Department of Mathematics
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- Qingci An (F. Lu) Identifiability and data-adaptive RKHS Tikhonov regularization in nonparametric learning problems
- Letian Chen (J. Bernstein) On Mean Curvature Flows coming out of Cones
- Ben Dees (C. Mese) On the Singular Sets of Harmonic Maps into F -Connected Complexes
- Lili He (H. Lindblad) The linear stability of weakly charged and slowly rotating Kerr Newman family of charged black holes
- Kalyani Kansal (D. Savitt) Codimension one intersections between components of the Emerton-Gee stack for GL 2
- Quanjun Lang (F. Lu) Learning kernels with nonlocal dependence in mean-field equations and the extension problem on Dirichlet space
- Yujie Luo (Y. Sire) Minimal log discrepancy and its applications in birational geometry
- Keaton Stubis (D. Savitt) Eisenstein Series with Class Number Coefficients Constructed from the Weil Representation
- Rong Tang (Y. Sire) Nonlocal Filtration Equations and Fractional Curvature Flows
- Xiangze Zeng (V. Shokurov) Boundedness of n -Complements on Algebraic Surfaces
- Zehong Zhang (F. Lu) Multi-agent systems: observability, classification and clustering prediction
- Luochen Zhao (Y. Sakellaridis) Topics in p -adic analysis
- Tslil Clingman (E. Riehl) Towards a theory of proof relevant categories
- Zongyipoan Lin (D. Savitt) Crystalline lifts of Galois representations
- David Myers (E. Riehl) Symmetry, Geometry, Modality
- Caroline VanBlargan (Y. Wang) Stability of Quermassintegral Inequalities
- Junyan Zhang (H. Lindblad) The Free-Boundary Problems in Inviscid Magnetohydrodynamics with or without Surface Tension
- Jin Zhou (M. Maggioni) Learning multiscale approximations of functions between manifolds
- Daniel Fuentes-Keuthan (E. Riehl) Goodwillie Towers of Infinity Categories and Desuspension
- Xiaoqi Huang (C. Sogge) Weyl formulae for Schrödinger operators with critically singular potentials
- Hanveen Koh (B. Smithling) Towards a conjecture of Pappas and Rapoport on a scheme attached to the symplectic group
- Patrick Martin (M. Maggioni) Multiplicatively Perturbed Least Squares for Dimension Reduction
- Xiyuan Wang (D. Savitt) Topics in Galois representations
Jordan Paschke (C. Sogge) Uniform Weyl Asymptotics for Off-Diagonal Spectral Projections
- Daniel Ginsberg (H. Lindblad) The free boundary problem for Euler’s equations
- Apurva Nakade (N. Kitchloo) Manifold Calculus and Convex Integration
- Cheng Zhang (C. Sogge) Oscillatory Integrals and Eigenfunction Restriction Estimates
- Zehua Zhao (B. Dodson) Long time dynamics for nonlinear Schrödinger equations at critical regularity
Older Theses
- Christopher Kauffman (H. Lindblad) Global Stability for Charged Scalar Fields in Spacetimes close to Minkowski
- Harry Lang (M. Maggioni) Streaming Coresets for High-Dimensional Geometry
- Tianyi Ren (C. Sogge) Resolvent Estimates for the Laplacian in the Euclidean Space and on the Sphere
- Shengwen Wang (J. Bernstein) Some results on the entropy of closed hypersurfaces and topology through singularities in mean curvature flow
- Emmett Wyman (C. Sogge) Explicit bounds on integrals of eigenfunctions over curves in surfaces of nonpositive curvature
- Ben Diamond (C. Consani) Smooth Surfaces in Smooth Fourfolds with Vanishing First Chern Class
- Chenyun Luo (H. Lindblad) On the motion of the free surface of a compressible liquid
- Yakun Xi (C. Sogge) Kakeya-Nikondym Problems and Geodesic Restriction Estimates for Eigenfunctions.
- Jon Beardsley (J. Morava) Coalgebraic Structure and Intermediate Hopf-Galois Extensions of Thom Spectra in Quasicategories
- Stephen Cattell (N. Kitchloo) The Completion of Dominant K-Theory
- Po-Yao Chang (J. Spruck) S elf-shrinkers to the mean curvature flow asymptotic to isoparametric cones
- Vitaly Lorman (N. Kitchloo) Real Johnson-Wilson Theories and Computations
- Kalina Mincheva (C. Consani) Semiring Congruences and Tropical Geometry
- Chenyang Su (J. Spruck) Starshaped locally convex hypersurfaces with curvature and boundary
- Jai Ung Jun (C. Consani) Algebraic geometry over semi-structure and hyper-structure of characteristic one
- John Ross (W. Minicozzi) Rigidity Results of Lambda-Hypersurfaces
- Jeffrey Tolliver (C. Consani) Hyperstructures and Idempotent Semistructures
- Xing Wang (C. Sogge) Asymptotic Behavior of Spectrums for Elliptic Pesdodifferential Operators
- Min Xue (C. Sogge) Concerning the Klein-Gordon equation on asymptotically Euclidean manifolds
- Junyan Zhu (B. Shiffman) Hole Probabilities of SU(m+1) Gaussian Random Polynomials
- Arash Karami (B. Shiffman) Zeros of random Reinhardt polynomials
- Matthew McGonagle (W. Minicozzi) The Gaussian Isoperimetric Problem and the Self-Shrinkers of Mean Curvature Flow
- Duncan Sinclair (C. Mese) Heat Kernels on Riemannian Polyhedra and Heat Flows into NPC Manifolds
- Hongtan Sun (C. Sogge) Strichartz Estimates for Wave and Schrödinger Equations on Hyperbolic Trapped Domains
- Tim Tran (B. Shiffman) Continuity of the Asymptotics of Expected Zeros of Fewnomials
- Xuehua Chen (C. Sogge) An Improvement on eigenfunction restriction estimates for compact boundaryless Riemannian manifolds with nonpositive sectional curvature
- Leili Shahriyari (W. Minicozzi) Translating graphs by mean curvature flow
- Peng Shao (C. Sogge) Sobolev resolvent estimates for the Laplace-Beltrami operator on compact manifolds
- Ling Xiao (J. Spruck) Flow Problems in Hyperbolic Space
- Sinan Ariturk (C. Sogge) Concentration and vanishing of eigenfunctions on a manifold with boundary
- Caleb Hussey (W. Minicozzi) Classification and analysis of low index mean curvature flow self-shrinkers
- Jingzhou Sun (B. Shiffman) Expected Euler characteristic of excursion sets of random holomorphic sections on complex manifolds
- Joseph Cutrone (V. Shokurov) Symmetric Sarkisov Links of Fano Threefolds
- Michael Limarzi (T. Ono) On a Cohomological Study of Heisenberg Groups over The Ring of Algebraic Integers
- Longzhi Lin (W. Minicozzi) On the existence of closed geodesics and uniqueness of weakly harmonic maps
- Nicholas Marshburn (V. Shokurov) Smooth Weak Fano Threefolds
- Xin Yu (C. Sogge) Strichartz Estimates and Strauss Conjecture on Various Settings
- John Baber (B. Shiffman) Scaled correlations of critical points of random sections on Riemann surfaces
- Romie Banerjee (J. Boardman, S. Wilson) Real Johnson-Wilson theories and non-immersions of projective spaces
- Jonathan Dahl (C. Mese) Existence and structure of solutions of Steiner problems in optimal transport
- Stephen Kleene (W. Minicozzi) Singular behavior of minimal surfaces and mean curvature flow
- Susama Agarwala (J. Morava) The geometry of renormalization
- Abhishek Banerjee (C. Consani) Nearby cycles, Archimedean complex and periodicity in cyclic homology
- Christine Breiner (W. Minicozzi) Embedded minimal surfaces of finite topology and one end
- Yifei Chen (V. Shokurov) Strong rational connectedness of toric varieties
- Jing-Cheng Jiang (C. Sogge) Bilinear Strichartz estimates in two dimensional compact manifolds and cubic nonlinear Schrödinger equations
- Hamid Hezari (S. Zelditch) Eigenvalues and eigenfunctions of Schrödinger operators: Inverse spectral theory; and the zeros of eigenfunctions
- Siddique Khan (W. Minicozzi) Embedded minimal disks with curvature blow-up on a line segment
- Joel Kramer (W. Minicozzi) Embedded minimal spheres in 3-manifolds
- Reza Seyyedali (R. Wentworth) Balanced metrics in Kahler geometry
- Thomas Wright (T. Ono) On convergence of singular series for a pair of quadratic Forms
- Patrick Zulkowski (C. Mese) The Plateau problem in Alexandrov spaces satisfying the Perel’man conjecture
- Benjamin Baugher (S. Zelditch) Statistics of critical points in Kahler geometry and string theory
- Sung Rak Choi (V. Shokurov) The geography of log models and its applications
- Brian Macdonald (B. Shiffman) Statistics of non-real zeros and critical points of systems of real random polynomials in several variables
- Shuai Wang (T. Ono) On a certain triple system, elliptic curves and Gauss theory of quadratic forms
- Qi Zhong (S. Zelditch) Energies of zeros of random sections on Riemann surfaces
Scott Zrebiec (B. Shiffman) Hole Probability and Large Deviations in the Distribution of the Zeros of Gaussian Random Holomorphic Functions
- Ann Stewart (C. Sogge) Existence theorems for some nonlinear hyperbolic equations on a waveguide
- Hsin-Hao Su (J. Boardman) The E (1,2) Cohomolgy of the Eilenberg-Mac Lane Space Lane K(Z,3)
- Giuseppe Tinaglia (W. Minicozzi) Multi-valued Graphs In Embedded Constant Mean Curvature Disks
- Mike Krebs (R. Wentworth) Toledo Invariants on 2-Orbifolds
- Eun-Kyoung Lee (T. Ono) On Certain Cohomological Invariants of Algebraic Number Fields
- Brian Dean (W. Minicozzi) Some Results on Stable Compact Embedded Minimal Surfaces in 3-Manifolds
- Seok-Min Lee (T. Ono) On Certain Cohomological Invariants of Quadratic Number Fields
- Sirong Zhang (W. Minicozzi) Curvature Estimates for Constant Mean Curvature Surfaces in Three Manifolds
- Xiangjin Xu (C. Sogge) Eigenfunction Estimates on Compact Manifolds with Boundary and Hörmander Multiplier Theorem
- Byungchul Cha (C. Popescu) Vanishing of Some Cohomology Groups and Bounds for the Shafarevich-Tate Groups of Elliptic Curves
- Jason Metcalfe (C. Sogge) Global Strichartz Estimates for Solutions of the Wave Equation Exterior to a Convex Obstacle
Jung-Jo Lee (J. Shalika) Bounding Ranks of Elliptic Curves
- Jihun Park (V. Shokurov) Fano Fibrations Over a Discrete Valuation Ring
- Ramin Takloo-Bighash (J. Shalika) The Integral of Novodvorsky and the Local p-adic Factors of the Spinor L-function of the Group
- Takeshi Torii (J. Morava) One Dimensional Formal Group Laws of Height N and N-1
- Alexandru Tupan (V. Kolyvagin) Congruences for Modular Forms
- Hemin Yang (J. Boardman, W. Wilson) The Hit Problem for w (4) over F 2 by Differential Operator Algebra
- Ivan Cheltsov (V. Shokurov) Log Models of Birationally Rigid Varieties
- Joshua Neuheisel (S. Zelditch) The Asymptotic Distribution of Nodal Sets on Spheres
- Diego Socolinsky (J. Spruck) A Variational Approach to Image Fusion
- Terutake Abe (V. Shokurov) Classification of Exceptional Surface Complements
- Florin Ambro (V. Shokurov) The Adjunction Conjecture Applications
- Satyan Devadoss (J. Morava) Tessellations of Moduli Spaces and the Mosaic Operad
- Heuisu Ryu (V. Kolyvagin) Algorithm for Non-Triviality of Shafarevich-Tate Group Using Heegner Points for Some Family of Elliptic Curves
- Guoling Tong (J. Shalika) The Shimura Integral and the Standard L-function of U(3)
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This collection contains a selection of the latest doctoral theses completed at the School of Mathematics. Please note this is not a comprehensive record.
This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. In most cases, these works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.
Recent Submissions
Spencer cohomology, supersymmetry and the structure of killing superalgebras , higher triangulated categories and fourier-mukai transforms on abelian surfaces and threefolds , investigating computer aided assessment of mathematical proof by varying the format of students' answers and the structure of assessment design by stack , estimation and application of bayesian hawkes process models , novel statistical learning approaches for open banking-type data , statistical and machine learning approaches to genomic medicine , using markov chain monte carlo in vector generalized linear mixed models: with an application to integral projection models in ecology , symmetries of riemann surfaces and magnetic monopoles , kan extensions in probability theory , regression analysis for extreme value responses and covariates , categorical torelli theorems for fano threefolds , laplacians for structure recovery on directed and higher-order graphs , efficient interior point algorithms for large scale convex optimization problems , solving sampling and optimization problems via tamed langevin mcmc algorithms in the presence of super-linearities , algebraic combinatorial structures for singular stochastic dynamics , stochastic modelling and inference of ocean transport , convergence problems for singular stochastic dynamics , classification of supersymmetric black holes in ads₅ , bps cohomology for 2-calabi—yau categories , quantitative finance informed machine learning .
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Mathematics PhD theses
A selection of Mathematics PhD thesis titles is listed below, some of which are available online:
2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991
Melanie Kobras – Low order models of storm track variability
Ed Clark – Vectorial Variational Problems in L∞ and Applications to Data Assimilation
Katerina Christou – Modelling PDEs in Population Dynamics using Fixed and Moving Meshes
Chiara Cecilia Maiocchi – Unstable Periodic Orbits: a language to interpret the complexity of chaotic systems
Samuel R Harrison – Stalactite Inspired Thin Film Flow
Elena Saggioro – Causal network approaches for the study of sub-seasonal to seasonal variability and predictability
Cathie A Wells – Reformulating aircraft routing algorithms to reduce fuel burn and thus CO 2 emissions
Jennifer E. Israelsson – The spatial statistical distribution for multiple rainfall intensities over Ghana
Giulia Carigi – Ergodic properties and response theory for a stochastic two-layer model of geophysical fluid dynamics
André Macedo – Local-global principles for norms
Tsz Yan Leung – Weather Predictability: Some Theoretical Considerations
Jehan Alswaihli – Iteration of Inverse Problems and Data Assimilation Techniques for Neural Field Equations
Jemima M Tabeart – On the treatment of correlated observation errors in data assimilation
Chris Davies – Computer Simulation Studies of Dynamics and Self-Assembly Behaviour of Charged Polymer Systems
Birzhan Ayanbayev – Some Problems in Vectorial Calculus of Variations in L∞
Penpark Sirimark – Mathematical Modelling of Liquid Transport in Porous Materials at Low Levels of Saturation
Adam Barker – Path Properties of Levy Processes
Hasen Mekki Öztürk – Spectra of Indefinite Linear Operator Pencils
Carlo Cafaro – Information gain that convective-scale models bring to probabilistic weather forecasts
Nicola Thorn – The boundedness and spectral properties of multiplicative Toeplitz operators
James Jackaman – Finite element methods as geometric structure preserving algorithms
Changqiong Wang - Applications of Monte Carlo Methods in Studying Polymer Dynamics
Jack Kirk - The molecular dynamics and rheology of polymer melts near the flat surface
Hussien Ali Hussien Abugirda - Linear and Nonlinear Non-Divergence Elliptic Systems of Partial Differential Equations
Andrew Gibbs - Numerical methods for high frequency scattering by multiple obstacles (PDF-2.63MB)
Mohammad Al Azah - Fast Evaluation of Special Functions by the Modified Trapezium Rule (PDF-913KB)
Katarzyna (Kasia) Kozlowska - Riemann-Hilbert Problems and their applications in mathematical physics (PDF-1.16MB)
Anna Watkins - A Moving Mesh Finite Element Method and its Application to Population Dynamics (PDF-2.46MB)
Niall Arthurs - An Investigation of Conservative Moving-Mesh Methods for Conservation Laws (PDF-1.1MB)
Samuel Groth - Numerical and asymptotic methods for scattering by penetrable obstacles (PDF-6.29MB)
Katherine E. Howes - Accounting for Model Error in Four-Dimensional Variational Data Assimilation (PDF-2.69MB)
Jian Zhu - Multiscale Computer Simulation Studies of Entangled Branched Polymers (PDF-1.69MB)
Tommy Liu - Stochastic Resonance for a Model with Two Pathways (PDF-11.4MB)
Matthew Paul Edgington - Mathematical modelling of bacterial chemotaxis signalling pathways (PDF-9.04MB)
Anne Reinarz - Sparse space-time boundary element methods for the heat equation (PDF-1.39MB)
Adam El-Said - Conditioning of the Weak-Constraint Variational Data Assimilation Problem for Numerical Weather Prediction (PDF-2.64MB)
Nicholas Bird - A Moving-Mesh Method for High Order Nonlinear Diffusion (PDF-1.30MB)
Charlotta Jasmine Howarth - New generation finite element methods for forward seismic modelling (PDF-5,52MB)
Aldo Rota - From the classical moment problem to the realizability problem on basic semi-algebraic sets of generalized functions (PDF-1.0MB)
Sarah Lianne Cole - Truncation Error Estimates for Mesh Refinement in Lagrangian Hydrocodes (PDF-2.84MB)
Alexander J. F. Moodey - Instability and Regularization for Data Assimilation (PDF-1.32MB)
Dale Partridge - Numerical Modelling of Glaciers: Moving Meshes and Data Assimilation (PDF-3.19MB)
Joanne A. Waller - Using Observations at Different Spatial Scales in Data Assimilation for Environmental Prediction (PDF-6.75MB)
Faez Ali AL-Maamori - Theory and Examples of Generalised Prime Systems (PDF-503KB)
Mark Parsons - Mathematical Modelling of Evolving Networks
Natalie L.H. Lowery - Classification methods for an ill-posed reconstruction with an application to fuel cell monitoring
David Gilbert - Analysis of large-scale atmospheric flows
Peter Spence - Free and Moving Boundary Problems in Ion Beam Dynamics (PDF-5MB)
Timothy S. Palmer - Modelling a single polymer entanglement (PDF-5.02MB)
Mohamad Shukor Talib - Dynamics of Entangled Polymer Chain in a Grid of Obstacles (PDF-2.49MB)
Cassandra A.J. Moran - Wave scattering by harbours and offshore structures
Ashley Twigger - Boundary element methods for high frequency scattering
David A. Smith - Spectral theory of ordinary and partial linear differential operators on finite intervals (PDF-1.05MB)
Stephen A. Haben - Conditioning and Preconditioning of the Minimisation Problem in Variational Data Assimilation (PDF-3.51MB)
Jing Cao - Molecular dynamics study of polymer melts (PDF-3.98MB)
Bonhi Bhattacharya - Mathematical Modelling of Low Density Lipoprotein Metabolism. Intracellular Cholesterol Regulation (PDF-4.06MB)
Tamsin E. Lee - Modelling time-dependent partial differential equations using a moving mesh approach based on conservation (PDF-2.17MB)
Polly J. Smith - Joint state and parameter estimation using data assimilation with application to morphodynamic modelling (PDF-3Mb)
Corinna Burkard - Three-dimensional Scattering Problems with applications to Optical Security Devices (PDF-1.85Mb)
Laura M. Stewart - Correlated observation errors in data assimilation (PDF-4.07MB)
R.D. Giddings - Mesh Movement via Optimal Transportation (PDF-29.1MbB)
G.M. Baxter - 4D-Var for high resolution, nested models with a range of scales (PDF-1.06MB)
C. Spencer - A generalization of Talbot's theorem about King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table.
P. Jelfs - A C-property satisfying RKDG Scheme with Application to the Morphodynamic Equations (PDF-11.7MB)
L. Bennetts - Wave scattering by ice sheets of varying thickness
M. Preston - Boundary Integral Equations method for 3-D water waves
J. Percival - Displacement Assimilation for Ocean Models (PDF - 7.70MB)
D. Katz - The Application of PV-based Control Variable Transformations in Variational Data Assimilation (PDF- 1.75MB)
S. Pimentel - Estimation of the Diurnal Variability of sea surface temperatures using numerical modelling and the assimilation of satellite observations (PDF-5.9MB)
J.M. Morrell - A cell by cell anisotropic adaptive mesh Arbitrary Lagrangian Eulerian method for the numerical solution of the Euler equations (PDF-7.7MB)
L. Watkinson - Four dimensional variational data assimilation for Hamiltonian problems
M. Hunt - Unique extension of atomic functionals of JB*-Triples
D. Chilton - An alternative approach to the analysis of two-point boundary value problems for linear evolutionary PDEs and applications
T.H.A. Frame - Methods of targeting observations for the improvement of weather forecast skill
C. Hughes - On the topographical scattering and near-trapping of water waves
B.V. Wells - A moving mesh finite element method for the numerical solution of partial differential equations and systems
D.A. Bailey - A ghost fluid, finite volume continuous rezone/remap Eulerian method for time-dependent compressible Euler flows
M. Henderson - Extending the edge-colouring of graphs
K. Allen - The propagation of large scale sediment structures in closed channels
D. Cariolaro - The 1-Factorization problem and same related conjectures
A.C.P. Steptoe - Extreme functionals and Stone-Weierstrass theory of inner ideals in JB*-Triples
D.E. Brown - Preconditioners for inhomogeneous anisotropic problems with spherical geometry in ocean modelling
S.J. Fletcher - High Order Balance Conditions using Hamiltonian Dynamics for Numerical Weather Prediction
C. Johnson - Information Content of Observations in Variational Data Assimilation
M.A. Wakefield - Bounds on Quantities of Physical Interest
M. Johnson - Some problems on graphs and designs
A.C. Lemos - Numerical Methods for Singular Differential Equations Arising from Steady Flows in Channels and Ducts
R.K. Lashley - Automatic Generation of Accurate Advection Schemes on Structured Grids and their Application to Meteorological Problems
J.V. Morgan - Numerical Methods for Macroscopic Traffic Models
M.A. Wlasak - The Examination of Balanced and Unbalanced Flow using Potential Vorticity in Atmospheric Modelling
M. Martin - Data Assimilation in Ocean circulation models with systematic errors
K.W. Blake - Moving Mesh Methods for Non-Linear Parabolic Partial Differential Equations
J. Hudson - Numerical Techniques for Morphodynamic Modelling
A.S. Lawless - Development of linear models for data assimilation in numerical weather prediction .
C.J.Smith - The semi lagrangian method in atmospheric modelling
T.C. Johnson - Implicit Numerical Schemes for Transcritical Shallow Water Flow
M.J. Hoyle - Some Approximations to Water Wave Motion over Topography.
P. Samuels - An Account of Research into an Area of Analytical Fluid Mechnaics. Volume II. Some mathematical Proofs of Property u of the Weak End of Shocks.
M.J. Martin - Data Assimulation in Ocean Circulation with Systematic Errors
P. Sims - Interface Tracking using Lagrangian Eulerian Methods.
P. Macabe - The Mathematical Analysis of a Class of Singular Reaction-Diffusion Systems.
B. Sheppard - On Generalisations of the Stone-Weisstrass Theorem to Jordan Structures.
S. Leary - Least Squares Methods with Adjustable Nodes for Steady Hyperbolic PDEs.
I. Sciriha - On Some Aspects of Graph Spectra.
P.A. Burton - Convergence of flux limiter schemes for hyperbolic conservation laws with source terms.
J.F. Goodwin - Developing a practical approach to water wave scattering problems.
N.R.T. Biggs - Integral equation embedding methods in wave-diffraction methods.
L.P. Gibson - Bifurcation analysis of eigenstructure assignment control in a simple nonlinear aircraft model.
A.K. Griffith - Data assimilation for numerical weather prediction using control theory. .
J. Bryans - Denotational semantic models for real-time LOTOS.
I. MacDonald - Analysis and computation of steady open channel flow .
A. Morton - Higher order Godunov IMPES compositional modelling of oil reservoirs.
S.M. Allen - Extended edge-colourings of graphs.
M.E. Hubbard - Multidimensional upwinding and grid adaptation for conservation laws.
C.J. Chikunji - On the classification of finite rings.
S.J.G. Bell - Numerical techniques for smooth transformation and regularisation of time-varying linear descriptor systems.
D.J. Staziker - Water wave scattering by undulating bed topography .
K.J. Neylon - Non-symmetric methods in the modelling of contaminant transport in porous media. .
D.M. Littleboy - Numerical techniques for eigenstructure assignment by output feedback in aircraft applications .
M.P. Dainton - Numerical methods for the solution of systems of uncertain differential equations with application in numerical modelling of oil recovery from underground reservoirs .
M.H. Mawson - The shallow-water semi-geostrophic equations on the sphere. .
S.M. Stringer - The use of robust observers in the simulation of gas supply networks .
S.L. Wakelin - Variational principles and the finite element method for channel flows. .
E.M. Dicks - Higher order Godunov black-oil simulations for compressible flow in porous media .
C.P. Reeves - Moving finite elements and overturning solutions .
A.J. Malcolm - Data dependent triangular grid generation. .
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PhD Dissertations
In 1909 the department awarded its first PhD to Grace M. Bareis , whose dissertation was directed by Professor Harry W. Kuhn. The department began awarding PhD degrees on a regular basis around 1930, when a formal doctoral program was established as a result of the appointment of Tibor Radó as a professor at our department. To date, the department has awarded over 800 PhD degrees. An average of approximately 15 dissertations per year have been added in recent times. Find below a list of PhD theses completed in our program since 1952. (Additionally, search Ohio State at Math Genealogy , which also includes some theses from other OSU departments.)
Recent PhD Theses - Applied Mathematics
2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024
PhD Theses 2024
Phd theses 2023, phd theses 2022, phd theses 2019, phd theses 2018, phd theses 2017, phd theses 2016, phd theses 2015, phd theses 2014, phd theses 2013, phd theses 2012, phd theses 2011, phd theses 2010, phd theses 2009, phd theses 2008, phd theses 2007.
Ph.D. Program Overview
Description.
The graduate program in the field of mathematics at Cornell leads to the Ph.D. degree, which takes most students five to six years of graduate study to complete. One feature that makes the program at Cornell particularly attractive is the broad range of interests of the faculty . The department has outstanding groups in the areas of algebra, algebraic geometry, analysis, applied mathematics, combinatorics, dynamical systems, geometry, logic, Lie groups, number theory, probability, and topology. The field also maintains close ties with distinguished graduate programs in the fields of applied mathematics , computer science , operations research , and statistics .
Core Courses
A normal course load for a beginning graduate student is three courses per term.
There are no qualifying exams, but the program requires that all students pass four courses to be selected from the six core courses. First-year students are allowed to place out of some (possibly, all) of the core courses. In order to place out of a course, students should contact the faculty member who is teaching the course during the current academic year, and that faculty member will make a decision. The minimum passing grade for the core courses is B-; no grade is assigned for placing out of a core course.
At least two core courses should be taken (or placed out) by the end of the first year. At least four core courses should be taken (or placed out) by the end of the second year (cumulative). These time requirements can be waived for students with health problems or other significant non-academic problems. They can be also waived for students who take time-consuming courses in another area (for example, CS) and who have strong support from a faculty; requests from such students should be made before the beginning of the spring semester.
The core courses are distributed among three main areas: analysis, algebra and topology/geometry. A student must pass at least one course from each group. All entering graduate students are encouraged to eventually take all six core courses with the option of an S/U grade for two of them.
The six core courses are:
MATH 6110, Real Analysis
MATH 6120, Complex Analysis
MATH 6310, Algebra 1
MATH 6320, Algebra 2
MATH 6510, Introductory Algebraic Topology
MATH 6520, Differentiable Manifolds.
Students who are not ready to take some of the core courses may take MATH 4130-4140, Introduction to Analysis, and/or MATH 4330-4340, Introduction to Algebra, which are the honors versions of our core undergraduate courses.
"What is...?" Seminar
The "What Is...?" Seminar is a series of talks given by faculty in the graduate field of Mathematics. Speakers are selected by an organizing committee of graduate students. The goal of the seminar is to aid students in finding advisors.
Schedule for the "What Is...?" seminar
Special Committee
The Cornell Graduate School requires that every student selects a special committee (in particular, a thesis adviser, who is the chair or the committee) by the end of the third semester.
The emphasis in the Graduate School at Cornell is on individualized instruction and training for independent investigation. There are very few formal requirements and each student develops a program in conjunction with his or her special committee, which consists of three faculty members, some of which may be chosen from outside the field of mathematics.
Entering students are not assigned special committees. Such students may contact any of the members on the Advising Committee if they have questions or need advice.
Current Advising Committee
Analysis / Probability / Dynamical Systems / Logic: Lionel Levine Geometry / Topology / Combinatorics: Kathryn Mann Probability / Statistics: Philippe Sosoe Applied Mathematics Liaison: Richard Rand
Admission to Candidacy
To be admitted formally to candidacy for the Ph.D. degree, the student must pass the oral admission to candidacy examination or A exam. This must be completed before the beginning of the student's fourth year. Upon passing the A exam, the student will be awarded (at his/her request) an M.S. degree without thesis.
The admission to candidacy examination is given to determine if the student is “ready to begin work on a thesis.” The content and methods of examination are agreed on by the student and his/her special committee before the examination. The student must be prepared to answer questions on the proposed area of research, and to pass the exam, he/she must demonstrate expertise beyond just mastery of basic mathematics covered in the core graduate courses.
To receive an advanced degree a student must fulfill the residence requirements of the Graduate School. One unit of residence is granted for successful completion of one semester of full-time study, as judged by the chair of the special committee. The Ph.D. program requires a minimum of six residence units. This is not a difficult requirement to satisfy since the program generally takes five to six years to complete. A student who has done graduate work at another institution may petition to transfer residence credit but may not receive more than two such credits.
The candidate must write a thesis that represents creative work and contains original results in that area. The research is carried on independently by the candidate under the supervision of the chairperson of the special committee. By the time of the oral admission to candidacy examination, the candidate should have selected as chairperson of the committee the faculty member who will supervise the research. When the thesis is completed, the student presents his/her results at the thesis defense or B Exam. All doctoral students take a Final Examination (the B Exam, which is the oral defense of the dissertation) upon completion of all requirements for the degree, no earlier than one month before completion of the minimum registration requirement.
Masters Degree in the Minor Field
Ph.D. students in the field of mathematics may earn a Special Master's of Science in Computer Science. Interested students must apply to the Graduate School using a form available for this purpose. To be eligible for this degree, the student must have a member representing the minor field on the special committee and pass the A-exam in the major field. The rules and the specific requirements for each master's program are explained on the referenced page.
Cornell will award at most one master's degree to any student. In particular, a student awarded a master's degree in a minor field will not be eligible for a master's degree in the major field.
Graduate Student Funding
Funding commitments made at the time of admission to the Ph.D. program are typically for a period of five years. Support in the sixth year is available by application, as needed. Support in the seventh year is only available by request from an advisor, and dependent on the availability of teaching lines. Following a policy from the Cornell Graduate School, students who require more than seven years to complete their degree shall not be funded as teaching assistants after the 14th semester.
Special Requests
Students who have special requests should first discuss them with their Ph.D. advisor (or with a field member with whom they work, if they don't have an advisor yet). If the advisor (or field faculty) supports the request, then it should be sent to the Director of Graduate Studies.
Home > College of Natural Sciences > Mathematics > Mathematics Theses, Projects, and Dissertations
Mathematics Theses, Projects, and Dissertations
Theses/projects/dissertations from 2024 2024.
On Cheeger Constants of Knots , Robert Lattimer
Information Based Approach for Detecting Change Points in Inverse Gaussian Model with Applications , Alexis Anne Wallace
Theses/Projects/Dissertations from 2023 2023
DNA SELF-ASSEMBLY OF TRAPEZOHEDRAL GRAPHS , Hytham Abdelkarim
An Exposition of the Curvature of Warped Product Manifolds , Angelina Bisson
Jackknife Empirical Likelihood Tests for Equality of Generalized Lorenz Curves , Anton Butenko
MATHEMATICS BEHIND MACHINE LEARNING , Rim Hammoud
Statistical Analysis of Health Habits for Incoming College Students , Wendy Isamara Lizarraga Noriega
Reverse Mathematics of Ramsey's Theorem , Nikolay Maslov
Distance Correlation Based Feature Selection in Random Forest , Jose Munoz-Lopez
Constructing Hyperbolic Polygons in the Poincaré Disk , Akram Zakaria Samweil
KNOT EQUIVALENCE , Jacob Trubey
Theses/Projects/Dissertations from 2022 2022
SYMMETRIC GENERATIONS AND AN ALGORITHM TO PROVE RELATIONS , Diddier Andrade
The Examination of the Arithmetic Surface (3, 5) Over Q , Rachel J. Arguelles
Error Terms for the Trapezoid, Midpoint, and Simpson's Rules , Jessica E. Coen
de Rham Cohomology, Homotopy Invariance and the Mayer-Vietoris Sequence , Stacey Elizabeth Cox
Symmetric Generation , Ana Gonzalez
SYMMETRIC PRESENTATIONS OF FINITE GROUPS AND RELATED TOPICS , Samar Mikhail Kasouha
Simple Groups and Related Topics , Simrandeep Kaur
Homomorphic Images and Related Topics , Alejandro Martinez
LATTICE REDUCTION ALGORITHMS , Juan Ortega
THE DECOMPOSITION OF THE SPACE OF ALGEBRAIC CURVATURE TENSORS , Katelyn Sage Risinger
Verifying Sudoku Puzzles , Chelsea Schweer
AN EXPOSITION OF ELLIPTIC CURVE CRYPTOGRAPHY , Travis Severns
Theses/Projects/Dissertations from 2021 2021
Non-Abelian Finite Simple Groups as Homomorphic Images , Sandra Bahena
Matroids Determinable by Two Partial Representations , Aurora Calderon Dojaquez
SYMMETRIC REPRESENTATIONS OF FINITE GROUPS AND RELATED TOPICS , Connie Corona
Symmetric Presentation of Finite Groups, and Related Topics , Marina Michelle Duchesne
MEASURE AND INTEGRATION , JeongHwan Lee
A Study in Applications of Continued Fractions , Karen Lynn Parrish
Partial Representations for Ternary Matroids , Ebony Perez
Theses/Projects/Dissertations from 2020 2020
Sum of Cubes of the First n Integers , Obiamaka L. Agu
Permutation and Monomial Progenitors , Crystal Diaz
Tile Based Self-Assembly of the Rook's Graph , Ernesto Gonzalez
Research In Short Term Actuarial Modeling , Elijah Howells
Hyperbolic Triangle Groups , Sergey Katykhin
Exploring Matroid Minors , Jonathan Lara Tejeda
DNA COMPLEXES OF ONE BOND-EDGE TYPE , Andrew Tyler Lavengood-Ryan
Modeling the Spread of Measles , Alexandria Le Beau
Symmetric Presentations and Related Topics , Mayra McGrath
Minimal Surfaces and The Weierstrass-Enneper Representation , Evan Snyder
ASSESSING STUDENT UNDERSTANDING WHILE SOLVING LINEAR EQUATIONS USING FLOWCHARTS AND ALGEBRAIC METHODS , Edima Umanah
Excluded minors for nearly-paving matroids , Vanessa Natalie Vega
Theses/Projects/Dissertations from 2019 2019
Fuchsian Groups , Bob Anaya
Tribonacci Convolution Triangle , Rosa Davila
VANISHING LOCAL SCALAR INVARIANTS ON GENERALIZED PLANE WAVE MANIFOLDS , Brian Matthew Friday
Analogues Between Leibniz's Harmonic Triangle and Pascal's Arithmetic Triangle , Lacey Taylor James
Geodesics on Generalized Plane Wave Manifolds , Moises Pena
Algebraic Methods for Proving Geometric Theorems , Lynn Redman
Pascal's Triangle, Pascal's Pyramid, and the Trinomial Triangle , Antonio Saucedo Jr.
THE EFFECTIVENESS OF DYNAMIC MATHEMATICAL SOFTWARE IN THE INSTRUCTION OF THE UNIT CIRCLE , Edward Simons
CALCULUS REMEDIATION AS AN INDICATOR FOR SUCCESS ON THE CALCULUS AP EXAM , Ty Stockham
Theses/Projects/Dissertations from 2018 2018
PROGENITORS, SYMMETRIC PRESENTATIONS AND CONSTRUCTIONS , Diana Aguirre
Monomial Progenitors and Related Topics , Madai Obaid Alnominy
Progenitors Involving Simple Groups , Nicholas R. Andujo
Simple Groups, Progenitors, and Related Topics , Angelica Baccari
Exploring Flag Matroids and Duality , Zachary Garcia
Images of Permutation and Monomial Progenitors , Shirley Marina Juan
MODERN CRYPTOGRAPHY , Samuel Lopez
Progenitors, Symmetric Presentations, and Related Topics , Joana Viridiana Luna
Symmetric Presentations, Representations, and Related Topics , Adam Manriquez
Toroidal Embeddings and Desingularization , LEON NGUYEN
THE STRUGGLE WITH INVERSE FUNCTIONS DOING AND UNDOING PROCESS , Jesus Nolasco
Tutte-Equivalent Matroids , Maria Margarita Rocha
Symmetric Presentations and Double Coset Enumeration , Charles Seager
MANUAL SYMMETRIC GENERATION , Joel Webster
Theses/Projects/Dissertations from 2017 2017
Investigation of Finite Groups Through Progenitors , Charles Baccari
CONSTRUCTION OF HOMOMORPHIC IMAGES , Erica Fernandez
Making Models with Bayes , Pilar Olid
An Introduction to Lie Algebra , Amanda Renee Talley
SIMPLE AND SEMI-SIMPLE ARTINIAN RINGS , Ulyses Velasco
CONSTRUCTION OF FINITE GROUP , Michelle SoYeong Yeo
Theses/Projects/Dissertations from 2016 2016
Upset Paths and 2-Majority Tournaments , Rana Ali Alshaikh
Regular Round Matroids , Svetlana Borissova
GEODESICS IN LORENTZIAN MANIFOLDS , Amir A. Botros
REALIZING TOURNAMENTS AS MODELS FOR K-MAJORITY VOTING , Gina Marie Cheney
Solving Absolute Value Equations and Inequalities on a Number Line , Melinda A. Curtis
BIO-MATHEMATICS: INTRODUCTION TO THE MATHEMATICAL MODEL OF THE HEPATITIS C VIRUS , Lucille J. Durfee
ANALYSIS AND SYNTHESIS OF THE LITERATURE REGARDING ACTIVE AND DIRECT INSTRUCTION AND THEIR PROMOTION OF FLEXIBLE THINKING IN MATHEMATICS , Genelle Elizabeth Gonzalez
LIFE EXPECTANCY , Ali R. Hassanzadah
PLANAR GRAPHS, BIPLANAR GRAPHS AND GRAPH THICKNESS , Sean M. Hearon
A Dual Fano, and Dual Non-Fano Matroidal Network , Stephen Lee Johnson
Mathematical Reasoning and the Inductive Process: An Examination of The Law of Quadratic Reciprocity , Nitish Mittal
The Kauffman Bracket and Genus of Alternating Links , Bryan M. Nguyen
Probabilistic Methods In Information Theory , Erik W. Pachas
THINKING POKER THROUGH GAME THEORY , Damian Palafox
Indicators of Future Mathematics Proficiency: Literature Review & Synthesis , Claudia Preciado
Ádám's Conjecture and Arc Reversal Problems , Claudio D. Salas
AN INTRODUCTION TO BOOLEAN ALGEBRAS , Amy Schardijn
The Evolution of Cryptology , Gwendolyn Rae Souza
Theses/Projects/Dissertations from 2015 2015
SYMMETRIC PRESENTATIONS AND RELATED TOPICS , Mashael U. Alharbi
Homomorphic Images And Related Topics , Kevin J. Baccari
Geometric Constructions from an Algebraic Perspective , Betzabe Bojorquez
Discovering and Applying Geometric Transformations: Transformations to Show Congruence and Similarity , Tamara V. Bonn
Symmetric Presentations and Generation , Dustin J. Grindstaff
HILBERT SPACES AND FOURIER SERIES , Terri Joan Harris Mrs.
SYMMETRIC PRESENTATIONS OF NON-ABELIAN SIMPLE GROUPS , Leonard B. Lamp
Simple Groups and Related Topics , Manal Abdulkarim Marouf Ms.
Elliptic Curves , Trinity Mecklenburg
A Fundamental Unit of O_K , Susana L. Munoz
CONSTRUCTIONS AND ISOMORPHISM TYPES OF IMAGES , Jessica Luna Ramirez
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Dissertations
Here is the complete list of all doctoral dissertations granted by the School of Math, which dates back to 1965. Included below are also all masters theses produced by our students since 2002. A combined listing of all dissertations and theses , going back to 1934, is available at Georgia Tech's library archive. For the post PhD employment of our graduates see our Alumni Page .
Doctoral Dissertations
Masters dissertations.
Mathematics Education, PHD
On this page:, at a glance: program details.
- Location: Tempe campus
- Second Language Requirement: No
Program Description
Degree Awarded: PHD Mathematics Education
This transdisciplinary PhD program in mathematics education accommodates students from a variety of academic backgrounds. It provides students with a solid foundation in graduate-level mathematics as well as research skills and perspectives that enable them to incorporate mathematics into such core educational areas as:
Conducting individual and collaborative research in the learning and teaching of mathematics is an integral part of the program.
Degree Requirements
84 credit hours, a written comprehensive exam, an oral comprehensive exam, a prospectus and a dissertation
Required Core (12 credit hours) MTE 501 Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education I (3) MTE 502 Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education II (3) MTE 503 Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education Ill (3) MTE 504 Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education IV (3)
Electives (42 credit hours)
Area Courses (12 credit hours)
Research (6 credit hours) MTE 792 Research (6)
Culminating Experience (12 credit hours) MTE 799 Dissertation (12)
Additional Curriculum Information Four to five graduate-level (500 and above) elective courses from mathematics, cognitive science, psychology, educational technology, philosophy or research should be taken as approved by the advisor.
For the area courses, students are required to take four graduate-level courses from the following areas of interest: mathematics, applied mathematics or statistics. Students should see the academic unit for the approved course list.
Students should see the school's website for information about qualifier and comprehensive examinations based on math coursework.
The doctoral dissertation culminating experience consists of a dissertation prospectus, oral dissertation defense and the submission of a final revised, formatted dissertation document to the Graduate College. Dissertations are composed under chair- and committee-supervised research, including literature review, research, data collection and analysis, and writing.
When approved by the student's supervisory committee and the Graduate College, up to 30 credit hours from a previously awarded master's degree may be used for this program. If students do not have a previously awarded master's degree, the remaining coursework is made up of electives and research.
Admission Requirements
Applicants must fulfill the requirements of both the Graduate College and The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Applicants are eligible to apply to the program if they have earned a bachelor's or master's degree in mathematics or a closely related area, with exceptionally high grades in advanced coursework in mathematics, from a regionally accredited institution.
Applicants must have a minimum cumulative GPA of 3.00 (scale is 4.00 = "A") in the last 60 hours of their first bachelor's degree program or a minimum cumulative GPA of 3.00 (scale is 4.00 = "A") in an applicable master's degree program.
All applicants must submit:
- graduate admission application and application fee
- official transcripts
- statement of education and career goals
- writing sample
- three letters of recommendation
- proof of English proficiency
Additional Application Information An applicant whose native language is not English must provide proof of English proficiency regardless of their current residency.
At least two of the letters of recommendation must be from faculty.
Next Steps to attend ASU
Learn about our programs, apply to a program, visit our campus, application deadlines, learning outcomes.
- Able to complete original research in applied mathematics.
- Able to incorporate mathematical concepts into novel teaching methods.
- Address an original research question in mathematics education.
Career Opportunities
Graduates of the doctoral program in mathematics education have opportunities in Arizona, the U.S. and internationally. Opportunities are typically at research universities and liberal arts colleges, community colleges, and education consulting firms and in roles such as:
- faculty-track academic
- education consultant or analyst
- mathematics professor, instructor or researcher
Program Contact Information
If you have questions related to admission, please click here to request information and an admission specialist will reach out to you directly. For questions regarding faculty or courses, please use the contact information below.
- [email protected]
- 480/965-3951
- Princeton University Doctoral Dissertations, 2011-2024
Mathematics
Home > USC Columbia > Arts and Sciences > Mathematics > Mathematics Theses and Dissertations
Mathematics Theses and Dissertations
Theses/dissertations from 2023 2023.
Extreme Covering Systems, Primes Plus Squarefrees, and Lattice Points Close to a Helix , Jack Robert Dalton
On the Algebraic and Geometric Multiplicity of Zero as a Hypergraph Eigenvalue , Grant Ian Fickes
Deep Learning for Studying Materials Stability and Solving Thermodynamically Consistent PDES With Dynamic Boundary Conditions in Arbitrary Domains , Chunyan Li
Widely Digitally Delicate Brier Primes and Irreducibility Results for Some Classes of Polynomials , Thomas David Luckner
Deep Learning Methods for Some Problems in Scientific Computing , Yuankai Teng
Theses/Dissertations from 2022 2022
Covering Systems and the Minimum Modulus Problem , Maria Claire Cummings
The Existence and Quantum Approximation of Optimal Pure State Ensembles , Ryan Thomas McGaha
Structure Preserving Reduced-Order Models of Hamiltonian Systems , Megan Alice McKay
Tangled up in Tanglegrams , Drew Joseph Scalzo
Results on Select Combinatorial Problems With an Extremal Nature , Stephen Smith
Poset Ramsey Numbers for Boolean Lattices , Joshua Cain Thompson
Some Properties and Applications of Spaces of Modular Forms With ETA-Multiplier , Cuyler Daniel Warnock
Theses/Dissertations from 2021 2021
Simulation of Pituitary Organogenesis in Two Dimensions , Chace E. Covington
Polynomials, Primes and the PTE Problem , Joseph C. Foster
Widely Digitally Stable Numbers and Irreducibility Criteria For Polynomials With Prime Values , Jacob Juillerat
A Numerical Investigation of Fractional Models for Viscoelastic Materials With Applications on Concrete Subjected to Extreme Temperatures , Murray Macnamara
Trimming Complexes , Keller VandeBogert
Multiple Frailty Model for Spatially Correlated Interval-Censored , Wanfang Zhang
Theses/Dissertations from 2020 2020
An Equivariant Count of Nodal Orbits in an Invariant Pencil of Conics , Candace Bethea
Finite Axiomatisability in Nilpotent Varieties , Joshua Thomas Grice
Rationality Questions and the Derived Category , Alicia Lamarche
Counting Number Fields by Discriminant , Harsh Mehta
Distance Related Graph Invariants in Triangulations and Quadrangulations of the Sphere , Trevor Vincent Olsen
Diameter of 3-Colorable Graphs and Some Remarks on the Midrange Crossing Constant , Inne Singgih
Two Inquiries Related to the Digits of Prime Numbers , Jeremiah T. Southwick
Windows and Generalized Drinfeld Kernels , Robert R. Vandermolen
Connections Between Extremal Combinatorics, Probabilistic Methods, Ricci Curvature of Graphs, and Linear Algebra , Zhiyu Wang
An Ensemble-Based Projection Method and Its Numerical Investigation , Shuai Yuan
Variable-Order Fractional Partial Differential Equations: Analysis, Approximation and Inverse Problem , Xiangcheng Zheng
Theses/Dissertations from 2019 2019
Classification of Non-Singular Cubic Surfaces up to e-invariants , Mohammed Alabbood
On the Characteristic Polynomial of a Hypergraph , Gregory J. Clark
A Development of Transfer Entropy in Continuous-Time , Christopher David Edgar
Moving Off Collections and Their Applications, in Particular to Function Spaces , Aaron Fowlkes
Finding Resolutions of Mononomial Ideals , Hannah Melissa Kimbrell
Regression for Pooled Testing Data with Biomedical Applications , Juexin Lin
Numerical Methods for a Class of Reaction-Diffusion Equations With Free Boundaries , Shuang Liu
An Implementation of the Kapustin-Li Formula , Jessica Otis
A Nonlinear Parallel Model for Reversible Polymer Solutions in Steady and Oscillating Shear Flow , Erik Tracey Palmer
A Few Problems on the Steiner Distance and Crossing Number of Graphs , Josiah Reiswig
Successful Pressing Sequences in Simple Pseudo-Graphs , Hays Wimsatt Whitlatch
On The Generators of Quantum Dynamical Semigroups , Alexander Wiedemann
An Examination of Kinetic Monte Carlo Methods with Application to a Model of Epitaxial Growth , Dylana Ashton Wilhelm
Dynamical Entropy of Quantum Random Walks , Duncan Wright
Unconditionally Energy Stable Linear Schemes for a Two-Phase Diffuse Interface Model with Peng-Robinson Equation of State , Chenfei Zhang
Theses/Dissertations from 2018 2018
Theory, Computation, and Modeling of Cancerous Systems , Sameed Ahmed
Turán Problems and Spectral Theory on Hypergraphs and Tensors , Shuliang Bai
Quick Trips: On the Oriented Diameter of Graphs , Garner Paul Cochran
Geometry of Derived Categories on Noncommutative Projective Schemes , Blake Alexander Farman
A Quest for Positive Definite Matrices over Finite Fields , Erin Patricia Hanna
Comparison of the Performance of Simple Linear Regression and Quantile Regression with Non-Normal Data: A Simulation Study , Marjorie Howard
Special Fiber Rings of Certain Height Four Gorenstein Ideals , Jaree Hudson
Graph Homomorphisms and Vector Colorings , Michael Robert Levet
Local Rings and Golod Homomorphisms , Thomas Schnibben
States and the Numerical Range in the Regular Algebra , James Patrick Sweeney
Thermodynamically Consistent Hydrodynamic Phase Field Models and Numerical Approximation for Multi-Component Compressible Viscous Fluid Mixtures , Xueping Zhao
Theses/Dissertations from 2017 2017
On the Existence of Non-Free Totally Reflexive Modules , J. Cameron Atkins
Subdivision of Measures of Squares , Dylan Bates
Unconditionally Energy Stable Numerical Schemes for Hydrodynamics Coupled Fluids Systems , Alexander Yuryevich Brylev
Convergence and Rate of Convergence of Approximate Greedy-Type Algorithms , Anton Dereventsov
Covering Subsets of the Integers and a Result on Digits of Fibonacci Numbers , Wilson Andrew Harvey
Nonequispaced Fast Fourier Transform , David Hughey
Deep Learning: An Exposition , Ryan Kingery
A Family of Simple Codimension Two Singularities with Infinite Cohen-Macaulay Representation Type , Tyler Lewis
Polynomials Of Small Mahler Measure With no Newman Multiples , Spencer Victoria Saunders
Theses/Dissertations from 2016 2016
On Crown-free Set Families, Diffusion State Difference, and Non-uniform Hypergraphs , Edward Lawrence Boehnlein
Structure of the Stable Marriage and Stable Roommate Problems and Applications , Joe Hidakatsu
Binary Quartic Forms over Fp , Daniel Thomas Kamenetsky
On a Constant Associated with the Prouhet-Tarry-Escott Problem , Maria E. Markovich
Some Extremal And Structural Problems In Graph Theory , Taylor Mitchell Short
Chebyshev Inversion of the Radon Transform , Jared Cameron Szi
Modeling of Structural Relaxation By A Variable-Order Fractional Differential Equation , Su Yang
Theses/Dissertations from 2015 2015
Modeling, Simulation, and Applications of Fractional Partial Differential Equations , Wilson Cheung
The Packing Chromatic Number of Random d-regular Graphs , Ann Wells Clifton
Commutator Studies in Pursuit of Finite Basis Results , Nathan E. Faulkner
Avoiding Doubled Words in Strings of Symbols , Michael Lane
A Survey of the Kinetic Monte Carlo Algorithm as Applied to a Multicellular System , Michael Richard Laughlin
Toward the Combinatorial Limit Theory of free Words , Danny Rorabaugh
Trees, Partitions, and Other Combinatorial Structures , Heather Christina Smith
Fast Methods for Variable-Coefficient Peridynamic and Non-Local Diffusion Models , Che Wang
Modeling and Computations of Cellular Dynamics Using Complex-fluid Models , Jia Zhao
Theses/Dissertations from 2014 2014
The Non-Existence of a Covering System with all Moduli Distinct, Large and Square-Free , Melissa Kate Bechard
Explorations in Elementary and Analytic Number Theory , Scott Michael Dunn
Independence Polynomials , Gregory Matthew Ferrin
Turán Problems on Non-uniform Hypergraphs , Jeremy Travis Johnston
On the Group of Transvections of ADE-Diagrams , Marvin Jones
Fake Real Quadratic Orders , Richard Michael Oh
Theses/Dissertations from 2013 2013
Shimura Images of A Family of Half-Integral Weight Modular Forms , Kenneth Allan Brown
Sharp Bounds Associated With An Irreducibility Theorem For Polynomials Having Non-Negative Coefficients , Morgan Cole
Deducing Vertex Weights From Empirical Occupation Times , David Collins
Analysis and Processing of Irregularly Distributed Point Clouds , Kamala Hunt Diefenthaler
Generalizations of Sperner's Theorem: Packing Posets, Families Forbidding Posets, and Supersaturation , Andrew Philip Dove
Spectral Analysis of Randomly Generated Networks With Prescribed Degree Sequences , Clifford Davis Gaddy
Selected Research In Covering Systems of the Integers and the Factorization of Polynomials , Joshua Harrington
The Weierstrass Approximation Theorem , LaRita Barnwell Hipp
The Compact Implicit Integration Factor Scheme For the Solution of Allen-Cahn Equations , Meshack K. Kiplagat
Applications of the Lopsided Lovász Local Lemma Regarding Hypergraphs , Austin Tyler Mohr
Study On Covolume-Upwind Finite Volume Approximations For Linear Parabolic Partial Differential Equations , Rosalia Tatano
Coloring Pythagorean Triples and a Problem Concerning Cyclotomic Polynomials , Daniel White
Theses/Dissertations from 2012 2012
A Computational Approach to the Quillen-Suslin Theorem, Buchsbaum-Eisenbud Matrices, and Generic Hilbert-Burch Matrices , Jonathan Brett Barwick
Mathematical Modeling and Computational Studies for Cell Signaling , Kanadpriya Basu
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This collection of MIT Theses in DSpace contains selected theses and dissertations from all MIT departments. Please note that this is NOT a complete collection of MIT theses. To search all MIT theses, use MIT Libraries' catalog .
MIT's DSpace contains more than 58,000 theses completed at MIT dating as far back as the mid 1800's. Theses in this collection have been scanned by the MIT Libraries or submitted in electronic format by thesis authors. Since 2004 all new Masters and Ph.D. theses are scanned and added to this collection after degrees are awarded.
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If you have questions about MIT theses in DSpace, [email protected] . See also Access & Availability Questions or About MIT Theses in DSpace .
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Department of Mathematics
Doctoral theses.
About twenty to thirty doctoral students complete their doctoral thesis at the Department of Mathematics every year.
Recent doctoral examinations
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Published after 1 January 2014. For theses published before 2014, please refer to the Research Collection .
Critical Analysis of Mathematics Education Doctoral Dissertations in the Philippines: 2009–2021
- First Online: 18 May 2023
Cite this chapter
- Bill Atweh 6 ,
- Minie Rose C. Lapinid 7 ,
- Auxencia A. Limjap 8 ,
- Levi E. Elipane 9 ,
- Michel Basister 10 &
- Rosie L. Conde 9
Part of the book series: Mathematics Education – An Asian Perspective ((MATHEDUCASPER))
171 Accesses
- The original version of this chapter was revised: The author name Michel Basister has been updated. The correction to this chapter is available at https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-0643-7_9 .
This chapter presents a critical analysis of educational research as reflected in doctoral dissertations completed during the past decade in mathematics education in the Philippines. It analyzes the published dissertations with respect to the topics in the discipline they address, the targeted participants in terms of educational level and roles of stakeholders and theoretical frameworks used to construct the research. The analysis revealed a strong emphasis on research on teaching educational goals of mathematics, teacher development, and the use of technology in teaching. The less traversed areas were the research on social goals of education, the relationship of mathematics teaching and learning in other disciplines, the equity in terms of language and access to quality mathematics education due to poverty, elementary and kindergarten mathematics, assessment, technology used in informal settings, and research areas that are informed by critical and sociopolitical perspectives. The analysis calls for the need for better articulation of the role of the theory in a dissertation and a greater diversification of theoretical stances, in particular the critical and sociopolitical perspectives that remain underutilized.
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Change history
16 june 2023.
A correction has been published.
Atweh, B., Clarkson, P., & Nebres, B. (2003). Mathematics education in international and global context. In F. Bishop, A. Clements, M. A. Keitel, C. Kilpatrick, & J. Leung (Eds.), The second international handbook of mathematics education (pp. 185–229). Kluwer Academic Publishers.
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Atweh, B. (2007). The social turn in understanding learning and its implications for facilitating learning. In B. Atweh (Ed.), Ripples of change: A journey in preservice teacher education reform in the Philippines (pp. 81–109). Commission on Higher Education.
Atweh, B., Ubina-Balagatas, M., Bernardo, A., Frido, M., & Macpherson, I. (2007). Ripples of change: A journey in preservice teacher education reform in the Philippines . Commission of Higher Education.
Bakker, A., Cai, J., & Zenger, L. (2021). Future themes of mathematics education research: An international survey before and during the pandemic. Educational Studies in Mathematics, 107 (1), 1–24. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10649-021-10049-w
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Atweh, B., Lapinid, M.R.C., Limjap, A.A., Elipane, L.E., Basister, M., Conde, R.L. (2023). Critical Analysis of Mathematics Education Doctoral Dissertations in the Philippines: 2009–2021. In: Atweh, B., Fan, L., Vistro-Yu, C.P. (eds) Asian Research in Mathematics Education. Mathematics Education – An Asian Perspective. Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-0643-7_4
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Mathematics Education Theses and Dissertations
Theses/dissertations from 2024 2024.
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Emotional Geographies of Beginning and Veteran Reformed Teachers in Mentor/Mentee Relationships , Emily Joan Adams
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Developing the Definite Integral and Accumulation Function Through Adding Up Pieces: A Hypothetical Learning Trajectory , Brinley Nichole Stevens
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Making Sense of the Equal Sign in Middle School Mathematics , Chelsea Lynn Dickson
Developing Understanding of the Chain Rule, Implicit Differentiation, and Related Rates: Towards a Hypothetical Learning Trajectory Rooted in Nested Multivariation , Haley Paige Jeppson
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“Don’t Say Gay. We Say Dumb or Stupid”: Queering ProspectiveMathematics Teachers’ Discussions , Amy Saunders Ross
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Addressing Pre-Service Teachers' Misconceptions About Confidence Intervals , Kiya Lynn Eliason
How Teacher Questions Affect the Development of a Potential Hybrid Space in a Classroom with Latina/o Students , Casandra Helen Job
Teacher Graphing Practices for Linear Functions in a Covariation-Based College Algebra Classroom , Konda Jo Luckau
Principles of Productivity Revealed from Secondary Mathematics Teachers' Discussions Around the Productiveness of Teacher Moves in Response to Teachable Moments , Kylie Victoria Palsky
Theses/Dissertations from 2017 2017
Curriculum Decisions and Reasoning of Middle School Teachers , Anand Mikel Bernard
Teacher Response to Instances of Student Thinking During Whole Class Discussion , Rachel Marie Bernard
Kyozaikenkyu: An In-Depth Look into Japanese Educators' Daily Planning Practices , Matthew David Melville
Analysis of Differential Equations Applications from the Coordination Class Perspective , Omar Antonio Naranjo Mayorga
Theses/Dissertations from 2016 2016
The Principles of Effective Teaching Student Teachershave the Opportunity to Learn in an AlternativeStudent Teaching Structure , Danielle Rose Divis
Insight into Student Conceptions of Proof , Steven Daniel Lauzon
Theses/Dissertations from 2015 2015
Teacher Participation and Motivation inProfessional Development , Krystal A. Hill
Student Evaluation of Mathematical Explanations in anInquiry-Based Mathematics Classroom , Ashley Burgess Hulet
English Learners' Participation in Mathematical Discourse , Lindsay Marie Merrill
Mathematical Interactions between Teachers and Students in the Finnish Mathematics Classroom , Paula Jeffery Prestwich
Parents and the Common Core State Standards for Mathematics , Rebecca Anne Roberts
Examining the Effects of College Algebra on Students' Mathematical Dispositions , Kevin Lee Watson
Problems Faced by Reform Oriented Novice Mathematics Teachers Utilizing a Traditional Curriculum , Tyler Joseph Winiecke
Academic and Peer Status in the Mathematical Life Stories of Students , Carol Ann Wise
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The Effect of Students' Mathematical Beliefs on Knowledge Transfer , Kristen Adams
Language Use in Mathematics Textbooks Written in English and Spanish , Kailie Ann Bertoch
Teachers' Curricular Reasoning and MKT in the Context of Algebra and Statistics , Kolby J. Gadd
Mathematical Telling in the Context of Teacher Interventions with Collaborative Groups , Brandon Kyle Singleton
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Student Understanding of Limit and Continuity at a Point: A Look into Four Potentially Problematic Conceptions , Miriam Lynne Amatangelo
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Types of Questions that Comprise a Teacher's Questioning Discourse in a Conceptually-Oriented Classroom , Keilani Stolk
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Student Teachers' Interactive Decisions with Respect to Student Mathematics Thinking , Jonathan J. Call
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Learning Within a Computer-Assisted Instructional Environment: Effects on Multiplication Math Fact Mastery and Self-Efficacy in Elementary-Age Students , Loraine Jones Hanson
Mathematics Teacher Time Allocation , Ashley Martin Jones
Theses/Dissertations from 2011 2011
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Teachers' Decisions to Use Student Input During Class Discussion , Heather Taylor Toponce
A Conceptual Framework for Student Understanding of Logarithms , Heather Rebecca Ambler Williams
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Growth in Students' Conceptions of Mathematical Induction , John David Gruver
Contextualized Motivation Theory (CMT): Intellectual Passion, Mathematical Need, Social Responsibility, and Personal Agency in Learning Mathematics , Janelle Marie Hart
Thinking on the Brink: Facilitating Student Teachers' Learning Through In-the-Moment Interjections , Travis L. Lemon
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Student Teacher Knowledge and Its Impact on Task Design , Tenille Cannon
How Eighth-Grade Students Estimate with Fractions , Audrey Linford Hanks
Similar but Different: The Complexities of Students' Mathematical Identities , Diane Skillicorn Hill
Choose Your Words: Refining What Counts as Mathematical Discourse in Students' Negotiation of Meaning for Rate of Change of Volume , Christine Johnson
Mathematics Student Teaching in Japan: A Multi-Case Study , Allison Turley Shwalb
Theses/Dissertations from 2007 2007
Applying Toulmin's Argumentation Framework to Explanations in a Reform Oriented Mathematics Class , Jennifer Alder Brinkerhoff
What Are Some of the Common Traits in the Thought Processes of Undergraduate Students Capable of Creating Proof? , Karen Malina Duff
Probing for Reasons: Presentations, Questions, Phases , Kellyn Nicole Farlow
One Problem, Two Contexts , Danielle L. Gigger
The Main Challenges that a Teacher-in-Transition Faces When Teaching a High School Geometry Class , Greg Brough Henry
Discovering the Derivative Can Be "Invigorating:" Mark's Journey to Understanding Instantaneous Velocity , Charity Ann Gardner Hyer
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How a Master Teacher Uses Questioning Within a Mathematical Discourse Community , Omel Angel Contreras
Determining High School Geometry Students' Geometric Understanding Using van Hiele Levels: Is There a Difference Between Standards-based Curriculum Students and NonStandards-based Curriculum Students? , Rebekah Loraine Genz
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What Does It Mean To Preservice Mathematics Teachers To Anticipate Student Responses? , Matthew M. Webb
Theses/Dissertations from 2005 2005
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Reasoning About Motion: A Case Study , Tiffini Lynn Glaze
Theses/Dissertations from 2003 2003
An Analysis of the Influence of Lesson Study on Preservice Secondary Mathematics Teachers' View of Self-As Mathematics Expert , Julie Stafford
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May 15, 2024
Tips and Resources for a Successful Summer of Dissertation Writing
By Yana Zlochistaya
Summer can be a strange time for graduate students. Gone are the seminars and workshops, the student clubs, and the working group, that structured the semester and provided us with a sense of community. Instead, we’re faced with a three-month expanse of time that can feel equal parts liberating and intimidating. This double-edged freedom is only exacerbated for those of us in the writing stage of our dissertation, when isolation and a lack of discipline can have a particularly big impact. For those hoping not to enter another summer with lofty plans, only to blink and find ourselves in August disappointed with our progress, we’ve compiled some tips and resources that can help.
According to Graduate Writing Center Director Sabrina Soracco, the most important thing you can do to set yourself up for writing success is to clarify your goals. She recommends starting this process by looking at departmental requirements for a completed dissertation. Consider when you would like to file and work backwards from that point, determining what you have to get done in order to hit that target. Next, check in with your dissertation committee members to set up an accountability structure. Would they prefer an end-of-summer update to the whole committee? A monthly check-in with your chair or one of your readers? Setting up explicit expectations that work for you and your committee can cut through the aimlessness that comes with a major writing project.
For those early on in their dissertation-writing process, a committee meeting is also a valuable opportunity to set parameters. “One of the problems with the excitement for the discipline that happens post-quals is that it results in too many ideas,” says Director. Soracco. Your committee members should give you input on productive research directions so that you can begin to hone in on your project. It is also important to remember that your dissertation does not have to be the end-all-and-be-all of your academic research. Ideas that do not fit into its scope can end up becoming conference papers or even book chapters.
Once you have a clear goal that you have discussed with your committee, the hard part begins: you have to actually write. The Graduate Writing Center offers several resources to make that process easier:
- The Graduate Writing Community. This is a totally remote, two-month program that is based on a model of “gentle accountability.” When you sign up, you are added to a bCourses site moderated by a Graduate Writing Consultant. At the beginning of the week, everyone sets their goals in a discussion post, and by the end of the week, everyone checks in with progress updates. During the week, the writing consultants offer nine hours of remote synchronous writing sessions. As a writing community member, you can attend whichever sessions work best for your schedule. All that’s required is that you show up, set a goal for that hour, and work towards that goal for the length of two 25-minute Pomodoro sessions . This year’s summer writing community will begin in June. Keep your eye on your email for the registration link!
- Writing Consultations : As a graduate student, you can sign up for an individual meeting with a Graduate Writing Consultant. They can give you feedback on your work, help you figure out the structure of a chapter, or just talk through how to get started on a writing project.
- Independent Writing Groups: If you would prefer to write with specific friends or colleagues, you can contact Graduate Writing Center Director Sabrina Soracco at [email protected] so that she can help you set up your own writing group. The structure and length of these groups can differ; often, members will send each other one to five pages of writing weekly and meet the next day for two hours to provide feedback and get advice. Sometimes, groups will meet up not only to share writing, but to work in a common space before coming together to debrief. Regardless of what the groups look like, the important thing is to create a guilt-free space. Some weeks, you might submit an outline; other weeks, it might be the roughest of rough drafts; sometimes, you might come to a session without having submitted anything. As long as we continue to make progress (and show up even when we don’t), we’re doing what we need to. As Director Soracco puts it, “it often takes slogging through a lot of stuff to get to that great epiphany.”
Yana Zlochistaya is a fifth-year graduate student in the Department of Comparative Literature and a Professional Development Liaison with the Graduate Division. She previously served as a co-director for Beyond Academia.
Ph.D. in Education: Curriculum and Instruction
This emphasis area is for students interested in developing expertise in teaching and teacher education, curricular development and implementation, subject specific areas (e.g., English, social studies, science, mathematics, and other areas), and/or issues in pre-K through college education.
Develop evidence-based, real-world solutions that will empower your students
Admission deadlines.
Applications and all associated documents must be received by the following dates to be considered. Fall Semester: July 1 | Spring Semester: Oct. 1.
About Our Program
This emphasis area is for students interested in developing expertise in teaching and teacher education, curricular development and implementation in subject and/or grade specific areas (e.g., English, social studies, elementary, secondary), and/or issues that reach across education. Individuals pursuing this degree may go on to pursue careers as researchers and teacher educators, become advanced teachers or instructional coaches within schools, or become curriculum specialists working in a variety of contexts. Courses will be selected from the student’s area of focus and can address any of the following areas:
- Curriculum and assessment theory & development
- Discipline or grade-level specific focus
- Teacher education and leadership
- Advanced pedagogical development
- Cross-categorical courses and special topics courses may also be selected in consultation with your advisor
All questions regarding application and admission may be directed to Dr. Jennifer Mahon, doctoral program coordinator, at [email protected] .
Request More Information
Program information.
The Curriculum & Instruction area of emphasis is guided by the general framework found in the Doctoral Program in Education Application Handbook . The manual provides general information about doctoral concentrations offered in the College of Education. This page will provide you with specific information that is unique to the C&I Program.
- Undergraduate and Graduate GPA 3.00 (university requirements)
- Preference for applicants who hold a master's degree from a regionally accredited institution in an area appropriately related to education. High achieving applicants who possess only a Bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution will be considered. Emphasis of prior degree area(s) should be appropriately related to education.
- Program application form (included in COEHD doctoral application manual)
- Complete vita/resume
- Sample of scholarly writing
- Essay of intent - should include qualifications for completing a doctoral degree and reasons for pursuing the degree
- International Studies: TOEFL score of 550 (unless you have a college degree from a U.S. institution)
- Three letters of recommendation from professionals qualified to judge potential for success in doctoral work
- Preferred: at least three years teaching or commensurate experience
All questions regarding application and admission may be directed to Dr. Jennifer Mahon, at [email protected] .
Admissions Deadlines: July 1 for Fall and Oct. 1 for Spring
All materials are submitted through the University's application portal . Once you create your account, go back to MyNevada to log in and start your application.
If you miss the application deadline, but would like to enroll in courses prior to an admission decision, you may still apply to take courses through the Graduate School under Graduate Special student status. However, please note, this does not guarantee you acceptance to the program, and the courses may not count towards the Ph.D. unless you have consulted with a C&I faculty member.
Program Structure
The Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) program requires a minimum of 72 credits beyond the baccalaureate degree, which includes a minimum of 12 credits of dissertation. Of the remaining 72 credits, a maximum of 24 credits (with grades of B or better) may be applied from a master's degree program or previous post-baccalaureate graduate studies program toward the doctoral degree. These credits must be approved by your chair, the College of Education Doctoral Director of Graduate Study, and the Dean of the Graduate School. Credit for completion of a thesis or special project may not be included. There is no limit on the number of units transferred when student earns master’s en route to Ph.D.
At least 30 credits of 700-level courses beyond the bachelor's degree, exclusive of dissertation credits, are required for the Ph.D. degree. Degree requirements must be completed within 8 years of admission to the program.
24 credits: Research and required core
- Doctoral Seminar in Education
Required Research Courses:
- One Quantitative research course
- One Qualitative research course
- Program Development and Evaluation
- Survey Research in Education
- Research Applications in Education
- Mixed Methods Research in Education
- Special topics research course such as Single Subject Design
- Others from outside COE (with approval)
- Lower level courses such as EDRS 640 and EDRS 700 or equivalents are prerequisites
- Course names and requirements are subject to change. Please visit the course catalog for the most current information.
36 credits(dependent upon number of dissertation credits carried): Area of emphasis
Coursework is determined by the Advisory/Examining Committee in close consultation with the student. Credits brought in from Master’s degree may apply to area of emphasis.
Minimum of 12 credits: Dissertation
The dissertation is the culminating experience for the doctoral degree. It represents an independent research project that makes a contribution to the field of study.
Coursework earned as part of a master’s degree can count toward the area of emphasis, as well as toward the research or cognate areas, depending on relevance. Decisions about prior coursework are approved by your chair and your Advisory/Examining Committee.
Our program goal is for all students to complete the doctoral degree within 5-6 years. Research has shown that students who work on this trajectory have the highest chance of ultimately completing their doctoral studies. The best way to meet this objective is full-time studies; however, we have students in our program who are part-time students. You will be advised to work closely with your initial advisor and ultimately your chair to develop a timeline and program of study that meets your career goal and is most likely to result in completion.
Looking for a Graduate Assistantship?
The College of Education & Human Development has a limited number of Graduate Assistantships for full-time students admitted to masters or doctoral programs.
Program Faculty
Department of Mathematics, University of California San Diego
****************************
Thesis Defense
Cameron cinel, linearly sofic lie algebras.
Advisor: Efim Zelmanov
May 15, 2024
9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093-0112
(858) 534-3590
College of Computer Science and Mathematics
13 May، 2024
doctoral thesis by student Karam Muhammad Mahdi Saleh
Discussion of a doctoral thesis in the College of Computer Science and Mathematics – Department of Computer Science entitled: Designing a digital forensic analysis model Design a Digital Forensics Model In continuation of the scientific research movement and with the follow-up and presence of the Honorable Dean of the College of Computer Science and Mathematics, Professor Dr. Doha Bashir Abdullah. It was discussed in the discussion hall of the College of Computer Science and Mathematics at the University of Mosul on Monday 5-6-2024 Doctoral thesis by student Karam Muhammad Mahdi Saleh Under the supervision of A.M.D. Naglaa Badie Ibrahim
The thesis submitted by the student dealt with the use of digital forensic techniques in the field of cybersecurity, as it aims to improve the accuracy, performance and reliability of digital forensic analyzes by developing a new model that analyzes heterogeneous data in a decentralized and synchronous manner in the Internet of Things environment, while preserving On privacy and reliability.
The researcher’s main goals include decentralizing local processing and peer-to-peer communication tasks, creating real-time communication protocols for analyzing concurrent devices, creating neural network architectures capable of managing heterogeneous data, using privacy-preserving federated learning techniques, and enabling scalable parallel processing. The packages are analyzed using digital forensic tools, collecting information, then determining the location of the attacker and automatically generating reports suitable for legal action and accelerating the analysis process by providing insights into cyber threats and breaches.
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workshop entitled “International Certificates for Information Technology and Computer Networks”
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Honoring the winners of the Creative Arts Competition at the Second Sustainable Development Festival at the University of Mosul
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scientific workshop entitled “Building and designing wireless networks using the OPNET Modeler program ”
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Discussing graduation research in the Software Department for preliminary studies
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master’s thesis of the student Zeina Nabil Jamil Al-Khatib
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the Creative Arts Competition
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Participation of the Dean of the College in a ministerial meeting
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A teaching participation in the Software Department of our college in the work of the Private Health Services Forum at the University of Mosul…
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Visit a nursing home
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Student Activities Division
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(Improving the machine learning algorithm to measure the quality of software) Student: Zakaria Abdel Wahed Hamid
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” An Improved Nonlinear Conjugate Gradient Algorithms ” by student Saja Othman Mohammad Tawfiq
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Doctoral candidate speaks at Ramapo College’s mathematics honor society induction ceremony
Posted in: Awards & Recognition , Mathematics Education PhD , Presentations , Students and Alumni
Geena Taite earned her bachelor’s degree at Ramapo and was a member of the Pi Mu Epsilon society . She was invited back to speak about her time at Ramapo and how it influenced her successful career as a math educator. It was an inspiring speech, congratulations Geena!
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Professor vatsala selected grand marshall for the spring 2024 doctoral hooding ceremony.
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Spring 2024 math graduates.
Justin Dunnam Receives the Graduate Student Teaching Excellence Award
Mathematics PhD student Justin Dunnam is the recipient of the 2024 Graduate Student Teaching Excellence Award.
PhD Candidates Honored
Dr. Aghalaya Vatsala, Mathematics Professor Emerita, was the Grand Marshall for the Spring 2024 Doctoral Hooding Ceremony. This news item showcases her introduction speech given by our Provost, Dr. Jaimie Hebert.
Dr. Aghalaya Vatsala is a mathematician and educator who has shaped the academic landscape at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette for four decades. Her contributions in teaching, research, and service reflect an unwavering commitment to excellence and reveal an enduring legacy as a mathematician, colleague, teacher, and mentor. After earning a PhD in Mathematics from the Indian Institute of Technology in 1973, Dr. Vatsala began an academic journey that led to our University a decade later. She joined the faculty at then-University of Southwestern Louisiana 1984. She was promoted to full professor in 1996.
In the classrooms of UL Lafayette, Dr. Vatsala has been a beacon of knowledge and support, teaching everything from Calculus to Advanced Applied Mathematics. Her students describe her as a caring professor who creates a nurturing environment where confidence is built, and achievement is fostered.
As a researcher specializing in Analysis and Differential Equations, Dr. Vatsala has authored 157 peer-reviewed articles and served on the editorial boards of 12 prestigious research journals in mathematics. Her expertise earned her election as an Academician of the Academy of Nonlinear Sciences in 1999 and recognition through multiple prestigious professorships, including the BORSF/SLEMCO Endowed Professorship and the Pennzoil Endowed Professorship in Mathematics and Statistics. In 2014, she was recognized with the UL Lafayette Foundation Distinguished Professor Award—the highest honor bestowed upon faculty at our University for research excellence.
Dr. Vatsala’s contributions extend beyond individual achievement. She has been a pillar of support for the mathematical community, organizing and hosting numerous special research sessions, advocating for women in mathematics, mentoring students from minoritized communities in STEM, and serving on far too many university and departmental committees to list tonight. Her guidance of 9 master’s and 16 doctoral students to degree completion is especially noteworthy this evening. It underscores well her commitment to scholarly collaboration and the creation and exchange of new knowledge.
In recognition of her outstanding contributions, Dr. Vatsala is wearing a special medallion struck in honor of her role as Grand Marshal.
Aghalaya, the University thanks you. Your contributions do more than just add up—they multiply the very essence of excellence in research and mentorship. Your impact has been infinitely non-derivative, leaving an indelible mark on the academic community here at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette and beyond it too.
Mathematics
2023-2024 grad student awards.
Bor-Luh Lin Thesis Award
- Ngoc Anh Phan
2023-24 Outstanding Teaching Assistant Awards:
- Edward White
- Adriana Fernandez Quero
- Matthew Barber
- Jacob Van Grinsven
- Joseph Small
- Jose David Beltran Lizarazo
Fall 23 Ballad and Seashore Dissertation Fellowship
- Fatou Kineh Ndow
- Michael Loren Davis
Spring 24 Ballad and Seashore Dissertation Fellowship
- Niki Amaraweera Kalutotage
Fall 23 Graduate College Post-Comprehensive Research Fellowship
- Juan Felipe Ariza Mejia
Casey Anna Stone
Spring 24 Graduate College Post-Comprehensive Research Fellowship
- Michele Capovilla-Searle
2024 CLAS Dissertation Writing Fellowship
Community Engagement Graduate Assistantship for Iowa Sciences Academy
- Joseph Starr
IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
Dissertations. Most Harvard PhD dissertations from 2012 forward are available online in DASH, Harvard's central open-access repository and are linked below. Many older dissertations can be found on ProQuest Dissertation and Theses Search which many university libraries subscribe to.
2023 Qingci An (F. Lu)Identifiability and data-adaptive RKHS Tikhonov regularization in nonparametric learning problems Letian Chen (J. Bernstein)On Mean Curvature Flows coming out of Cones Ben Dees (C. Mese)On the Singular Sets of Harmonic Maps into F-Connected Complexes Lili He (H. Lindblad)The linear stability of weakly charged and slowly rotating Kerr Newman family of charged black holes ...
Quantitative finance informed machine learning . Sabate Vidales, Marc (The University of Edinburgh, 2023-10-13) This PhD thesis consists of two parts. In the first part, we develop and study deep learning-based methods for approximating high-dimensional parabolic (path-dependent) linear PDEs parametrised by the model parameters.
A selection of Mathematics PhD thesis titles is listed below, some of which are available online: 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991. 2023. Melanie Kobras - Low order models of storm track variability Ed Clark - Vectorial Variational Problems in L∞ and Applications ...
For PhD Thesis, see here.This page is about Senior thesis. In order that senior thesis produced by Harvard math students are easier for other undergrads to benefit from, we would like to exhibit more senior theses online (while all theses are available through Harvard university archives, it would be more convenient to have them online).It is absolutely voluntary, but if you decide to give us ...
First Position: Postdoc at the Institution for Advanced Study and Princeton. Max Lipton. Thesis: Dynamical Systems in Pure Mathematics. Advisor: Steven Strogatz. First Position: NSF Mathematical Sciences Postdoctoral Fellow at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Elise McMahon. Thesis: A simplicial set approach to computing the group homology ...
Below is a list of PhD dissertations written by students at the Harvard Department of Mathematics. All scholars can order copies of most Harvard dissertations from 1982 to the present by contacting UMI/ProQuest at 1-800-521-3042. Permission of the author is usually required to copy theses within the last five years.
In 1909 the department awarded its first PhD to Grace M. Bareis, whose dissertation was directed by Professor Harry W. Kuhn.The department began awarding PhD degrees on a regular basis around 1930, when a formal doctoral program was established as a result of the appointment of Tibor Radó as a professor at our department. To date, the department has awarded over 800 PhD degrees.
PhD Theses 2016. Giuseppe Sellaroli. Non-compact groups, tensor operators and applications to quantum gravity. Robert H. Jonsson. Decoupling of Information Propagation from Energy Propagation. John Lang. Mathematical Modelling of Social Factors in Decision Making Processes at the Individual and Population Levels. John Yawney.
Guide to Graduate Studies. The PhD Program. The Ph.D. program of the Harvard Department of Mathematics is designed to help motivated students develop their understanding and enjoyment of mathematics. Enjoyment and understanding of the subject, as well as enthusiasm in teaching it, are greater when one is actively thinking about mathematics in ...
The graduate program in the field of mathematics at Cornell leads to the Ph.D. degree, which takes most students five to six years of graduate study to complete. One feature that makes the program at Cornell particularly attractive is the broad range of interests of the faculty. The department has outstanding groups in the areas of algebra ...
bio-mathematics: introduction to the mathematical model of the hepatitis c virus, lucille j. durfee PDF ANALYSIS AND SYNTHESIS OF THE LITERATURE REGARDING ACTIVE AND DIRECT INSTRUCTION AND THEIR PROMOTION OF FLEXIBLE THINKING IN MATHEMATICS , Genelle Elizabeth Gonzalez
Here is the complete list of all doctoral dissertations granted by the School of Math, which dates back to 1965. Included below are also all masters theses produced by our students since 2002. A combined listing of all dissertations and theses, going back to 1934, is available at Georgia Tech's library archive.
Degree Awarded: PHD Mathematics Education. ... Students should see the school's website for information about qualifier and comprehensive examinations based on math coursework. The doctoral dissertation culminating experience consists of a dissertation prospectus, oral dissertation defense and the submission of a final revised, formatted ...
Princeton University Masters Theses, 2022-2024; Princeton University Undergraduate Senior Theses, 1924-2023; ... My DataSpace; Princeton University Doctoral Dissertations, 2011-2024; Mathematics; Mathematics Items (Sorted by Submit Date in Descending order): 1 to 20 of 153 next > Issue Date ...
The idiosyncratic format of this dissertation, which is intimately related to its content, requires a brief explanation. The three-article organization is due to a rarely-exploited bylaw of the Harvard Graduate School of Education which allows for three manuscripts to make a dissertation so long as those manuscripts share a unifying theme.
Theses/Dissertations from 2021. PDF. Simulation of Pituitary Organogenesis in Two Dimensions, Chace E. Covington. PDF. Polynomials, Primes and the PTE Problem, Joseph C. Foster. PDF. Widely Digitally Stable Numbers and Irreducibility Criteria For Polynomials With Prime Values, Jacob Juillerat. PDF.
If you have questions about MIT theses in DSpace, [email protected]. See also Access & Availability Questions or About MIT Theses in DSpace. If you are a recent MIT graduate, your thesis will be added to DSpace within 3-6 months after your graduation date. Please email [email protected] with any questions. Permissions
Doctoral Thesis, Zurich, ETH Zurich, 2021. The work presented in this thesis aims to extract signals from complex large-scale data. The contributions are at the intersection of developing novel statistical methodology, computationally efficient algorithms and corresponding open source software.
The PhD dissertation research will ordinarily be conducted under the guidance of a mathematics educator in the Fariborz Maseeh Department of Mathematics and Statistics. The dissertation is the most important part of a candidates program, and involves identifying and researching a significant problem which builds upon previous research, and ...
Dissertation #20 particularly looked into Senior High School mathematics teachers' mathematics content and pedagogical knowledge through a test, analysis of lesson plans, classroom discourse observations, and interviews, while dissertation #28 provided a didactics of mathematics course prototype integrated in the teacher education curriculum ...
Theses/Dissertations from 2020. Mathematical Identities of Students with Mathematics Learning Dis/abilities, Emma Lynn Holdaway. Teachers' Mathematical Meanings: Decisions for Teaching Geometric Reflections and Orientation of Figures, Porter Peterson Nielsen. Student Use of Mathematical Content Knowledge During Proof Production, Chelsey Lynn ...
The Graduate Division serves more than 13,000 students in over 100 graduate degree programs. We are here to help you from the time you are admitted until you complete your graduate program. ... For those early on in their dissertation-writing process, a committee meeting is also a valuable opportunity to set parameters. ...
This emphasis area is for students interested in developing expertise in teaching and teacher education, curricular development and implementation, subject specific areas (e.g., English, social studies, science, mathematics, and other areas), and/or issues in pre-K through college education. This ...
Department of Mathematics, ... Thesis Defense. Cameron Cinel UCSD. Linearly Sofic Lie Algebras. Advisor: Efim Zelmanov May 15, 2024 4:00 PM. APM 6218 ***** 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093-0112 ... Contact Us; Undergraduate Graduate ...
This page is for Undergraduate Senior Theses. For Ph.D. Theses, see here.. So that Math Department senior theses can more easily benefit other undergraduate, we would like to exhibit more senior theses online (while all theses are available through Harvard University Archives, it would be more convenient to have them online).It is absolutely voluntary, but if you decide to give us your ...
Discussion of a doctoral thesis in the College of Computer Science and Mathematics - Department of Computer Science entitled: Designing a digital forensic analysis model Design a Digital Forensics Model In continuation of the scientific research movement and with the follow-up and presence of the Honorable Dean of the College of Computer Science and Mathematics, Professor Dr. Doha
Posted in: Awards & Recognition, Mathematics Education PhD, Presentations, Students and Alumni Geena Taite earned her bachelor's degree at Ramapo and was a member of the Pi Mu Epsilon society . She was invited back to speak about her time at Ramapo and how it influenced her successful career as a math educator.
Dr. Aghalaya Vatsala, Mathematics Professor Emerita, was the Grand Marshall for the Spring 2024 Doctoral Hooding Ceremony. This news item showcases her introduction speech given by our Provost, Dr. Jaimie Hebert. ... After earning a PhD in Mathematics from the Indian Institute of Technology in 1973, Dr. Vatsala began an academic journey that ...
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