Admission Requirements
In addition to University requirements for admission, the applicant must:
No application will be considered complete until the application, complete questionnaire, and official GRE scores are received by the WTAMU Graduate Office. Once all of your application materials have been received, the Department graduate faculty will determine whether or not you will be admitted to the Biology Graduate Program. You will be notified through the WTAMU Graduate Office.
- Please be aware of the following Department of Life, Earth and Environmental Sciences graduate admissions deadlines. All of the above application materials must be received by the Department of Life, Earth and Environmental Sciences (NOT by the Graduate Office) prior to the application for the semester in which you wish to enter and begin graduate study. Late applications will not be accepted.
Semester of Entry
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Application Deadline
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Fall
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August 1
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Spring
|
December 1
|
Summer
|
May 1
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Additional Requirements for International Students
- In addition to all of the above requirements for US National Students, international applicants must meet the following criteria:
- Applicants from Universities following the US GPA format will be assessed following the table provided above under US National Students. Students from Universities not following the standard US GPA format require an average verbal and quantitative percentile of >40.
- The curriculum criteria as outlined above for US National Students, including some indication of grade interpretation for Universities not following the standard US GPA and grading system.
- Students for whom English is a second language require a minimum TOEFL score of ≥90 (iBT) or PTE score of ≥62 or IELTS score of >6.5overall.
More information on international graduate admissions can be found online through the International Student Office.
Faculty members respond to inquiries from prospective students interested in their field of study and recruit their own students. As far as positions in their labs, this contingent on (1) if they have the space in their lab (i.e., if they can take on a new student), (2) if they have financial support, including support for research (e.g., research grant, assisstantship, through the university or department), and (3) if the interests of the student actually align with that of the faculty member.
Our department has five Graduate Teaching Assistantships available. These are competitive, and because students are generally granted two years on an assistantship, not all assistantships are open each year. Applications are solicited in January or February and are usually awarded in April following evaluation by a committee. Faculty members are encouraged to seek outside funding, but these may or may not lead to a student research assistantship.
Students may certainly propose their own projects, but these must align with the faculty member’s expertise and be feasible with the resources available here. Students can apply for small research grants (ca. $3000) through our Killgore Research Center to help fund projects (supplies, small equipment items, travel); faculty members sometimes have grant support for research, which can also help defray costs of research. We are always hopeful that students will publish their theses and projects are designed with that in mind.
Major in Biology
(Major Code: 5102)
The Department of Life, Earth and Environmental Sciences offers students a master of science degree in biology. Department faculty provide opportunities for research (see below) which lead to a degree with thesis. A research-thesis program is recommended for those students planning to continue their education to the doctorate level or for students seeking a career that requires research training in biology. A non-thesis degree program is also available.