following information: Your major, degree, and graduation month and year. The title of your thesis/dissertation.

  16. Doctoral thesis submission

    All PGRs are required to submit their thesis electronically both for assessment and for final submission of thesis. Further advice for postgraduate research students on issues related to Covid-19 are available on the University's dedicated webpage. ... More information on how to deposit the electronic copy of your PhD or MPhil thesis is ...

  17. Untitled Page [durslt.du.ac.in]

    YYYY. Registered Email-id *. Download Various PhD Thesis Submission Forms. : Mandatory Fields *. Ph.D & DM/M.Ch Seating Plan (Annual Convocation-2023) (Click Here) Ph.D. Rules & Results (Click Here) Instructions & Identity-Cum-Entry-Slip for the Scholar Awarded in 100th Annual Convocation.

  18. Initial Thesis Submission

    McGill.CA / Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies / Thesis / Thesis Guidelines. The next deadline for initial and final thesis submissions is April 15 th. For initial thesis submission, your myThesis status should be "Eval. Authorized by GPD" by midnight, April 15 th. This means your submissions was approved by the supervisor (s) and GPD.

  19. Thesis Submission

    Guidelines on Thesis Submission. Regulations Governing the Format, Binding and Presentation of Theses for Higher Degrees by Research. Preparation, Submission and Examination of Theses (From the Graduate School Handbook) Preparing and Submitting Your Thesis: A Guide for MPhil and PhD Students.

  20. 2. Thesis submission

    2. Thesis submission. If you have submitted your thesis for examination via UQ eSpace please read this document for information on how your examination will progress. 1. Overview. Uploading your thesis for examination is a 2-step process: iThenticate Similarity Report: Generate and share your iThenticate similarity report with your principal ...

  21. PhD thesis submission

    Together with the digital copy, you need to send a summary (text file) of your PhD thesis with a maximum length of 999 words (approx.3 pages in Word). We will add the summary to the description of your thesis. You can submit the thesis (PDF) and the summary (text file) in one of the following ways: via email attachments to [email protected]

  22. Doctorate Thesis Submission Steps

    Students must begin planning for thesis submission 6 months before their submission date. 1. Intention to submit. Ensure student registration and fee payments are up-to-date. Ensure you have completed any mandatory elements of your programme (example 15 module credit requirement for Doctorate programme).

  23. Thesis Submission

    A CD containing the thesis copy in PDF format. The penalty fee for the late submission of Ph.D. Thesis is Rs.500/- (if it exceeds six months from the date of submission of the Synopsis) for every six months till the date of submission of thesis. Actual Postal Expense is to be paid by the candidate at time of the submission of consolidated Report.

  24. PhD thesis offer 2024- Call for Application of a CIFRE-ANRT thesis

    This document should be sent to [email protected]. Call opening: May 1, 2024. Deadline for applications: 31 May 2024. Interview with member of scientific committee of TRIO2 and NAOS ILS: During June. Notification of selected candidate & CIFRE ANRT thesis submission: During July 2024. Languages.

  25. May 15, 2024

    Who: Students completing a dissertation, thesis or report; faculty and staff who assist students with submission. Where: Virtually via Zoom (please register to attend online and receive participation instructions) and in person in Admin 404 (room capacity is 30). Registration: Please register to receive handouts via email or attend online. The ...

  26. Arts Graduate Research Publication Support Grant

    The scholarship may not be deferred. For Joint PhD candidates, Melbourne must be the Home institution. The work plan should commence immediately after thesis submission and is expected to take approximately three months to complete. Awardees whose thesis is already under examination, must accept the award and commence workplan immediately.