Biological Sciences


Opportunities for graduate studies

The Department of Biological Sciences' mission is to provide you with a contemporary education of the highest quality while you pursue a graduate degree in biology, biochemistry, molecular biology and environmental science. Scholarly research, strong professor-student mentoring, high-quality instruction and professional community service are the foundation of our mission. The cornerstone of our graduate programs is the creation of new knowledge through research. We offer you the opportunity to conduct research, leading to your theses or dissertations, in aquatic biology, aquatic toxicology, biochemistry, cell/molecular biology, ecology, environmental sciences, forensic biology, genetics, limnology, microbiology, neurobiology, physiology and plant sciences.

Our research is supported through dozens of public, private, and nonprofit agencies including the American Heart Association, Army Corps of Engineers, Environmental Protection Agency, National Institutes of Health and National Science Foundation.

Department assets for research and graduate training occupy more than 200,000 square feet in the Biology Building, the Science Research Building, and the Environmental Education, Science and Technology Building. Resources include basic biological instrumentation, electron microscopes with preparative and X-ray analysis equipment, common instrument areas with facilities for proteomic and genomic research, an instrument shop, darkrooms, greenhouses, and land and water vehicles.

The Institute of Applied Sciences provides research and educational programs addressing natural and human resource issues. The institute also has laboratories for aquatic chemistry, aquatic toxicology, geographic information systems, data visualization and analyses of archaeological samples. The 40-acre Water Research Field Station is located a few miles from the campus.


Admission requirements

You must meet the requirements of the Toulouse School of Graduate Studies and specific requirements for admission to our master's and doctoral programs. Visit www.biol.unt.edu or consult the graduate catalog at www.unt.edu/catalog for admission requirements. For more information, e-mail gradsch@unt.edu or call 940-565-2383 or toll free 888-868-4723.


Degree requirements

Master of science degrees

  • Biology - a 30-hour scholarly research degree that requires 24 hours of formal course work, special problems and seminars at the 5000-6000 levels, and a 6-hour thesis.
  • Biology with a specialization in teaching - a 36-hour non-research degree if you desire initial teacher certification in the life sciences at the secondary level. The degree requires 18 hours at the 5000-6000 levels in biology and 18 hours in secondary education at the 5000-6000 levels. Admission to the secondary education courses requires meeting all College of Education requirements. You are not eligible for our Ph.D. program by completing the non-thesis M.S.
  • Biochemistry - a 30-hour scholarly research degree that requires 24 hours of formal course work (with three core courses), special problems and seminars at the 5000-6000 levels, and a 6-hour thesis.
  • Molecular biology - a 30-hour scholarly research degree that requires 24 hours of formal course work, special problems and seminars at the 5000-6000 levels, and a 6-hour thesis.
  • Environmental science - two options: (1) a 36-hour scholarly research degree that requires 30 hours of organized course work, special problems and seminars at the 5000-6000 levels, and a 6-hour thesis; or (2) a 42-hour formal course work program including special problems and seminars at the 5000-6000 levels. Both options have a core course work requirement.

Master of arts degrees

  • Biology - a 36-hour non-research degree is 30 hours of organized course work at the 5000-6000 levels and 6 hours of problems in lieu of thesis; or 36 hours of formal course work at the 5000-6000 levels. Students completing the M.A. are not eligible for our Ph.D. program. The M.A. has a language requirement.
  • Molecular biology - a 36-hour degree with two options in lieu of a thesis: (1) 30 hours of course work at the 5000-6000 levels and a 6-hour problems course, or (2) 36 hours of course work at the 5000-6000 levels. Students have a foreign language requirement and are not eligible for the department's Ph.D. program.

Ph.D. degree

  • Biology, biochemistry, molecular biology or environmental science - a scholarly research program of 90 hours at the 5000-6000 levels beyond the bachelor's degree or 60 hours beyond the master's degree, including a 12-hour dissertation. Specific requirements may vary among the four programs. The Ph.D. represents creation of new knowledge through independent research that culminates in a dissertation of scientific merit. You are expected to have been published or be accepted for publication with at least one original research article in a refereed journal before graduation.

Financial assistance

Qualified graduate students are supported through competitive teaching assistantships or research assistantships funded through research grants to faculty. Nine-month stipends range from $10,800 for entering master's students to $12,400 for Ph.D. candidates. Out-of-state and international students who are supported at least one-half time are eligible for in-state tuition. Contact the department for information about assistantships. Contact Student Financial Aid and Scholarships for student loan information at 940-565-2302 or (877) 881-1014.

Information about financial aid offered through the graduate school, including fellowships, is available at www.gradschool.unt.edu.


Libraries

The UNT libraries contain books, periodicals, electronic databases, maps, documents, microforms and audiovisual materials, plus a large and growing number of electronic journals and books.

The Science and Technology Library holdings emphasize biology, chemistry, computer science, library and information sciences, and physics, and include an outstanding collection in mathematics. Catalogs for other major research libraries throughout the world may be searched electronically and documents ordered through interlibrary loan.