IV. Degree Regulations
Master of Landscape Architecture
Thesis
For the Master of Landscape Architecture degree students are encouraged to undertake scholarship of discovery, integration, application, and/or communication. This work typically includes identification of clear goals, adequate preparation, selection and application of appropriate methods, identification and discussion of results, effective written and graphic communication, and reflective critique.
For the Master of Landscape Architecture degree each candidate shall submit a thesis, communicated in an appropriate form, based upon scholarship on a topic related to landscape architecture. The thesis must demonstrate the candidate’s capacity for original and independent work, and should include a critical evaluation of work that has previously been done in the candidate’s area of investigation. The thesis should emphasize any new conclusions resulting from the candidate’s scholarly investigation. Special emphasis should be placed on the communication of how the results inform design.
Procedures
The thesis may be submitted at any time of the year, but candidates are encouraged to have the final examination well in advance of the deadline date for thesis submission. Candidates should be aware of the deadlines schedule, a copy of which may be obtained in the Office of Graduate Studies. Candidates should discuss their thesis write-up with their advisors early in their final semester.
As the thesis is being written, the candidate is expected to be in regular communication with the advisory committee. The draft thesis is sent to the members of the advisory committee. When a draft is completed which the advisory committee recommends for examination, the final draft is sent to the members of the master's examination committee and the final oral examination is held.
Following the master's examination the candidate, if successful, arranges for the preparation of the thesis in final form, and for its submission to the Assistant VP (see below). The thesis in final form must include any minor corrections or revisions resulting from the examination. Approval of the thesis takes the form of a Certificate of Approval, signed by the examination committee.
Master's Examination
The final oral examination, devoted chiefly to the defence of the thesis, is a departmental examination identified as the master's examination. The master's examination committee normally consists of three or four members appointed by the department chair or graduate coordinator, as follows:
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A member of the regular graduate faculty of the department, who is not a member of the advisory committee, to act as chair of the master's examination committee and to make arrangements therefor;
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A member of the candidate's advisory committee (normally, the advisor);
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A member of the associated graduate faculty or of the graduate faculty who may be a member of the advisory committee;
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A fourth member may be appointed from among graduate faculty from another department, from the department or from the advisory committee, according to departmental and/or examination requirements.
If possible, a member of another department should be included on the committee.
The examination is open to the public; members of the audience may question the candidate only upon invitation of the chair of the committee.
The examination is passed and the thesis approved if there is no more than one negative vote. An abstention is regarded as a negative vote. The report to the Assistant VP of Graduate Studies will record the decision as unsatisfactory or satisfactory. If unsatisfactory, the candidate may be given a second attempt. A second unsatisfactory result constitutes a recommendation to the Board of Graduate Studies that the student be required to withdraw (see Unsatisfactory Progress and Appeals of Decisions).
Copies of Thesis
One unbound copy of the certified thesis must be submitted to the Office of Graduate Studies by the deadline date shown in the Academic Schedule in this calendar. The Certificate of Approval signed by the examination committee must also be submitted. Also included must be a brief abstract consisting of no more than 150 words, a copy of the circulation waiver, and the copying licence. A second copy of the certified thesis must be submitted to University Design and Print for binding and for eventual submission to the department.
Publication
The university requires publication of the thesis in the following manner:
One unbound copy of the thesis is forwarded to the National Library of Canada, together with an agreement form signed by the candidate authorizing the National Library to microfilm the thesis and to make copies available for sale on request. The National Library will film the thesis exactly as it is and will list the thesis in Canadiana as a publication of the National Library.
The National Library's Microfilm Agreement form will be sent to the candidate prior to the master's examination, to be signed and submitted to the Assistant VP of Graduate Studies immediately after the successful completion of the examination.
An abstract of not more than 150 words, prepared by the author and approved by the advisor, is forwarded by the National Library to the publishers of Masters Abstracts International. The abstract is printed in this work and the availability of the thesis in microfilm at the National Library is announced.
The candidate, in consultation with the advisor and the department chair, shall have the right to request that circulation and/or copying of the thesis in any form be withheld for up to one year.