Difference between revisions of "PhD Information"

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*Do a technical test of the presentation in the exam room 6/1 in the Physics building at Campus South (check if your figures are not truncated and easy to read).
 
*Do a technical test of the presentation in the exam room 6/1 in the Physics building at Campus South (check if your figures are not truncated and easy to read).
   
  +
=== Preparation for the Exam ===
 
=== Preparation of the presentation ===
 
 
*Think about possible questions. Physicists out of your topic likely focus on related topics (e.g., functionality of your measurement device, physical basics of your topic).
 
*Think about possible questions. Physicists out of your topic likely focus on related topics (e.g., functionality of your measurement device, physical basics of your topic).
 
* With the doctoral regulations from March 27, 2017, the questions will be in the context of the topic. Nevertheless, it can be helpful to read some protocols from other exams to get an idea about how the examiners pose their questions (but note that an examiner sometimes gives hints on potential questions/topics, which is not necessarily mentioned in the protocol). Katharina Maurer (Student Advisory Service, Campus South, Physics building 30.23, 13. floor, room: 13.08, Phone: +49 721 608-46752, katharina.maurer@kit.edu) has a folder with a collection of questions from previous exams.
 
* With the doctoral regulations from March 27, 2017, the questions will be in the context of the topic. Nevertheless, it can be helpful to read some protocols from other exams to get an idea about how the examiners pose their questions (but note that an examiner sometimes gives hints on potential questions/topics, which is not necessarily mentioned in the protocol). Katharina Maurer (Student Advisory Service, Campus South, Physics building 30.23, 13. floor, room: 13.08, Phone: +49 721 608-46752, katharina.maurer@kit.edu) has a folder with a collection of questions from previous exams.

Revision as of 15:38, 26 May 2023

This wiki hopes to cover most information regarding the admin part about doing a PhD at IMK, however there are many other places that also supply information and some are listed here.


General Information for PhD Students

A nice overview about doing a doctorate at IMK(TRO) can be found here.


PhD Council and Representatives

We have now started a PhD Council at IMK with two representatives in charge of the contact with the group leaders. We are informally in charge of adding things to this wiki as well as other projects for improving PhD life at IMK. If you are interested in joining us or you have small or big ideas send us an email at imk-phd-council@lists.kit.edu!

We are aiming at organising a bi-annual PhD Assembly to improve our networking as well as an opportunity to voice any concerns. These will hopefully be in conjunction with the semester start and will be announced in the TRO Newsletter as well through the PhD emailing lists.


Business trips

Please see the page on business trips.


On-boarding Checklist

Registering as a PhD Student

The registration procedure can be quite complicated for a new PhD student, here is the information given on the latest PhD Induction day.


Further information can be found here:

Teaching

A nice intro to teaching at the IMK can be found here.

Essential Software

See the page on Software

Finishing your PhD and Defence

Writing your Dissertation

  • Discuss the outline and content of your thesis with your supervisor(s) and referees.
  • Agree with your supervisor(s) on the language of the thesis (English or German).
  • Use the official LaTeX template for your dissertation (LaTeX template for dissertation: German or English. You will first have to hand in a draft (“version 0”) of your thesis to your referees (digital or printed version, preferably A4 format; see below).
  • The dissertation must be written in the form of a monograph; cumulative dissertations are not allowed at the KIT-Faculty of Physics.

Useful hints for writing:

    • Do not only write your thesis from your “expert” perspective, but in a way a scientist with basic knowledge can follow your study.
    • Make clear what your personal contribution to the topic is; highlight the “gap” that you want to fill.
    • Find meaningful headlines; if possible, highlight in the headlines what is new in your work.
    • Level of detail (e.g., in data and methods chapter): Which information do you need to understand the results? Is this part of the overall story of your thesis?
    • Use an appendix for additional information (e.g., skill scores, additional graphics and tables).

Registration procedure for the exam (defence)

  • Talk to your supervisor(s) and referees: present the status of your work and show that your dissertation can be finished in the remaining time. Discuss possible dates for the exam.
  • Ask for an exam date at the Dean’s office (current secretary: Regina Hühn: +49 721 608-42052). You will get several dates, so that you can find a suitable date for you and your referees. You can only apply for exam dates, which are up to three months in the future and which are in the lecture period (Vorlesungszeit).
  • Communicate the exam date to the secretary of the Dean’s office (together with the names and institutes of your referees).
  • If the date is still available, the secretary will send you an e-mail with the exam date confirmation. The e-mail also contains further things that you have to keep in mind (e.g., the submission date at which you

have to hand in your “vorgelegte” version of the dissertation; see below).

  • The secretary will ask for documents, you have to send to her approx. 1 week before the submission date of your “vorgelegte” version:
    • Admission application, addressed to the Dean (Zulassungsgesuch an den Dekan). This must be sent within four years after acceptance as doctoral researcher at the KIT-Faculty of Physics, otherwise your status as doctoral researcher ends.
    • Your CV (including your office address and private address, the date and place of birth), and your list of publications (may be part of your CV).
    • Copies of university-entrance diploma (Abiturzeugnis) and diploma/Bachelor’s + Master’s certificate(s) (Diplom-/Bachelor- und Masterzeugnis[se])
    • Declarations as per attachment 3, 4, and 5b of the doctoral regulations from March 27, 2017 (Erklärungen nach Anlage 3, 4 und 5b der Promotionsordnung vom 27.3.2017)

Handing in you Dissertation

1. Discuss your draft of the dissertation with your supervisor and referees, and give them a comb- or glue-bound book form of the draft approx. 2-3 weeks before the submission date. Add a cover letter/write an e-mail with a summary of the important dates and deadlines (e.g., deadline for referee reviews [=submission date], date of exam).

2. Make necessary changes as proposed by the referees. Some referees ask for a second iteration. When you have done all changes, this version is your “vorgelegte” version for submission.

3. You need the following copies of your “vorgelegte” version of the dissertation:

  • one copy for the Dean’s office: Hand in a hardcover/glue-bound version of your “vorgelegte” dissertation to the Dean’s office (on the submission date, 10 a.m. at the latest). Make sure that it says “vorgelegte Dissertation” and not “genehmigte Dissertation” on the title page of your dissertation too! The first is the version, which is graded, the latter is for final publishing after the exam (see below).
  • Up to four/five copies for the examiners: Examiners who are referees in personal union might not need a copy of the “vorgelegte” version if they have already a printed book of the draft. You can provide them with a digital version of your dissertation with tracked changes. Moreover, some examiners who are not referees might not want a printed version to save paper.
  • One copy for you.

4. After submission: When the Dean’s office has received the dissertation and the referee reviews, they will send you details about the exam (date and time, room, examiners) via “Hauspost” and by mail to your address which is given in your CV. Get in touch with your examiners who are not referees and agree on a date for a personal/digital meeting (approx. 30-60 min). Be prepared to present a summary of your work. The sooner, the better for your preparation time in the last days before the exam.

5. The Dean’s office also sends you an e-mail with the time for a short meeting with the Dean and the other examinees (PhD students). The Dean will explain the exam’s procedure and show you the rooms. Be prepared to present a 5-minute summary of your work.


IMPORTANT DEADLINES:
3 months before the exam date: Save your date for the exam (date must be in lecture period!). The submission date will be 5 weeks before the exam at the latest (10 a.m.!). 
~ 2-3 weeks before the submission date: Hand in version 0 of your thesis to your supervisor and referees (agree on a date, so that the referees have enough time to read and comment the thesis and you have enough time to make necessary changes. (Print draft necessary)
 ~ 1
week before the submission date: Hand in further “official” documents requested by the Dean’s office (see below). 
Submission date: Hand in revised version of your thesis (version 0 + necessary changes asked for by referees; “vorgelegte” version) to the Dean’s office. The same deadline applies for the referee’s reviews, make sure that your referees hold this deadline. (Print “vorgelegte” version necessary) 
 Exam date: Exam, have your 20 minute presentation prepared.


Preparation of the presentation

  • Present your work with logical structure, central theme; focus on important findings rather than rushing through many results.
  • Provide a good introduction; you could try to show simple schemes to explain certain processes/phenomena in the introduction (keep in mind that some examiners are not related to your research topic).
  • Mention your publications.
  • Give trial presentations about 1-2 weeks before your exam to your referees, to other PhD-students and Post-doctoral researchers to get feedback on your presentation. Take into consideration a second trial presentation within your working group a few days before the exam.
  • Do a technical test of the presentation in the exam room 6/1 in the Physics building at Campus South (check if your figures are not truncated and easy to read).

Preparation for the Exam

  • Think about possible questions. Physicists out of your topic likely focus on related topics (e.g., functionality of your measurement device, physical basics of your topic).
  • With the doctoral regulations from March 27, 2017, the questions will be in the context of the topic. Nevertheless, it can be helpful to read some protocols from other exams to get an idea about how the examiners pose their questions (but note that an examiner sometimes gives hints on potential questions/topics, which is not necessarily mentioned in the protocol). Katharina Maurer (Student Advisory Service, Campus South, Physics building 30.23, 13. floor, room: 13.08, Phone: +49 721 608-46752, katharina.maurer@kit.edu) has a folder with a collection of questions from previous exams.
  • Read books/papers/texts related to your topic.

Defence talk/presentation and oral exam

The presentation and exam take place in two different rooms in building 30.23: room 6/1 for the presentation and room 9/16 for the exam. Take an HDMI-to-VGA adapter with you if necessary.

Exam:

  • You will stand in front of a blackboard and the examiners sit at a meeting table. One at a time, they will ask you questions for about 10 minutes each. The first referee will start; the Dean is the last one.
  • You can/should use the blackboard to draw a sketch or write down an equation.
  • In case that you do not know the answer to a question, do not panic or keep silent. Try to refer to the topic. It is not expected that you can answer all questions.
  • You will be informed about the outcome by the head of the board of examiners.

Steps for publishing your dissertation (in order to receive your PhD certificate):

1. Ask your referees, if final changes in the dissertation are needed. Make all necessary changes (also check for typing errors). Change the title page to „genehmigte Dissertation“. 2. Ask in the Dean‘s office for the print permission document (Druckerlaubnis). Here, your referees have to sign that the thesis can be published in its current form. 3. Hand in the signed print permission document and a printed version of the final thesis (“genehmigte Dissertation”) at the Dean‘s office. 4. Publish your thesis at the KIT library (see below). The Dean‘s office will be notified by the KIT library. 5. You will receive an e-mail from the Dean‘s office as soon as you can pick up your doctoral certificates (Promotionszeugnis and Promotionsurkunde).


Publication possibilities at KIT:

There are three main ways of publishing your dissertation at the KIT library:

  1. online publication (DIN A4 format) at the repository KITopen
  2. online publication (DIN A5 format) at KIT Scientific Publishing (KSP)
  3. online and print (DIN A5 format) at KSP


More information about the different publication possibilities can be found on the website of the KIT library (https://www.bibliothek.kit.edu/dissertationen.php). If you include already published material in your dissertation (e.g., articles from scientific journals), you have to make sure that the copyright policy of the journal agrees with the license at KIT (e.g., KITopen license, open access license).

Details for publishing at KSP:

Your dissertation at IMK-TRO may be published printed and online within the book series „Wissenschaftliche Berichte des Instituts für Meteorologie und Klimaforschung des Karlsruher Instituts für Technologie“ by KIT Scientific Publishing (KSP). Each dissertation (volume) gets its own ISBN-number. This enables everyone to order your dissertation in a bookshop as “print on demand”. Online publication is done by KSP using Eva Star of the KIT-library. The costs for printing of 25 copies of your dissertation is covered by IMK-TRO (upper limit approx. 700 EUR). Covering of additional costs by IMK-TRO due to a higher number of copies or many color figures in your dissertation has to be discussed with the head of your research group – ideally before publication.

The design of the cover and the layout of the first pages are fixed for the book series by IMK-TRO and KSP. For the overall layout of your volume there is a KSP-template in Latex and Word, which MUST be used (https://www.bibliothek.kit.edu/ksp-toolbox.php) or you can use the version on the IMK-TRO webpage (recommended; format is A5; the templates are designed to fit the final format). Important formal requirements of the template, which you have to meet, are collected in a very helpful PDF: https://www.bibliothek.kit.edu/downloads/KSP/KSP-Basic-Layout-Guidelines.pdf

Further remarks:

  • Detailed printing information for your dissertation are given on the KSP homepage (English translation possible via built-in Google translator)

Before printing answer the KSP technical questions as follows: - Cost absorption for printing: by IMK-TRO (if agreed by the head of your group); - Form of publication: print on demand; - Series of publication: IMK-TRO institute series; - Title of series: Wiss. Berichte des Instituts für Meteorologie und Klimaforschung; - Book format: DIN-A5. - Number: leave blank - The KSP printing offer has to be approved by the head of your group. Payment is done by IMK-TRO at Campus North (Großforschungsbereich). - Currently 9 copies have to be handed out to Mrs. Beideck at IMK-TRO, CS for IMK and other libraries. The remaining 16 copies are provided for your individual purposes.

If you have any questions concerning the print of the thesis, you can ask Michael Kunz (kunz@kit.edu).Authors publishing at KSP are entitled to benefits of an allowance paid by the „Verwertungsgesellschaft Wort (VG Wort)“, in case that you are registered at „VG Wort“.