FCT Programs
About The Program Governance Media Contacts
Friday, May 16, 2008
Digital Media Advanced Computing Mathematics UTEN
Joint Educational Program

ICES and the Portuguese institutions aim to put together an educational program in the area of advanced computing to appear as a sub-field in existing programs in Computer Science. In a first phase, this program will consist of a series of advanced courses that students can take both in Portugal and at UT-Austin that are automatically recognized as part of existing M.Sc. and Ph.D. offerings. Therefore, a student engaged in an existing post-graduate program and working towards the research projects aforementioned will be able to plan and take coursework, including courses in both Portugal and at UT-Austin as part of the academic curriculum. This allows students to keep pace in completing the academic requirements of the degrees they are engaged in while traveling and spending time on student exchanges between Portugal and UT-Austin.

In a second phase, the coursework mentioned above and the joint research projects between Portugal and UT-Austin may converge into a joint Ph.D. degree offered by the Portuguese institutions and UTA/ICES in the field of advanced computing. Such a Ph.D. degree may be awarded to students that complete a set of requirements to be defined by the schools involved. A M.Sc. degree might be offered after an academic curriculum has been completed and enough research presented. Students willing to pursue the joint Ph.D. degree must then pass qualifying examinations and defend their thesis.

In order to enable the application and exploitation of advanced and grid computing technologies, the following education and training initiatives will be promoted:

  • Short courses and training seminars: The focus will be on advanced computing tools, environments, and systems administration for presenting overviews of advanced computing systems and technologies. An additional objective is to promote the utilization, application development, and management of advanced computing environments. Besides individual course units, the Advanced Computing Program will also consider the organization of intensive summer classes with practical, hands-on laboratory facilities.
  • Advanced courses: Individual courses, covering the main dimensions of advanced and grid computing including: (i) user interfaces, advanced portals, and problem-solving environments; (ii) advanced application development, including parallel and distributed programming models, software environments, and tools; (iii) advanced middleware, services and resource management; and (iv) and advanced distributed infrastructures, and operating systems management including clusters, heterogeneous resources for computation, storage and communication. Such themes can be complemented with other courses with a focus on computational science or scientific computing themes such as simulation, numerical methods and algorithms. Such advanced courses can be offered as individual teaching units and attended by students with different backgrounds including: (i) students with a master’s degree in Computer Science/Informatics/Software Engineering who seek further specialization in advanced technologies; and (ii) students with a background on science and engineering who also seek complementary education on advanced technologies. For both kinds of students such advanced courses can contribute to course requirements for a PhD or to education on advanced technologies aiming at a professional integration in industry. By attending a collection of such advanced courses and obtaining a number of ECTS a student can obtain a certified 'Diploma de Formação Avançada.” Such a “Diploma” can also contribute to part of the course requirements for the 1st year of a PhD.
  • PhD Program in the Advanced Computing areas of computer science and informatics with focus on high-performance, grid computing, and computational science and engineering: In Portugal, a PhD Program is now defined as a 3rd cycle graduate program in the context of the European Union Bologna Treaty reformulations of higher education. Such a program aims at enabling professional opportunities in fundamental research or research and development (R&D) in universities for both teaching and research activities and in industry. As such, it is required that the degree provides a specialization based on a broad and consolidated knowledge in computer science/informatics. Accordingly the cooperation between UT-Austin and selected Portuguese universities will work toward a PhD program in the Advanced Computing areas of computer science/informatics with a focus on high performance and grid computing, and on its relationships with computational science and engineering. Such a focus will be achieved through: (i) specialized and advanced courses; (ii) studying and working in a research environment at the participating universities and research centers integrated in projects related to advanced and grid computing and its relationships with computational science and engineering; and (iii) the preparation of a PhD thesis on a related theme within the scope of one of those projects. Overall there are some differences in the structure and operational details of the distinct PhD Programs of the universities involved in this program. In order to identify and define a common template for a joint PhD Program to be pursued under the cooperation protocol with UT-Austin, the Portuguese universities will prepare a joint proposal for a common program so that a participating student can transparently enroll in the Advanced Computing PhD Program by following a common and uniform model for PhD work independent of any one institution. Such a common template will also be used for meeting UT-Austin PhD program requirements and for the possibility of establishing a common protocol. It is a goal of the Advanced Computing Program to allow for a reasonable degree of flexibility in this mapping so that collaboration is enabled with UT-Austin without strong forms of a joint PhD Program that may require long-term discussions. It is also an important goal that all PhD students are held to the highest scientific standards and satisfy the PhD program requirements that are defined by the participating universities. Such matching protocols will address the following issues: (i) student admission requirements; (ii) PhD course structure; (iii) requirements for accepting the doctoral plan and for assessment of work progress; (iv) joint co-advising involving the Portuguese universities and UT-Austin; (v) residency requirements of the students and co-advisers at UT-Austin and in Portugal; and (vi) PhD thesis submission and defense.

It is understood that any joint degree program will require a specific protocol to be established by means of procedures to be determined and approved by the UT-Austin and the involved Portuguese partners. It is intended that these protocols be defined 'on top' of the existing PhD Programs and not by creating a new PhD program.

09.Oct.2008
03.Oct.2008
21.Jul.2008
15.Jul.2008
14.Jul.2008
10.Jul.2008
16.Jun.2008
16.Jun.2008
26.May.2008
03.Apr.2008
14.Mar.2008