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Training Objectives Regardless of whether your future leads you into academia, industry,
or some other career option, as a graduate student you have two tasks:
1) to learn how to be a scientist, and 2) to obtain a broad training
in many different areas of science. The Department of Biology at UNC
provides a superb environment to carry out both of these tasks. The
road to becoming a scientist involves learning to plan, carry out
and interpret experiments. One of the best ways to obtain this sort
of training is in work on a model biological system such as those
studied in our department. The strengths of these model systems are
the many tools available to attack a problem, allowing students to
work at the cutting edge of biology. The boundaries formerly separated
different disciplines have disappeared; one can no longer be simply
a geneticist or just a cell biologist. Rather, one must attack a problem
with all of the tools at hand. A student who carries out thesis work
studying a fundamental biological problem in one of our labs will
be exposed to a wide array of technological approaches. In addition to lab work, our Department offers a number of other training opportunities. Students in our Department will spend the first year taking a set of courses tailored to their own interests and needs. They attend our weekly Department seminars, and also have an opportunity to attend the seminars in other Departments, Curricula, and programs on our campus and in the broader Research Triangle area. Our students are trained to present their work in yearly seminars for their fellow graduate students, and in yearly meetings with their thesis advisory committees. They also have the opportunity to present their work at National and International scientific meetings in their area of study. Stipends First-year MCDB graduate students in Biology receive a stipend of $21,000/year (2005-6 level). They also receive tuition remission and health insurance. All students are admitted without a commitment to a particular lab, allowing them to do rotations in several labs during their first year, while they are taking classes and seminar courses. All students are guaranteed full support for the 4-5 years that Ph.D. work is expected to last.
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