Applications are made through the Graduate School but read on for important information for applicants. Don't hesitate to contact us with questions...see contact info at the bottom.
The truth is that your thesis advisor is the person who will have, by far, the greatest influence on your professional development. It is critical that you choose wisely. Research success and your advisor’s close guidance will be the most important factors in launching your research career. Go through the web pages of our faculty. Read the recent papers of those you are interested in. Contact them and, if possible, go and visit them. Talk to their current and former students. Talk to them about their research goals and see how you would fit into these goals. Ask about financial support.
Note: You need not be accepted by an advisor to be accepted into the Program (although that’s desirable) but one or more faculty members need to be interested in you as a potential graduate student and be willing to advise you in your first year. Laboratory rotations are one of a number of optional methods of identifying a formal advisor.
As a rule, all students receive support:
This is not a job. It is a period of training. Thus the money is enough to live on so you can focus your efforts on your research.
Graduate Office Telephone: 301-405-6905
Room 2231 Biology/Psychology Building
email: biol-grad@deans.umd.edu
University of Maryland
College Park, MD 20742
…..to contact the Graduate Director, Prof. Marco Colombini: colombini@umd.edu