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Graduate Record 2011-2012 [ARCHIVED RECORD]
Statistics
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Return to: Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
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Programs of Study
The Department of Statistics administers programs leading to the degrees of Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy. These programs provide diverse opportunities for advanced study and research in all areas of applied and theoretical statistics, and practical experience in statistical consulting.
The Master of Science (M.S.) degree requires 30 credits of coursework, or 10 courses. Candidates for the M.S. degree complete course requirements covering the breadth of applied and theoretical statistics, and statistical consulting, and pass certain general examinations based on those courses.
The Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degree is normally completed within five years. Candidates for the Ph.D. degree fulfill certain course requirements and examinations beyond the M.S. degree. The fundamental addition is the Ph.D. dissertation, which presents original research performed under the supervision of a faculty member. Master of Science Degree
Preparation: Students should have 3 semesters of calculus (including multiple integrals), linear algebra (comparable to UVa’s MATH 351 or APMA 308), and an introductory probability and statistics course such as MATH 3100/STAT 3120 or APMA 3100/3120. Course requirements
The M.S. program requires 30 units of coursework or 10 courses. M.S. required courses: STAT 5120, STAT 5130, STAT 5190, STAT 7995 (for 3 credits).
M.S. Electives (6 courses): Any STAT course numbered 5000 and above except STAT 5000, 5980, 9120, 9970, 9990. Suggested electives in other departments include MATH 5110 and PHS 7950. Other courses may be used upon agreement of the departmental graduate advisor.
Examination Schedule
Master’s Final Exam: This exam is given every April and November and is done ‘take home’. It consists of one or more data sets. At least one of the data sets can be analyzed using the techniques of either STAT 5120, or STAT 5130. The student picks a data set and does a complete analysis, writing a report detailing the analysis and its conclusions.
Language Exam: This covers one programming language (R/SPlus) and one statistical package (SAS). It is given every April and November and unlimited retakes (but only one administration per semester ) are allowed.
Sample M.S. programs can be found at the department web (courses/masters) Doctor of Philosophy Degree
Successful completion of the following are the requirements for the Ph.D. degree:
- 72 credits of coursework
- Ph.D. General Examinations
- Ph.D. Qualifying Examination
- Written Doctoral Dissertation and Final Defense.
Preparation: Students should have 3 semester of calculus, linear algebra (comparable to UVa’s MATH 3510 or APMA 3080), and an introductory calculus-based probability and statistics course (comparable to MATH 3100/STAT 3120 or APMA 3100/3120). Most students find it extremely helpful to have an introductory real analysis course (‘epsilon-delta proofs’) comparable to MATH 3310. Course requirements
The Ph.D. program requires a total of 72 credits of coursework. At most 18 of these credits can consist of Statlab (STAT 5980), Seminar (STAT 9120), and Non-topical Research (STAT 9970 and 9990).
The remaining 54 units are as follows:
Ph.D. required courses: STAT 5120, STAT 5130, STAT 5190, STAT 7950 (for 3 credits), MATH 5310, STAT 7110, STAT 7120, STAT 7200, STAT 7220.
Ph.D. electives (27 credits or 9 courses): Any STAT course numbered 500 and above except STAT 5000, 5430, 5980, 9120, 9970, 9990. Suggested electives in other departments included MATH 5110 and PHS 7950. Other courses may be used upon agreement of the departmental graduate advisor. (MATH 7310 (Real Analysis & Linear Spaces I) and MATH 7360 (Mathematical Theory of Probability) may be taken together in place of STAT 7200. In this case there will be eight remaining elective courses needed.)
Students with a M.S. degree in a related field may receive up to 24 units of credit for the prior degree. The exact number of units allowed depends upon the courses taken for the prior M.S. and whether or not these courses can be used to substitute for any of the required Ph.D. courses.
General examinations
All students are required to take the Ph.D. General Exams at the end of the first year. There are two exams: the theory exam is based upon MATH 5310 and STAT 5190; the methods exam is based upon STAT 5120 and STAT 5130. Both exams are written three hour exams and will be administered on the Friday and Saturday preceding the first day of classes in the Fall semester of the student’s second year. If one of the two exams is passed, a retake of the failed exam will be allowed. The retake will occur on the weekend preceding the start of the Spring semester of the student’s second year. If neither of the two exams are passed, no retake is allowed. Qualifying examination
The Ph.D. Qualifying Exam is an oral exam designed to establish the candidate’s preparedness for dissertation research. By the time of taking the examination, the candidate should have chosen a broad area of potential research (e.g. multivariate statistics) and a probable dissertation advisor.
There are two basic formats for the qualifying exam. One is a dissertation proposal. In the alternative format, the dissertation advisor will choose three papers in the probable area of the dissertation topic and the student will present these papers and be examined on them.
The format of the exam consists of a talk prepared by the student and delivered to the Statistics and Biostatistics graduate students and faculty. After the talk, the Statistics and Biostatistics faculty will question the student to establish the student’s understanding of the proposed dissertation area. The exam might also include questions from the Department’s higher level theoretical courses: STAT 7110, 7120, 7200, 7220. These questions will often, but not necessarily, be related to the dissertation area. For example many statistics papers talk about large sample approximations. Although such papers might not be formally presented in a mathematical sense, the examination might explore the precise mathematical meaning of these approximations, and such questions are answered in the Department’s theoretical courses.
One retake of the qualifying exam is allowed. Language requirement
This covers one programming language (R/SPlus) and one statistical package (SAS). It is given every April and November and unlimited retakes (but only one administration per semester) are allowed.
Sample Ph.D. programs can be found at the department web site. The Statistics Colloquium
The colloquium is held weekly, with the sessions devoted to research activities of students and faculty members, and to lectures by visiting statisticians on current research interests.
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Return to: Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
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