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Program in Conservation Biology
Degree Programs:
Full-Time/Part-Time: Free-Standing M.A. in Conservation Biology
The Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Environmental
Biology (E3B) was established as a result of a multi-institutional
collaboration through the Center for Environmental Research and Conservation
(CERC). CERC is a consortium of five New York City-based science and research
institutions: The American Museum of Natural History, Columbia University,
The New York Botanical Garden, The Wildlife Conservation Society, and Wildlife
Trust. In creating E3B, the University and the Consortium partners held that
the fields of ecology, organismal evolution, population biology, and
environmental biology constitute a distinct subdivision of the biological
sciences with its own set of intellectual foci, theoretical foundations, scales
of analysis, and experimental designs and methodologies.
E3B's mission is to educate a new generation of scientists and practitioners in
the theory and methods of ecology, evolution, and population biology and to
conduct multidisciplinary research on emerging environmental problems
associated with the decline of ecosystems and the loss of biological diversity.
Though its administrative staff, core faculty, and headquarters are based at Columbia University, E3B's academic staff is also
based at the other partner institutions in the CERC consortium. Through the
auspices of this consortium, the department is able to tap into an astonishing
array of scientific and intellectual resources in the New York City area.
In close coordination with the consortium, E3B has assembled a research and
training faculty of over 90 members from the five partner institutions. This
academic staff covers the areas of plant and animal systematics, evolutionary
and population genetics, demography and population biology, behavioral and
community ecology, and related fields of epidemiology, ethnobiology, public health,
and environmental policy. Harnessing the expertise of these major research
institutions, E3B covers a vast area of inquiry into the evolutionary, genetic,
and ecological relationships among all living things.
Conservation Biology Scholarship
The Department of Ecology, Evolution and Environmental
Biology (E3B) and the Center for Environmental Research and Conservation (CERC)
invite applicants to the Conservation Biology Master's Program to apply for the
scholarship position(s) of course assistant for the Certificate Program in
Conservation Biology.
Students awarded a course assistantship will help faculty
prepare for classes, attend all class meetings, answer student questions and
carry out other responsibilities as these arise. Students work up to ten hours
a week.
Course assistants will receive a combination of partial
tuition and a stipend up to $1,800 per academic year. The scholarship is
renewable for a second year of the Conservation Biology Master's Program.
Applicants interested in applying for the Conservation
Biology Scholarship should download an application here
and submit it as part of their application to the Graduate
School of Arts and Sciences program in Conservation Biology.
Special Admission Requirements
A background in ecology and evolutionary biology is
preferred, with one year of undergraduate introduction biology and three
separate upper-division undergraduate courses in ecology, evolution, and
genetics required. The GRE General Test is mandatory, and the Biology Subject
Test is strongly recommended. Students interested in pursuing the thesis-based
option are strongly encouraged to identify a full-time or adjunct faculty
member who would act as research sponsor prior to applying to the program.
In addition to the requirements listed below, all students must submit
1 official transcript showing courses and grades per school attended, a
Statement of Academic Purpose and 3 letters of evaluation from academic sources. All
international students whose native language is not English or whose
undergraduate degree is from an institution in a country whose official
language is not English, must submit scores of the Test of English as a
Foreign Language (TOEFL) or IELTS. For more information, refer to our Admissions Information and Frequently Asked Questions pages.
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DEGREE:
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Master's Only
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Deadline for Fall Admission
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December 15*
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Deadline for Spring Admission
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no spring admission
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Resume/CV
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yes
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Writing Sample
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no
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GRE General
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yes
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GRE Subject
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recommended
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Miscellaneous
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none
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* The program will continue to accept applications until April 1 on a space available basis only.
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