Preparation for Graduate
School
Post-baccalaureate education is almost compulsory for
anyone who wishes to be involved in biology as a career.
With advanced degrees, individuals may seek employment as
field biologists, botanists, resource technicians,
laboratory researchers, and educators. For further
assistance in selecting specific career options, contact
UNCA's Career
Center and talk to your departmental advisor.
Entrance to graduate programs is highly competitive
and is based primarily on your grade point average, your
performance on the Graduate Record Examination, and
recommendations and evaluations from faculty. Many
schools require scores for both the general and advanced
GRE exams. These exams are normally taken during the
summer or fall of your senior year. The advanced GRE
(subject test) specifically tests your knowledge of
biology. Study guides with sample test questions are
available in bookstores or over the Internet. Your
advisor can be particularly helpful in providing hints on
how to prepare for this exam.
Most graduate schools offer special incentives to pay
for the costs of graduate school. Typically, when you are
admitted into a graduate program you will be offered a
teaching assistantship (TA) or a research assistantship
(RA) and a tuition waiver. Although stipends vary
considerably, the range is generally between $8,000 and
$16,000 per year. A number of foundations and federal
programs offer grants or fellowships for graduate
students. You should begin exploring these possibilities
during your junior year. The Biology Department posts
announcements of such fellowships on the bulletin board
across from the department office in Robinson 137. We
also display graduate school flyers on this board.
To place yourself in the best position to be admitted
into the graduate program of your choice you should
select either the Cellular and
Molecular Biology Concentration or the Ecology
and Evolutionary Biology Concentration. The former is
designed for students who are interested in graduate
studies in specialty areas such as biochemistry, cell
biology, genetics, molecular biology, and microbiology.
The latter is for students who want advanced training in
ecology, conservation biology, evolution, behavioral
ecology, and related fields of study. The requirements
for these programs meet or exceed those for graduate
programs at most universities in the United States. It
is also helpful to complete a field/laboratory senior
research project and to sign up for BIOL 499 (Laboratory
Assistantship) at least once.
One of the most difficult issues is determining which
graduate program and school is most appropriate for you.
By the end of your junior year you should have a grasp of
the major subdisciplines in biology and should begin
narrowing your choice down with respect to subdiscipline
(e.g., ecology versus cell biology) and organismal group
(e.g., plants versus animals versus microbes). Hopefully
at this time you will have narrowed your primary
interests to the point where you can begin exploring
specific programs at universities (e.g., primatology,
microbial genetics, plant systematics, aquatic ecology,
animal physiology, wildlife ecology, immunology, cell
biology, cancer research).
If you are not fully sure what these subdisciplines
entail, then spend some time in the library or on the web
reading abstracts in specialty journals to get a better
feel for current research. Most professors at research
institutions have web pages that explain their specific
areas of interest, so spend time exploring web sites for
details. If you find a school and program that seems
ideal, then it is helpful to contact a professor via
email to introduce yourself, to express your interest in
their laboratory's work, and to determine if there is
room for another graduate student in the lab. Acceptance
into graduate programs is highly competitive, so plan to
apply to several schools that range in quality and
acceptance standards. If you are accepted to two or more
programs of your choice, then campus visits may be in
order before making your final choice.