PhD Requirements

For any questions related to CS PhD milestone requirements, please email phdstudentservices@cs.stanford.edu

Academic Requirements

Guidelines for Reasonable Progress

  • By the end of the first year, you should align with a permanent advisor; students are welcome to switch advisors, but a student should not have significant periods of time (after the first year) with no advisor.
  • A student must make satisfactory progress in his or her research, as determined by his or her advisor.
  • By Spring Quarter of the second year, a student should complete all six breadth area requirements, 2 breadth area requirements in each of 3 areas. 
  • By Spring Quarter of the third year, a student should pass a Qualifying Examination in the area of his or her intended dissertation.
  • Within one year of passing the Qualifying Examination, a student should form a Reading Committee and submit a signed Reading Committee Form to the phdstudentservices@cs.stanford.edu.
  • By Spring Quarter of the fourth year, a student should schedule a Thesis Proposal with the reading committee members and submit the Thesis Proposal Form to the phdstudentservices@cs.stanford.edu.

The teaching requirement may be satisfied at any time. As a matter of policy, a student should satisfy half of the teaching requirement in the first two years. Students are encouraged to complete the teaching requirement early in their stay to eliminate conflicts with later dissertation work. The research requirement is routinely satisfied by participation in research throughout the student's career.

Note: Form/s should be submitted as pdf and emailed to phdstudentservices@cs.stanford.edu.   Jay Subramanian , Director of Graduation Admissions and PhD Program, approves these forms on behalf of the department chair.

Candidacy

University policy requires that all doctoral students declare candidacy by the end of the sixth quarter in residence, excluding summers. Once you have a permanent advisor and have completed the breadth requirements and the three units of coursework with four instructors (faculty that are academic council members) you are eligible to file for candidacy.  The Application for Candidacy for Doctoral Degree form can be found at https://drive.google.com/file/d/17Db_0Y2pFRuY42nHY4z0AWYgJyoEVqtL/view. On the form the student must list 135 units of courses (either completed or planned, a total of 10 units of PE/music/performing arts courses can be counted towards this). The form is reviewed and signed first by the student's permanent advisor. The advisor's signature indicates the academic adequacy of the proposed program of study. The form is then reviewed by the Program Officer to make sure that it accurately reflects the University and departmental requirements.

The candidacy form serves as a "contract" between the department and the student. The department acknowledges that the student is a bona fide candidate for the Ph.D. and agrees that the program submitted by the student is sufficient to warrant granting the Ph.D. upon completion. The department may not change requirements unilaterally. The student may petition the department for modification of his or her program.

Candidacy expires five years from the date of submission of the candidacy form, rounded to the end of the quarter. In special cases, the department may extend a student's candidacy, but is under no obligation to do so. The monthly stipend increases slightly after candidacy is filed. This goes in effect the quarter following submission and approval of the candidacy form.

Petition for MS Degree

After satisfying the Breadth requirement (Section 4), applying for candidacy (Section 5) and the Depth requirement (Qualifying Examination, 6) and a minimum of 45 units with a GPA of 3.0, the student is eligible to petition for a Master's degree. To do so, you need to fill out the "Graduate Program Authorization Petition" which is available via Axess. (From the Academics panel in your Student Center, select "Petitions and Forms" from the drop down menu to submit the Grad Auth electronically.) Note that the form needs to be completed before deadline to apply to graduate, so do not wait until the last minute to complete it. There is a $125 application fee to add a Master's program to your PhD. Do not forget to "Apply to Graduate" for your Master's program as well as your PhD program in Axess when it's time to graduate.

Please note that the university places a limit on the number of transfer units and units that you can ‘double-count’ towards your MS and PhD degrees. You can use up to 45 units of transfer units, or MS units, but not both, towards the 135 units that are required for the PhD degree.

https://registrar.stanford.edu/students/graduate-degree-progress/minimum...

In order to add the MSCS degree, please follow the guidelines:

1. Log onto Axess.
2. Click "Student" tab.
3. Under the "Academics" header, there is a drop-down menu; select "Petitions and Forms".
4. On the next page, select "Graduate Program Authorization Petition".
5. Do not click the box by "I wish to discontinue this program..."
6. Click the quarter that you wish to receive your MS.
7. Click "No" to the question asking if you are enrolling in an official joint program.
8. Under "Requested New Program", indicate "CS".
9. Under "Degree", indicate "CS-MS".
10. Click "Submit".

Your application will be routed to Meredith Hutchin, MSCS Program Administrator. Once she confirms your eligibility, she will contact you.  Once your application is approved by Meredith, you will be able to apply for MS conferral on Axess.

Student Financial Support

The Ph.D. program is a full-time program. Most Computer Science Ph.D. students are supported by a research or teaching assistantship in Computer Science or the School of Engineering (SOE), or by a fellowship, or by an approved assistantship through a collaborating research organization. The Ph.D. program is full-time and requires full tuition, most or all of which is normally covered by such support. Since Ph.D. students have 50% RAships or CAships, full time equals 8-10 units. Students with partial or no support may not register part-time but must make up any tuition shortfall themselves, except as noted (Hertz, NSF, NPSC Fellows may register for 8-10 units also).

University Graduation-TGR Requirements

A student may go TGR after all the Ph.D. requirements have been completed and just their orals and submission of the dissertation remain, see CS Ph.D. Program Milestone Checklist for reference. Students are strongly encouraged to apply for TGR status as soon as they are eligible as the TGR fee is 40% of regular tuition. The School of Engineering and the University expects students making reasonable progress to be TGR for only one year.To advance to TGR status, you need to fill out and submit the TGR form which is now housed in the eForms portal.

Unit-Based Requirements

These requirements are:

  • 135 course/research credit units are required to graduate with the Ph.D.
  • Once you have completed the 135 units of course/research credit and all program requirements up to your Orals and Dissertation, then you are eligible to apply for TGR status.
  • Up to 45 units completed at Stanford (or accepted as transfer credit) toward a Masters degree may be used toward the 135 units of residency requirement for the doctoral degree. (Application for transfer of credit may be requested after at least one quarter of enrollment.)

Additional Information on Enrollment:

  • Students who are on most fellowships register for at least 8 or 10 units. Certain outside fellowships require 12 units a quarter so if you have a question concerning this, contact the Ph.D. Program Officer.
  • Students who are on 50% research or course assistantships register for at least 8 units and should register for 10 as the tuition is the same for 8 to 10 units.
  • Students who are on 25% research or course assistantships should register for a minimum of 8 and maximum of 10 units. The assistantship covers 5 units and the student must make up the difference. It is recommended that Ph.D. students seek a 50% assistantship (or two 25% assistantships.)
  • Students who are on a 90% research assistantship in the summer register for 3 units of CS499. If the student is TGR, then they register for 0 units of CS802. For students on 50% CAships, RAships or fellowships during the summer, the above rules apply.

*TGR fees only provide for maintenance of matriculation; they do not represent tuition. If a TGR student wishes to take a course for credit, then the student will pay tuition on a unit basis, at a special tuition rate.

Distinction in Teaching

A graduating Ph.D. student will be awarded a certificate of Distinction in Teaching if the following conditions are met:

  1. The student is nominated for this distinction by at least one CS faculty member who has supervised the student as a Course Assistant. This nomination is e-mailed to the Ph.D. Program Officer.
  2. The student has completed 10 units of CA or TF-ship where each unit counts as one 25% CA or TF-ship i.e. five 50% CAships.
  3. The units must include at least one course at the 100-course level; and at least one course at either the 200 or 300-plus course levels.
  4. The student has taught at least one course as a Teaching Fellow with primary responsibility for organizing and teaching a course (tutored video does not qualify.)

Evaluation

The department will check with the advisor annually to ensure that the student is making satisfactory progress towards the completion of their degree. The Computer Science PhD student services sends each Ph.D. student an e-mail with updates on the student's milestone and research progress. Individualized evaluations are sent to each student via e-mail throughout the summer. This evaluation is based on information available to the Ph.D. Program Officer at the time of the evaluation meeting. Please be sure to e-mail phdstudentservices@cs.stanford.edu, whenever you complete a breadth requirement or milestone throughout the year in order to keep you records current. As per the Honor Code, it is the student's responsibility to contact the Program Officer with regard to any error or correction to their records.

If a student is not making reasonable progress and further action needs to be taken:

  1. The student's advisor, Director of Graduate Studies, and the Department Chair will meet to evaluate the next step that should be taken.
  2. By University Policy, the student has the right and can request to meet with the Director of Graduate Studies.
  3. The student can submit a request for an ombudsman.
  4. Failure to schedule the meeting constitutes a waiver of the university-mandated right to a hearing and can lead to dismissal without further warning.