Department of
Bioinformatics and
Computational Biology
College of Science
Student Handbook
Introduction
This handbook
describes policies and procedures for the Certificate, M.S., and Ph.D.
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology degrees offered by the College
of Science (COS) in the Department of Bioinformatics and Computational
Biology (BCB) at George Mason University. These programs, headquartered
at the Prince William (PW) Campus, emphasize the role of computation in
the biological, physical, mathematical, data and environmental sciences
and address the growing national and regional demand for trained
computational biologists. Additional information regarding curriculum
and entrance requirements may be obtained through the BINF website at http://www.binf.gmu.edu.
Bioinformatics Academic Programs
·
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology,
Ph.D.
·
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology,
M.S.
·
Certificate in
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Admission to Bioinformatics Programs
There are several different types of
admission status used in the Bioinformatics programs, as explained
below:
1. Ph.D. Degree
Status
- Full admission as a degree-seeking student in the doctoral program. The student may be enrolled either full-time or
part-time.
2. Provisional
Ph.D. Status - Provisional admission* into the doctoral program.
The student may be enrolled either full-time or part-time.
3. M.S. Degree Status -
Full admission as a degree-seeking student into the masters program.
The student may be enrolled either full-time or part-time.
4. Provisional M.S.
Status – Provisional admission* into the masters program. The
student may be enrolled either full-time or part-time.
5. Certifticate
in Bioinformatics -
Students may not enroll initially in any
COS
non degree, M.S., or Ph.D.
program,
then later transfer into this certificate program. The Certificate in
Bioinformatics charges students
a differential tuition rate of $100 per credit hour, which is added to
the standard GMU graduate tuition rate (regardless of in or out of
state status).
6. Non-Degree
Status - Non-degree students are not admitted into the
Bioinformatics program, but may take up to 12
credit hours of
coursework which may be applied to a degree program at a later date if
approved. Students who later choose to seek
admission to a degree program must reapply for admission using the
regular graduate application.
*Note: Provisional admission into the
Bioinformatics degree programs may be offered
to students who have a GPA below 3.0 or who may require additional
preparation in either Biology, Mathematics, or Computer Science. In
such cases, the admissions letter will indicate courses that the
student must
take (usually before enrollment or during the first semester in the
Ph.D. or M.S. program). Upon successful completion of the indicated
courses with a minimum average GPA of 3.0, the student will be notified
by letter that he/she has advanced from provisional status to degree
status. This change in status will also be documented in the student’s
file. All credits of graduate level work earned during provisional
status will be applied toward the degree program unless otherwise
stated.
Student Orientation
Students are required to attend an
orientation session with the program administration during the first
week of the fall semester. This meeting provides incoming students with
an overview of the Bioinformatics program and GMU resources, including
computer facilities, library facilities, offices, and staff. Staff
members from the BCB program as well as other GMU units will attend to
answer questions. Topics include policies and procedures for the
academic programs as well as for addressing student concerns. This
meeting is held at the PW campus.
Temporary Advisor
The student will be assigned a temporary
advisor upon acceptance into the program whether the student status is
degree or provisional. The name and phone
number of the temporary advisor are included in the acceptance letter.
It is imperative that the temporary advisor be contacted as soon as
possible to discuss enrollment in classes.
Computational Resources
The Department of Bioinformatics and
Computational
Biology maintains 3 computer labs for student use. Two of
these labs, room 304B and 327, are also used as classrooms so students
must be aware of course schedulings. Room 320 is available for student
use at all times. Room 304B contains Apple eMacs. Room 327 contains
PC's with both Linux and Windows installed on them. Room 320 has a
combination of eMacs and Windows PC's. All three computer labs have
laser printers maintained within the rooms.
Bioinformatics students are
issued
accounts and access to the student lab facilities. Other
computing platforms may be available for research
by graduate students. Both basic office software and bioinformatics
specific
software is available on the eMacs. Please contact our Computer Support
Technician for a list of current and special request software. The
Computer
Support Technician can also set up your login computer account.
George Mason University provides a
computer account to each student during the duration of their
enrollment in
an academic program. This account allows for email, news, web access,
electronic search, and electronic library access. Please be sure to
check your email frequently for updates on the program, or for general
student
announcements.
Student Research Day
There will be one day
during each of the spring and fall semesters scheduled for student
research presentations. Advanced and graduating students in the Ph.D.
and M.S. programs will be selected to present their current research in
a short research seminar. For M.S. students and for Ph.D. students in
their 2nd year of study in the program, poster session presentations of
research is recommended but is considered optional. We encourage all
other fellow students to attend the presentations.
Student Bullentin Boards
Notices on colloquia, seminars and
conferences are posted on the bullentin board in the hallway outside
the administrative offices on the 3rd floor of the Occoquan Building.
Please take time to visit these boards periodically, as available
internships and upcoming GMU and outside events of interest to our
students are frequently updated. There are additional boards available
for our student posters. These posters reflect some of the current
research areas of our graduate students for other students and faculty
members to view at their leisure.
Student Research Labs
The Bioinformatics programs have
designated student research labs that may be
utilized by
students doing research under the supervision of a specific faculty
member. Although these labs are reserved for students, access must be
approved by the
advising faculty member involved with the specified student research
project.
Master's Program
Procedures
•
Before or during the first semester of study in the M.S. program,
students are required to submit a Plan of Study form with a tentative
Plan of Study approved by an advisor. The M.S. Plan of Study will help
the student create a program time line as well as help ensure all
graduation course work requirements are met. A listing of the
required courses for this degree are on the BCB website, and should be
used as a guide to completing the Plan of Study.
• On
the Plan of Study, the student will need to
address whether s/he is interested in the project or the thesis option
for completion of the M.S. research component. Project students
will need 12 credits of electives. Thesis students will need 9
credits of electives. Any BINF course can be an elective. Courses
in other disciplines can be approved as electives by the student’s
advisor. Students are to ensure they have the prerequisites for
their electives.
• Students will need to decide which faculty member
they would like to work with while doing their project or thesis
research. If he/she agrees, this person will act as the student’s
research advisor. The thesis option requires a committee.
The master’s thesis committee must be approved by the BCB Dept. chair
who will designate a member of the faculty (usually the advisor) as the
thesis committee chair. Thesis advisors will help students select
members for the balance of the thesis committee. The committee
will consist of at least three persons: two must be faculty members
from the Bioinformatics program, and one faculty member may come from
an academic unit outside the program. Students are to
obtain advisors’ and committee members’ signatures on the Plan of
Study. They should bring the form to the program office, and in
the future submit updated and signed versions of the form if the Plan
changes.
• Prior to the semester in which the student plans to
conduct the research component, an M.S. Research Proposal form must be
completed and signed by the research advisor. This form will then
be submitted to the Program Director for review and final
approval. If the thesis or project proposal is approved, the
student may enroll in 3 to 6 credit hours of thesis research (BINF 799)
or 3 credits of project research (BINF 798) at the beginning of the
next semester. Graduate students must maintain continuous
enrollment while writing and submitting a thesis.
• In the semester before students expect to graduate
they are to file a Graduation Intent Form on the Registrar’s
website. The deadline to do this is listed on
the Registrar’s
website every semester.
• Project students can expect to present the results
of their research project in either poster or oral presentation form on
Student Research Day.
• It
is imperative that the MS thesis student review the manuscript
submission procedures provided by University Dissertation and Thesis
Services
http://thesis.gmu.edu/index.html
• Thesis students are required to
present bound copies of the thesis to the department and to the thesis
director.
Doctoral Program
Procedures
The Ph.D. program includes
several important milestones that are documented in the student's file
using program forms that are available online and in the Student
Coordinator's office.
I. Proposed Coursework
The student
should meet with the temporary advisor in his/her first semester to
create a preliminary listing of anticipated coursework, which is
documented on Form #1. Credits from a previous graduate program should
be listed on this sheet. Credits taken in non-degree status at GMU
should also be listed. This form is usually completed during the
initial meeting with the temporary advisor.
II.Dissertation
Director and Committee
- Once a
student has completed over half of his/her required courses, which
should be during the 2nd year
of full time study, the student is to begin work with his/her temporary
advisor to select a general area of scientific investigation and to
identify possible dissertation directors. (Lab Rotations are a means of
investigating the area of research they might wish to pursue.) The
student begins to communicate with those faculty members and finally
selects a faculty member who is willing to become the dissertation
director.
- The
dissertation director has the primary responsibility for leading the
technical direction and content of the work of the student. The
dissertation director must be a member of the Bioinformatics
and Computational Biology program faculty or a well-qualified
scientist external to Mason.
In the latter case the person must also hold at least affiliate status
within the department offering the degree. (Any non-Mason person
serving as dissertation director who cannot be made affiliate faculty
in the department must be approved as Graduate Faculty.) The
appointment of the dissertation director must be approved by the COS
dean.
- The
purpose of the dissertation committee is to guide and direct the
student to ensure that the student has the capability to conduct
first-rate research and that the dissertation work is of publishable
quality in the discipline or interdisciplinary fields of computational
sciences and informatics. A primary role of the committee
is to test the student in accordance with the policies
of the School.
- The
chair of the committee is a Bioinformatics program faculty member who
is familiar with COS and university policies and procedures regarding
the advancement of a student through the process leading to the
doctorate. The chair is responsible for organizing all meetings of the
committee and ensures that the proper process is being followed. The
chair is to work closely with the dissertation director to ensure the
consistency and the quality of the examinations and the dissertation
work.
- A
dissertation committee is formed by the student with the consent of the
dissertation director, the Ph.D. Program Director, and the COS dean.
The committee is to consist of a minimum of three members including the
dissertation director and committee chair. The chair of the
dissertation committee should be a full-time Mason faculty member,
preferably from the BCB Dept. At least two members of the committee
must be BCB program faculty members and at least one must have a Mason
faculty appointment outside the BCB Dept. (The final membership must
represent at least two disciplinary areas.) Beyond these three,
additional experts or advisors from outside Mason may serve on the
committee with the consent of the Bioinformatics program faculty
members on the committee. Once the committee is formed, the
Bioinformatics Program Form #2 listing the committee members
must be completed and signed by all committee members, the program
director, and the COS dean. Ideally, the committee is formed and
approved before the student begins work on the dissertation proposal.
- A
faculty member may leave the committee at any time. The replacement
member must receive the consent of the rest of the dissertation
committee members, the program director, and the COS dean. A new Form
#2 must be completed and submitted for approval.
III.Dissertation
Proposal
• Once
a student has a fully approved dissertation committee and has completed
most of the required courses (or is within a semester or two of taking
the
candidacy
examination), the student may begin to register for BINF
998 Doctoral Dissertation Proposal to develop a proposal. (In
exceptional cases the
student
may register for one semester of 998
before the committee is approved. In these cases the program
office/student coordinator must receive
confirmation
from the
dissertation director that permission for one semester of 998 has been
granted.)
• When
the dissertation director feels the student is ready, the student
undergoes a dissertation proposal defense with the dissertation
committee. The
student is to
supply a copy of the proposal to the
committee members at least two weeks in advance of the attempted
defense.
IV.
Dissertation Proposal Defense
- Students
must prepare a Dissertation Proposal Defense that consists of a written
proposal and an oral presentation to the committee. This proposal
should include a statement of the problem, relevant background
material, preliminary results and a proposed research plan with a time
line.
- The proposal should be given to the student’s
individual committee members at least two weeks prior to the
scheduled proposal defense date. (A copy of the full proposal is also
submitted with Form #3-B.)
- Proposals should contain sufficient text,
illustrations, tables, equations, and bibliography.
- Proposals should discuss hardware/software issues
including computational tools/techniques to be utilized in the
research.
- Proposals
should include a clear set of goals, methods, and models, and a
discussion of the expected results and their anticipated significance.
The discussion should also include any limitations on the generality of
these results.
- The
student will make a 15-20 minute presentation of the proposal to
his/her Doctoral Dissertation Committee and other members of the
academic community. There will then be a closed session for discussion
of the proposal in which the student will answer questions about the
proposal and background material needed to successfully complete the
proposal.
- The proposal defense should be done within a year of
passing the comprehensive exam.
- Proposals
must be approved by the dissertation director and the dissertation
committee, and ultimately by the program director and COS Dean. These
approvals are documented on Form #3-B.
V. Proposal
and Dissertation Credits
• For
students requesting ongoing 998 and 999 credit hours, it is required
that they meet with their committee members prior to the start of each
semester. The
student must show satisfactory progress with his or her
research in order to obtain a Section/CRN of 998 or 999 for the
upcoming semester.
If a committee
exists, all members must agree on the
student’s satisfactory progress, or make a recommendation if the
student is failing to do so. The
Dissertation
Proposal and Research Progress form
should be completed by the student and his or her committee members
during the progress review
meeting. (This
form must be signed and
submitted to the BCB program office before being issued a Section/CRN
to register for 998 or 999.) A student’s
failure to
make satisfactory
progress in his or her dissertation research for two consecutive
semesters may result in termination from the program.
VI. Candidacy Examination
- The Candidacy Examination
consists of written, oral, and computational parts. All parts are
mandatory.
- It
should determine mastery of fundamental knowledge and familiarity with
current research in topics that contribute directly to the dissertation
research area.
- The
computational exam will be given as an assessment exam during the first
semester of enrollment into the program. Students who do poorly on this
entrance exam will be required to take BINF 634 and/or BINF 734.
- The
written (comprehensive) exams will be given once a year in January. The
exam schedule will be announced through the Student Services
Coordinator. Students will be allowed two attempts to successfully pass
the exams.
- The
comprehensive exam will be composed of six exam topics; 1) protein
structure analysis, 2) research methods, 3) biological sequence
analysis, 4) numerical methods for bioinformatics, 5) cellular and
biochemical systems modeling, and 6) either genomics or Biophysics.
Although there is no specific exam named, students should be
knowledgeable in the area of molecular, cellular and biochemistry of
the cell, since this information is essential for understanding the
field of Bioinformatics.
- The
written exams will be administered and taken on campus and completed
without collaboration, in an assigned room. The format of the written
comprehensive exam may change from year to year. Details of the exam
format will be announced to the students one month prior to the
scheduled exam date.
- Students must show competency on all six parts and a
high degree of competency on four of the six parts of the written
exams.
- The
computational assessment and the written exams are graded by faculty
members of the BCB program. The student will be informed of their
results in a timely manner.
- The
Dissertation Proposal Defense is considered the oral portion of the
comprehensive exam. It will be scheduled and administered by the
committee, and will include discussion of the student’s proposed
dissertation research
- Students are
allowed two attempts to successfully pass the Proposal Defense.
VII.
Advancement to Candidacy
1.
After
the student completes all coursework, has passed all portions of the
candidacy exam, has exhausted his/her work on the dissertation
proposal, and
has successfully defended the
proposal to the
dissertation committee, the information is to be documented on Form #3A
and Form #3-B and
the
approved dissertation proposal
attached. These forms constitute the
committee’s recommendation that the student be advanced to candidacy.
2.
After
receipt in the program office, these forms plus the student’s approved
dissertation proposal are forwarded to the COS Dean’s office for
review. If the Dean grants
candidacy the student will be notified via a
mailed letter.
VIII. Dissertation Research Hours
• Once
a student has reached candidacy s/he must be continuously enrolled in
BINF 999, Doctoral Dissertation Research, while working on and
completing the
dissertation.
• To
obtain a Section/CRN for subsequent semesters of 999 the student is to
submit a signed Dissertation Proposal and Research Progress form to the
program office
in the semester prior.
• The total number of credits of
BINF 998-999 for graduation purposes must be at least 24.
(If the student’s work on the proposal and dissertation takes
more than
24 credits, only 24 can be credited toward the program requirements.)
Having reached candidacy, the student must enroll in at least 3 hours
of
999 each
semester until three dissertation hours remain. Once the
candidate has three or fewer hours remaining, s/he may register for one
credit of 999 per
semester. The
candidate must take at least one credit
of 999 in the semester of graduation.
IX. Doctoral Dissertation and
Pre-Defense
1. A dissertation is a
written piece of original thinking and independent performance that
demonstrates the doctoral candidate's mastery of the subjectmatter,
methodologies, and conceptual foundations in their chosen field of
study.
2. Content should:
a. be relevant and current
in
the chosen area
b. demonstrate an
understanding of research and development issues
c. demonstrate a mastery of
computational tools or techniques
d. make a contribution
through either new results or new techniques
e. be of publishable quality
3.
Doctoral
candidates are required to undergo a “pre-defense” of the dissertation
at least 30 days prior to the formal, public defense. All committee
members must attend.
Arrangements
for this are made between the candidate and the committee. Candidates
are to provide their committee members a copy of the dissertation
at
least two weeks prior. If the committee is satisfied with the
candidate’s pre-defense, permission is granted to schedule a public
defense. This
permission is documented on Form
#4
X. Public Dissertation Defense
- When
the doctoral dissertation thesis is completed and a pre-defense has
been successful, the candidate must arrange with his/her committee to
schedule the final defense. Immediately after verifying a date with
members of the committee, candidates are to contact the Student
Coordinator for the Bioinformatics program to schedule a room and to
make a public announcement.
- The
final dissertation must be given to the student’s committee members for
review at least two weeks before the final defense is scheduled.
- It
is imperative that the doctoral candidate review the manuscript
submission procedures provided by University Dissertation and Thesis
Services. http://thesis.gmu.edu/index.html
- The
candidate is responsible for getting his/her thesis bound for COS
archives. (We suggest brown or rust color with dissertation title and
candidate’s name on the spine of the book.) Please refer to the COS
graduates’ theses available for review in the COS office in Fairfax.
They may not be removed from the room for review.
- Candidate
is to submit Defense of Doctoral Thesis Form #5 to
the BCB program office. It is required that bound copies of the
dissertation are provided to the department, the dissertation director,
and the committee chair. It is recommended but not required that bound
copies of the dissertation are provided to the remaining committee
members.
Timelines for Manuscript
For MS and PhD students who plan
to defend their thesis or dissertation in any given semester, there are
a series of deadlines to follow.
• 8 Weeks
before Submitting Your Manuscript to the Library Contact the Thesis and
Dissertation Coordinator and arrange a Format Review
http://thesis.gmu.edu/index.html
• At Least 7 Weeks before Submitting Your Manuscript to the Library submit
draft manuscript to your commitee
• At Least 5 Weeks before Submitting Your Manuscript to
the Library
Do a
pre-defense with your committee—Mandatory for PhD students; recommended
for MS thesis students.
Submit date
and desired time of public defense to student services coordinator for
room scheduling
• At Least 3
Weeks before Submitting Your Manuscript to the Library Submit final
manuscript to your committee. Student services coordinator
announces your
public defense
• At Least 1
Week before Submitting Your Manuscript to the Library have your Public Defense
The absolute deadlines
for the above processes are dependent on the “Thesis and Dissertation
Submission Deadline”, which is different each semester. To
find out
what it is, go to the Registrar’s website. Click Students, then
Graduation Services, then Timelines.
Guidelines for the content
and general format of the doctoral dissertation may be found at http://thesis.gmu.edu/index.html .
Contact the Thesis and
Dissertation Coordinator at
(703) 993-2222,
Fenwick Library, for step-by-step instructions on preparing the
dissertation.
XI. Graduation Procedures
1.
Students can access graduation information on the Web
at http://registrar.gmu.edu/gif/index.html . They must complete a
Graduation Intent Form
online.
2. The
Application for Graduation must be completed by the student and
submitted to the BCB program office. It is reviewed and signed by
the Program Director and the Dean’s office. A copy is made for the
student’s file and for verification of the program requirements. It is
forwarded to the graduation section of the Registrar’s office. This
form is also available on the web at the same URL as above.
The deadlines to apply to graduate and to submit your
dissertation manuscript vary each semester. Check the Registrar’s
website for a
semester in
advance.