Course Requirements
Common Core (required) - 11-12 hours
and one from the following:
Thesis Option
- Subject area concentration: Complete 12 credit hours (if APSC 608 is taken above) or 13 credit hours (if APSC 651 or MATH 541 is taken above) of graduate coursework in desired concentration with guidance from advisor and committee.
Non-Thesis Option
- Subject area concentration: Complete 16 credit hours (if APSC 651 or MATH 541 is taken above) or 17 credit hours (if APSC 608 is taken above) of graduate coursework in desired concentration with guidance from advisor and committee.
Due to the different backgrounds, previous preparation, and career goals, not all Applied Science students will take the full core sequence, and a substitution for any of these courses can be approved by the Academic Progress Committee in Applied Science. However, unless otherwise exempted by the Department, students will be responsible for the material covered in the entire core.
Thesis Requirement
A thesis is optional. Students on the thesis track must complete an original thesis approved by the student’s advisory committee and defended in an oral examination.
Exam Requirement
There is no qualifying or comprehensive exam requirement.
Language Requirement
All graduate students who were required to take the TOEFL exam for admission will also be required to take courses on written or spoken English. A student and his/her adviser can jointly petition the Academic Progress Committee to waive this requirement.
There is no foreign language requirement for native English-speakers.
Satisfactory Progress
To be eligible to graduate, all students must achieve a cumulative grade point average of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale in all courses undertaken for graduate credit at William & Mary after admission to a degree program. A student in the Department must maintain a B average in order to remain in good standing. A student who receives a grade of C+ (2.3) or lower in a course may repeat that course one time for credit, upon approval of both the instructor of the course and the graduate director for the student’s program. When such a repeat attempt is approved, the grades for both attempts will count in the cumulative GPA, but only the most recent attempt will count toward the degree. No credit toward a degree will be allowed for a course in which a student receives a grade below C (grade point = 2.0).