Computational Linguistics
Bachelor of Science (Major Subject)
Bachelor of Science (Major Subject)
Examination Office for Humanities and Social Sciences
Administrator
Examination Administration
Platzhalter
Further deadline overviews are to be found here.
The thesis for the degree program Computational Linguistics should be processed in the course of the 4th semester according to attachement 2 of the examination regulations.
Please contact your supervisor timely before the begin of the processing time. A withdrawal from the thesis topic given is only possible once two weeks after the first day of the processsing time at the latest.
The form for thesis regsitration can be downloaded here. Please exclusively use the form intended for your degree program. If there is no specific form for your program, please use the form desgnated as "allgemein".
Please fill in your personal data and let your supervisor fill in the thesis' working title.
The form will be forwarded to the examanation office either directly by your supervisor, or by your program coordinator. The admission to the thesis will be registered by the responsible clerk within two to three weeks after the begin of the processing time.
After the thesis was registered at the examination office, it appears at your LSF Transcript of Records and at the LSF page "List of exams registered for". At this page you can also check the spelling fo your thesis' working title. If anything is wrong, please contact the responsible clerk at the examination office.
The begin of the processing time is the first day of the registration period for all students. The processing time is exactly 20 weeks.
Please note: The registration form can be submitted at any given day during the registration period. The begin of the processing time is its first day regardless.
The thesis [2 copies] must be submitted to Mr. Philipp Moritz Handl in room D 203 (Geschwister-Scholl-Platz 1, 80539 München) on the day of submission during opeing hours.
When submitting it, you must confirm in writing that you have written your work independently and have not used any other sources or aids. Further information can be found on the homepage of the Center for Information and Language Processing.