I will be joining the faculty in the Department of Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology (E3B) at Columbia University in New York City in Fall 2009. E3B offers both a Masters and a PhD program. Completion of the two-year Masters program will earn you a degree in Conservation Biology. All students in the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology PhD program also complete the Environmental Policy Certificate program, for which they receive a separate degree.


Masters Students

Masters students are accepted into the E3B program and find an advisor during their first year at Columbia.  However, if you are interested in working in my lab, feel free to contact me.

 

PhD Students

My policy with PhD students is one of guided independence. I encourage you to think big! What are the most interesting problems in evolutionary biology and evolutionary ecology right now and how are you going to solve them? Your goal as a graduate student should be to not only master your topic of study and become an expert in your discipline and study system, but also to push the field and further develop a body of evolutionary or ecological theory. My job is to help you succeed in doing this. I will work with you to develop questions and formulate hypotheses. I will help you become a better writer, both for scientific publications and for grant proposals. Although I will help you become a better field biologist, I will also require that you learn a variety of laboratory techniques so that you become trained as an integrative biologist that can think and work across disciplines. I firmly believe that integrative research is where evolutionary biology and evolutionary ecology is going, and mastering this approach now will make you more marketable for postdocs and jobs after graduate school.

 

If Columbia’s E3B Department looks like the place for you, and if my lab and advising philosophy interest you, please contact me via email. Remember that first impressions are important. In your email, briefly explain what types of questions and topics interest you, what you might want to do in graduate school, and what you have done in the past. Please also include a copy of your CV.

 

Postdocs

Because my interests are broad and varied, I am open to people working on a variety of systems. If you might be interested in working in my lab, please email me and we can discuss opportunities. I currently do not have funding to support postdocs, but I am happy to work together with you to write grants to fund research at Columbia.

 

Undergraduates

I hope to have my lab set up as soon as I arrive at Columbia (in time for Fall 2009). I will have many opportunities for undergrads to gain experience with molecular techniques (PCR, gel electrophoresis, microsatellite genotyping), hormone assays (radioimmunoassay, ELISA), and various immune assays. Check back soon for more details!

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