All graduate theses or dissertations must conform to the minimum style and form requirements as detailed in SGSPA General Forms of Theses. You are advised to follow all necessary copyright rules described at Copyright & Your Thesis.
MA examining committees are composed of the following members:
- Chairperson – Head of the Department or Head’s Delegate. The Chair is not a voting member of the committee.
- Supervisor(s)
- Examiner – may be from SKHS, external to SKHS, or, in exceptional circumstances, external to Queen’s.
All committee members external to Queen’s University must be approved by the Associate Dean of the School of Graduate Studies. Supervisors must submit a CV of the examiner to the SKHS Graduate Program Coordinator for them to make the request.
If assistance is required to secure a Chair, the supervisor should contact the SKHS Graduate Program Coordinator as soon as possible.
The candidate and supervisor must notify the SKHS Graduate Program Coordinator of the oral examination by submitting a completed and signed MA Oral Examination Form.
This form must be submitted at least 15 working days in advance of a scheduled examination. The candidate must also submit a copy of their thesis to the SKHS Graduate Program Coordinator at this time.
The Graduate Program Coordinator will provide the examining committee with the thesis, exam instructions and forms at least 10 working days in advance of the exam. The Graduate Program Coordinator will also notify the School of Graduate Studies and Postdoctoral Affairs of the examination at this time, providing the candidate’s MSc exam form, transcript, and proof of completion of other degree requirements.
The MA oral thesis examination proceeds according to the following guideline:
The examiners and the candidate are introduced to one another by the Chair. The candidate will then be asked to withdraw briefly from the room (physical or virtual) while the committee members’ reports are read.
The candidate is recalled, and questioning takes place in the order of external examiner(s), internal examiner(s), head or delegate (including if the Head is serving in Chair role, i.e., read their own report), and supervisor(s).
The candidate is asked to once again withdraw from the room while the committee deliberates.
The candidate is recalled and told of their results, which can be one of the following outcomes:
Passed: A thesis is passed if it acceptable in its present form or pending minor revisions, and its defense at the oral thesis examination was satisfactory.
Passed with Major Revisions: A thesis is passed with major revisions if it is not acceptable in its present form or pending minor revisions but could be acceptable pending major revisions. This result does not require a second oral thesis examination; however, all revisions must be completed within 4-months. All major revisions must be documented by the Chair and certified to the School of Graduate Studies and Postdoctoral Affairs.
Referred: A thesis is referred if it is not acceptable in its present form and, after extensive revision by the candidate, required re-examination by the examining committee. The referred result may be used whether the committee determines that the thesis requires substantive changes or rewriting and/or if it determines that the oral thesis examination itself is unsatisfactory. In all cases of referral, the nature of the revisions and/or additional work, and/or the deficiencies associated with the oral examination, must be specified in writing by the Chair to avoid dispute or ambiguity. These comments will be passed on to the candidate in a letter from the School of Graduate Studies and Postdoctoral Affairs as revisions that must be met for the thesis to be reconsidered. The candidate has up to twelve months to complete revisions.
Failed: A thesis is failed if the document is unacceptable to the discipline even with substantive revisions. If the committee returns two or more votes of Failed on the basis of the document, this means that the committee recommends that the student be required to withdraw on academic grounds. Failure may also result from an unacceptable second oral thesis examination, where the student was manifestly unable to adequately present and defend the thesis. A decision of failed on the basis of the second oral thesis examination requires agreement by the majority (more than half) of the examining committee.
The Chair will complete and submit all exam documentation to the Graduate Program Coordinator, who will then submit the records to the School of Graduate Studies.
Oral thesis examinations are normally open, meaning that all members of the Queen’s community (any faculty member, staff member, or student of the University) may attend. Visitors (anyone who is not a member of the Queen’s community) may attend an open oral thesis examination if their attendance has been arranged by the candidate and the supervisor(s).
An oral thesis examination may be closed, meaning that only members of the examining committee may be present.
Submission to QSpace
Degree requirements are considered complete when an electronic copy of the thesis, in PDF-format approved by the oral thesis examination committee is submitted to the School of Graduate Studies through the E-Thesis Submission process in QSpace, Queen's Research Repository.
To submit a thesis to QSpace, see: Deposit your Thesis to QSpace. Please also see: Final Submission Thesis Checklist.
Restriction of Thesis
A thesis submitted to QSpace is available to the broad community. As a publicly assisted university, research is made accessible to the public. Occasionally there may be cause to restrict access to a thesis for a period of time.
For more information, please review: Restriction of Thesis
Permission of Co-Authors for Manuscript-Style Theses
Permission from co-authors is always necessary if you are including full articles that have been published elsewhere (i.e. a manuscript style thesis). Please use the [Permission of Co-Authors] form to get permission and signatures from your co-authors.
In most cases, publishers will allow for journal articles and book chapters to be included in manuscript style theses without additional permissions. Check your publication agreements, the author rights section of the publisher site or the SHERPA RoMEO website for more information about what your publisher allows.
For more information on copyright permissions and your thesis go to the library website
Theses Binding
At the time of submission for completion of degree requirements, you may also submit up to two unbound copies of the thesis for permanent binding. For more information about thesis binding, please see: Submission of Paper Copies of the Theses for Binding
Please note, students must arrange for the printing of hard copies of theses and submission to the School of Graduate Studies. The School of Kinesiology and Health Studies Administration Office does not print theses.
Registration
All students working on a thesis must register for each term until they have completed all requirements for their degree program.
Requirements are considered complete when an electronic copy of the thesis, in PDF-format approved by the oral thesis examination committee is submitted to the School of Graduate Studies through the E-Thesis Submission process in QSpace. Please review: Final Thesis Submission.
Tuition + Fees Refund
All students working on a thesis must pay tuition for each term until they have completed all requirements of their program.
A student who completes their program mid-term is eligible for a full or partial refund of ancillary and tuition fees assessed for that term according to Office of the University Registrar - Degree Completion Refund Timeline. Students are required to return their student card to Records and Services for a refund of ancillary fees.
If you have questions, please contact the Office of the University Registrar through email at refunds@queensu.ca and include your full name and student number.