Environmental Science & Engineering

Postgraduate

In Los Angeles (USA)

higher than £ 9000

Description

  • Type

    Postgraduate

  • Location

    Los angeles (USA)

The Institute of the Environment and Sustainability offers the Doctor of Environmental Science and Engineering (D.Env.) degree.

Facilities

Location

Start date

Los Angeles (USA)
See map
90095

Start date

On request

Questions & Answers

Add your question

Our advisors and other users will be able to reply to you

Who would you like to address this question to?

Fill in your details to get a reply

We will only publish your name and question

Reviews

Subjects

  • Environmental Science
  • Engineering
  • Project
  • University
  • Credit

Course programme

Course requirements consist of core courses, elective courses, environment and sustainability skill seminars, environmental science and engineering seminars, and solutions courses.

Core Courses. Thirteen courses from five categories are required. All core courses must be taken for a letter grade.

Elective Courses. Three courses selected to provide depth in one area for students whose previous degrees emphasized disciplinary breadth or to provide additional courses in an area related to a student’s goals within environmental science and engineering. Elective courses are selected in consultation with the student’s academic adviser and must be approved by the program chair. All elective courses must be taken for a letter grade.

Credit for Prior Work. Entering environmental science and engineering students may already have completed some of the required course work in their undergraduate and graduate work. Three of the 13 core courses can be waived based on prior course work. Any other course requirement satisfied by previous work must be replaced with an elective in any field of environmental science and engineering that is pertinent to the goals of the student. Thus, a minimum of 13 core and elective courses must be completed after admission to the program. A minimum of 10 core and elective courses must be taken at UCLA or another University of California campus.

Environment and Sustainability Seminar. Courses that develop written and oral presentation skills. Students take Environment 290 twice, once during their first and once during their second year.

Environmental Science and Engineering Seminar. While completing core and elective requirements, full-time students must attend the equivalent of two quarters of weekly seminars in the general area of environmental science and engineering, either by enrolling in seminar courses or by attending 16 separate departmental seminars each year.

Solutions Course. The Solutions Course, Environment 400, constitutes intensive multidisciplinary applied research directed toward the solution of a current environmental problem. Students are required to quantify and measure necessary parameters, perform critical evaluations, edit and process technical and socioeconomic information, meet deadlines, and communicate through a final report to the competent lay person as well as to the technical specialist. Sometimes two or three faculty from different academic disciplines oversee a team of student researchers. The student’s individual faculty adviser will assist the student is identifying a solutions course project. Upon selecting a solutions course project, the student will nominate a doctoral committee. The doctoral committee will oversee the student’s progress in the solutions course project.

Before proceeding to the solutions course, students must have completed eight of the required core courses, successfully passed all core and elective courses taken (B- grade or better), and maintained a cumulative grade-point average of 3.0 for all classes taken after entering the Environmental Science and Engineering Program. A total of 24 quarter units of Environment 400 (eight units per quarter) must be completed during the three quarters prior to advancement to candidacy. Enrollment in more than one solutions course per quarter is not allowed. No more than eight units of other course work may be taken when enrolled in a solutions course.

Normally, solutions course credit is only earned from courses offered through the Environmental Science and Engineering Program. However, students may petition the faculty for permission to earn solutions course credit through multidisciplinary environmental projects offered in other departments at UCLA.

Teaching Experience

Not required.

Field Experience

Residency

After advancement to candidacy, students begin a residency in their field of interest at an outside institution. Arrangements for the residency are the students' responsibility but program faculty will assist. Beginning in the first year, the student’s faculty adviser will assist the student in identifying potential residency opportunities. Upon their appointment, doctoral committee members also assist the student in identifying and obtaining a residency position. The host institution and the nature of the appointment must be approved by the doctoral committee and the program chair. Supervision during the field training experience will be by the doctoral committee and the field program supervisor. A letter of agreement between UCLA and the institution is required. During each academic quarter of residency, the student must register at UCLA for eight units of Environment 599. The length of the residency period depends upon the nature of the residency and the needs of the student’s research, but typically lasts between 18 to 24 months, with a maximum of 24 months (6 quarters).

Written and Oral Qualifying Examinations

Academic Senate regulations require all doctoral students to complete and pass university written and oral qualifying examinations prior to doctoral advancement to candidacy. Also, under Senate regulations, the University Oral Qualifying Examination is open only to the student and appointed members of the doctoral committee. In addition to university requirements, some graduate programs have other pre-candidacy examination requirements. What follows in this section is how students are required to fulfill all of these requirements for this doctoral program.

All committee nominations and reconstitutions adhere to the new Minimum Standards for Doctoral Committee Constitution.

A two-tiered examination sequence, consisting of the Departmental Written Qualifying Examination and the University Oral Qualifying examination, is required for advancement to candidacy to the D.Env. degree. The examinations must be successfully completed before the residency can begin. The purpose of the examinations is to test the student's understanding of the core and breadth areas, current issues in the environmental field, and subjects covered in students' solutions course experience. The Departmental Written Examination is administered by the doctoral committee in the first quarter of the solutions course. The Departmental Written Examination may be repeated once. The University Oral Qualifying Examination is administered by the doctoral committee at the conclusion of the solutions course research project. Generally, the doctoral committee is appointed during the second year of the student's tenure at UCLA at the start of the solutions course. The doctoral committee may be reconstituted with the approval of Graduate Division in the event that the dissertation topic differs significantly from the solutions course topic. The oral examination may be repeated once.

Advancement to Candidacy

Students are advanced to candidacy upon successful completion of the written and oral qualifying examinations.

Doctoral Dissertation

Every doctoral degree program requires the completion of an approved dissertation that demonstrates the student's ability to perform original, independent research and constitutes a distinct contribution to knowledge in the principal field of study.

Dissertation Prospectus Review

In the third year of the program (first year of the residency) the candidate is required to present a written prospectus of the dissertation before the doctoral committee. In this review, the doctoral committee assesses progress and provides the candidate guidance on the dissertation research plan.

Final Oral Examination (Defense of the Dissertation)

Required for all students in the program.

Time-to-Degree

Well-prepared students who hold strong baccalaureate and master's degrees should be able to complete the requirements for the D.Env. degree in 13 to 15 quarters, including the residency period.

MAXIMUM TTD

Termination of Graduate Study and Appeal of Termination

University Policy

A student who fails to meet the above requirements may be recommended for termination of graduate study. A graduate student may be disqualified from continuing in the graduate program for a variety of reasons. The most common is failure to maintain the minimum cumulative grade point average (3.00) required by the Academic Senate to remain in good standing (some programs require a higher grade point average). Other examples include failure of examinations, lack of timely progress toward the degree and poor performance in core courses. Probationary students (those with cumulative grade point averages below 3.00) are subject to immediate dismissal upon the recommendation of their department. University guidelines governing termination of graduate students, including the appeal procedure, are outlined in Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.

Special Departmental or Program Policy

A recommendation for academic disqualification for a student who is not advanced to candidacy is made by the program faculty. A recommendation for academic disqualification for a student who is advanced to candidacy is made by the doctoral committee. A student may appeal a recommendation for academic disqualification to the Environmental Science and Engineering Faculty Advisory Committee. In addition to the standard reasons outlined above, a student may be recommended for academic disqualification based on the inability to communicate (in writing or orally) as required for success in the program area.

UCLA is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges and by numerous special agencies. Information regarding the University's accreditation may be obtained from the Office of Academic Planning and Budget, 2107 Murphy Hall.

Environmental Science & Engineering

higher than £ 9000