Our inclusive curriculum prepares you to succeed at the next level of your career, whether that's working in an a biomedical research lab, an environmental testing lab, or a local, state, or federal agency such as the Centers for Disease Control or the US Fish and Wildlife Service.
Location: Cullowhee, Main Campus
Prerequisites:
Full-Time or Part-Time
App Deadline: Dec. 1, May 1
Close proximity to research facilities
Located in a region of exceptional biodiversity
Join us at one of our upcoming virtual Graduate School Open House events on Zoom! You'll have the opportunity to learn more
about Western Carolina University, understand the Graduate School application process,
and meet key program representatives.Virtual Open House
Tuesday, December 3, 2024: 5-6:30 p.m.
Completing an M.S. in Biology requires a minimum of 30 semester hours of graduate study, including three semesters of BIOL 696, one semester of BIOL 697 and a 6-hour thesis. An oral defense of the thesis is required.
Catalogs and application for admission, fellowships, or assistantships are available online from the Graduate School. Tuition waivers and teaching assistantships with a stipend of possible total yearly support ranging from $15,000 to $19,000 are awarded on a competitive basis to graduate students in Biology.
To be eligible for consideration, the applicant should have an undergraduate grade point average of 3.00 (out of 4.00) or higher and an undergraduate degree (or equivalent) in Biology or related life science from an accredited College or University for consideration of full admission.
Application materials: a statement including the names of two WCU faculty members whose research is of interest; three letters of reference; official transcripts. Applicants may submit GRE scores if they wish, but submitting GRE scores is not required.
Prospective graduate students are encouraged to apply to the Graduate School early. Decisions on admissions and assistantships are usually made in spring for the following term.
WCU’s proximity to five national forests, two national parks, and some of the highest biodiversity in the world gives our program natural laboratories for ecological and organismal resesarch. Additionally, the Biology Department's mammalian cell culture facility, its microscopy imaging facility, its DNA sequencers and other biochemistry instrumentation, and its association with WCU's Forensic Science lab offer outstanding research opportunities for graduate students interested in genetics and physiology. Biology's Graduate Student Research page lists current and past projects.
The Station provides graduate students and senior scientists from throughout the United States with research and specialty course opportunities on Southern Appalachian biota.
Research funds and logistical support are available for qualified graduate students.
The station is located 50 minutes from campus.
Learn more about Highlands Biological Station
Graduate students may become involved in research projects in Great Smoky Mountains National Park and the Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory, both of which are International Biosphere Reserves. Research opportunities also are available in the Blue Ridge Parkway National Park and in Nantahala and Pisgah National Forests.
This research unit of the International Biological Reserve has been established and
well known for its watershed research for over half a century. It is one of a few
long term ecological research stations in the country. Cooperative research projects
are encouraged by the permanent research staff as well as other universities working
at the station.
Learn more about Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory