Pre-examination process of a doctoral dissertation
The dissertation is examined in two stages, the first of which is the pre-examination and the second the public examination.
The pre-examiners’ task is to provide statements on whether the manuscript has scientific or artistic value that justifies granting permission to present it as a dissertation.
Originality check of the manuscript before the pre-examination process
Before you submit the manuscript for pre-examination, your responsible supervisor ensures that you have adhered to sound scientific practice when writing the dissertation: for example, that you have used proper citation to refer to literature. Once you have agreed with your supervisor that your manuscript is complete, feed the final version in your responsible supervisor’s Turnitin section on Moodle. See the instructions on using the Turnitin software. Your responsible supervisor reports the results of the check to the faculty. The originality check is mentioned on the title page of the dissertation.
Please read more about research ethics.
The contents and language of the manuscript submitted for pre-examination must be final except for any changes that may be presented in the pre-examination statements. Especially when the author uses some other than his/her native tongue, it is recommended that an external language revisor revise the text.
Read your faculty’s instructions on submitting the thesis for pre-examination, which can be found below this general section.
Get permissions in time
In good time, the doctoral student must ask for written permission from publishers to republish in both print and online the partial publications included in the dissertation. The author of the dissertation is responsible for getting the publishing permits. Permission must also be sought to publish partial publications that are only just being printed or accepted for publication. The doctoral student should also go through the Library’s guide on publishing a dissertation well in advance.
The author of the dissertation should have the copyright to the images, tables and other such materials contained in the dissertation. Visit the websites below for further information on copyright.
The doctoral student must be enrolled at the University as a present student throughout the dissertation’s examination process.
Appointing the pre-examiners and disqualification
Based on the supervisor’s proposal, the faculty appoints at least two pre-examiners to assess the dissertation manuscript. The pre-examiners and the opponent must be experienced and unbiased experts not employed by the University who have completed a doctoral degree. In the field of theatre arts, at least one of the pre-examiners and the opponent must hold a doctoral degree and the other pre-examiner may be appointed based on artistic merits.
The University’s minimum requirement, which the faculties may further specify, is that these experts may not have published joint publications with the doctoral student within the past three years. Provisions on the disqualification of experts are laid down in the Administrative Procedure Act (434/2003, Sections 27–29) (pdf). After this general description, read the specifications made by the faculties.
Doctoral students should submit the manuscript to the faculty according to the faculty’s instructions.
The faculty sends the documents pertaining to the pre-examination to the pre-examiners. The faculty, responsible supervisor and doctoral student agree on how and when the manuscript is sent to the pre-examiners.
The pre-examination statement
Within the agreed deadline, the pre-examiners send their statement to the faculty. It is recommended that the pre-examiners draft their statement within two months of receiving the manuscript.
In the statement, the pre-examiner makes clear whether he/she
- proposes the right to publish and publicly defend the manuscript
- does not propose the permission to publish and publicly defend the dissertation manuscript
The faculties have detailed assessment criteria specific to their doctoral programmes, which can be found below this general section.
The faculty contacts the pre-examiner if the statement does not arrive within the agreed deadline. If necessary, the faculty appoints new pre-examiners.
Check here the actions to be taken after the arrival of statements: