MCB Graduate MOU and Handbook
The Memorandum of Understanding provides the handbook-type information and guidelines and expectations of students in the graduate program in Molecular and Cellular Biology.
General Procedures
Specific Requirements
- Research Adviser
- Doctoral Advisory Committee
- Coursework
- Additional Courses Required by Home Departments
- Grades
- Research Proposal
- Comprehensive Examinations
- Teaching Requirement
- Financial Support
- Scholarly Disciplines
- Dissertation Defense
- Probation and Remediation
- Academic Misconduct
This is a Memorandum of Understanding among the interdisciplinary program in Molecular & Cellular Biology; the departments of Biological Sciences, Biomedical Sciences, Chemistry & Biochemistry, and Environmental & Plant Biology; and the Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine at ÃÛèÖÊÓÆµ.
The Interdisciplinary Doctoral Program in Molecular and Cellular Biology (MCB) is an academic program providing a broad graduate training of students by faculty from the participating departments. Because MCB students are departmental graduate students, they must be simultaneously admitted into both the MCB program and their department of emphasis (home department). Each department participating in the MCB program (Department of Biological Sciences, Biomedical Sciences, Chemistry and Biochemistry, and Environmental and Plant Biology) may serve as a home department. MCB also offers a Ph.D. program in conjunction with the DO program in Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine. DO/Ph.D. students may be enrolled in any department within the program but usually choose the Department of Biological Sciences or Biomedical Sciences and should follow the Ph.D. requirements of that home department with the exceptions as noted. Each of the home departments participates in programs of study leading to the Ph.D. degree, with its own requirements for admission and graduation. MCB admission and graduation requirements reflect both the requirements of the home department and the requirements of the MCB Program. This document delineates the role of both the home departments and the MCB Program in admitting Ph.D. students, offering stipends and other support, setting requirements for graduation and monitoring progress. All general requirements and specific MCB and home department requirements must be followed. The intent of this document is to provide clarity and simplicity in these aspects of MCB student affairs. The home departments and MCB reserve the right to make changes in their policies, procedures, and requirements from time to time; therefore, this document will be revised as required by such changes. The policies and requirements in force at the time that the student is admitted into the program will govern the student’s program of study.
General Procedures
Admission
The MCB Graduate Committee is composed of one MCB faculty member from the four participating departments (Biological Sciences, Biomedical Sciences, Chemistry & Biochemistry, and Environmental & Plant Biology) and an MCB student. The MCB Graduate Committee, in considering applications, will use the specific admission requirements for the home department and the MCB Program as well as the objective and subjective evaluation of the quality of such information as letters of reference and student interviews. The specified requirements are to be considered minimal. Applicants accepted to the MCB graduate program must also be accepted by their respective home department graduate committee. The home department has veto authority regarding admission.
Student Progress and Graduation
Each student is personally responsible for satisfying all requirements, meeting all deadlines, and for ensuring that all documentation of completion of said requirements is provided to the MCB program administrative assistant within one week after completion. Yearly, during the spring semester, the MCB administrative assistant will send the MCB Student Progress Form to all students.Each student should return the completed form to the administrative assistant within two weeks after receipt. The documents will be provided to the MCB Curriculum Committee chairperson who will maintain records and annual progress reports for each student. In addition, copies of all documents regarding a student will be provided to the home department graduate chairperson by the MCB administrative assistant within one week of receipt of the document. The specific requirements for progress and graduation are defined below under MCB and departmental requirements, and the chairperson of the MCB Graduate Committee will serve as the authority for determination that the requirements have been met. To ensure that students will not be confused over which unit governs their progress and graduation, once a student has been admitted she/he will deal with the MCB Graduate Committee chairperson. The MCB Graduate Committee chairperson, in consultation with the home department graduate chairperson, the student, and the student's adviser, will determine any action to be taken concerning problems or answers to any questions that might arise. Thus, the student need only notify the MCB chairperson of a concern or questions and will not be expected to mediate between MCB and the home department. However, departments may terminate students from their program if departmental requirements, as stated in this document, are not met.
If a home department determines that this arrangement is not serving well, this Memorandum of Understanding can be altered in the spring or summer semester of each year. However, a student already enrolled will be affected only by the agreement in force when she/he was admitted.
Stipends and Other Financial Support
At the time of admission and yearly thereafter, the MCB graduate chairperson and the home department graduate chairperson will consult together and with the student's adviser to determine the appropriate source (home department, MCB, or grant) of support, if any. Factors such as teaching or research needs, availability of grant-funded stipends and student aptitude and progress will be considered. The MCB graduate chairperson in conjunction with the departmental graduate chairperson will provide each student a description of any service required for support. .
Specific Requirements
Admission
Research Adviser
The student will select her/his research adviser from among the MCB program faculty before the end of the second semester in the program. The selected faculty adviser must have graduate faculty status in the home department of the student advisee. If the faculty member does not have graduate status in the student’s home department, the student must apply to and be admitted to the home department in which the faculty has such an affiliation. Prior to selection of an adviser, the home department representative to the MCB Graduate Committee will serve in that capacity.
Students in the departments of Biological Sciences/ Biomedical Sciences may, without penalty, perform lab rotations in qualified laboratories prior to the selection of the dissertation adviser. Once an adviser has been selected, all students in Biological Sciences/ Biomedical Sciences, in conjunction with the adviser, must submit Dissertation Advisor Form to the MCB program administrative assistant.
Doctoral Advisory Committee
The student and her or his research adviser will choose a Doctoral Advisory Committee (DAC) composed of no fewer than four faculty members, at least three of whom are MCB faculty. All members of the DAC must hold graduate faculty status in their home departments to be eligible to serve. Two members of the committee, including the chairperson (the student's research adviser), must be from the student's home department or have graduate faculty status in that department. At least one committee member must NOT be associated with the graduate program of the student’s home department and will serve, with approval from the Dean of the College of Arts & Science, as the Graduate Faculty Representative of the College. The DAC must be formed and should meet by the end of the second semester to discuss coursework for the student’s program of study (see Coursework). A great deal of the responsibility for determination of the program of study of the student is left to the DAC. General and specific requirements are included in this document, and the DAC has the initial responsibility to ensure that these requirements are met
Coursework
A student is required to complete a minimum of 30 graded credit hours of graduate coursework unless he or she has previously earned an M.S. degree in a related field. A student entering the program with an earned M.S. degree is required to complete a minimum of 24 graded credit hours of graduate coursework. Courses taken in foreign languages and undergraduate courses will not count toward the graded credit hours. The student's DAC has the responsibility of determining appropriate coursework.
Within one week after the first meeting of the DAC (no later than the second semester of study), the student should submit form CAS#5 Dissertation Committee and Faculty Representative Information [PDF] and the signed MCB Course Approval Form to the MCB Program administrative assistant.
The coursework chosen by the DAC has as one of its objectives the adequate preparation of the student for the comprehensive examinations. However, a required core curriculum for MCB students consists of
- Biochemistry - CHEM 5901 (4 credits) and CHEM 5902 (4 credits)
- Biological Research and Science Ethics – PBIO 5170 (1 credit)
- Molecular Biology - MCB 7200 (3 credits)
- Bioinformatics - Genomics Laboratory – MCB 5280 (3 credits)
- *Advanced Cell Biology - MCB 7600 (3 credits)
- Writing in the Life Sciences - PBIO 5180 (3 credits)
- Seminar in Molecular and Cellular Biology - MCB 7410 (1 credit)
*Students who do not have a background in cell biology should take PBIO 5310, Cell Biology, before enrolling in MCB 7600.
A student who can demonstrate competency in any required course may be exempt from the requirement but only with the approval of his or DAC and the MCB curriculum chair. Depending on the requirements of the home department, competency may be demonstrated by having previously taken a similar course and earning a grade of "B" or better or by successfully completing a competency exam. This exemption does not give a student graded course credit for the course, but simply exempts him or her from taking the course, thus giving him/her flexibility in selecting courses that better meet his/her programmatic needs.
All students are also required to register for Seminar in Molecular and Cellular Biology (MCB 7410) when offered and must present at least one seminar each year. First year students may be exempt from the presentation requirement depending upon seminar enrollment. However, students whose home department is the Department of Biological Sciences or Biomedical Sciences must present a seminar in their first year, either in the MCB seminar series or an appropriate class or journal club. Also note that students in all home departments may use a dissertation research seminar to fulfill the yearly MCB seminar presentation requirement in their final year. Attendance is required for all seminars in the semesters registered. All students are also required to attend all seminars presented by MCB invited speakers. The MCB Graduate Committee chairperson or her/his representative will record student attendance at all MCB seminars. Absences must be approved in advance by the MCB Graduate Committee chairperson.
Typically, during the first year of enrollment, a student is expected to take core courses in the following sequence: fall semester - CHEM 5901, MCB 7200, PBIO 5170, MCB 7410; spring semester – CHEM 5902, MCB 5280 or MCB 5160 and MCB 7410. In the second year, the student is expected to take: fall semester – MCB 7600 or possibly PBIO 5310; and MCB 7410; spring semester – MCB 7410. In the third year, the student is expected to take: fall semester – PBIO 5180, MCB 7600 if not taken previously and MCB 7410; spring semester – MCB7410.
Additional Courses Required by Home Departments
Biological Sciences and Biomedical Sciences: In addition to the above requirements, students are required to take one of the following: BIOS 6700 Biostatistics I, PBIO 5150 Quantitative Methods or an equivalent course.
Chemistry & Biochemistry: Chemistry & Biochemistry: In addition to the above required MCB coursework, students must take one CHEM course at the 7000-level and demonstrate competency in the field of chemistry during the first two years of the Ph.D. program. To demonstrate competency in the field of chemistry, students must pass with a grade of B or higher one of the required Biochemistry courses (CHEM 5901 or CHEM 5902) and two 5000-level CHEM classes (selected from two different areas: analytical, inorganic, organic or physical). These courses all count toward the minimum total credits of graded coursework required for MCB.
Environmental & Plant Biology: In addition to the above requirements, students must take one course in experimental design/data analysis (PBIO 5150 Quantitative Methods in Plant Biology - 4 cr.) and a minimum of two additional courses in PBIO.
DO/Ph.D. program in MCB: Because of coursework taken in the Medical School, students in the DO/Ph.D. program are asked to complete only 15 additional hours of graded coursework for the Ph.D. DO/Ph.D. students are required to take MCB 7200 Molecular Biology, MCB 5280 Genomics Laboratory or MCB 5160 Problem Solving using Bioinformatics Tools (as appropriate to their needs), MCB 7600 Advanced Cell Biology and additional coursework for a total of 15 hours of graded coursework. Coursework must satisfy the additional requirements of their home department and be approved by the DAC. Although not included in the graded coursework, students are also required to participate in the MCB seminar, MCB 7410, during the 3 years of coursework, to satisfy the requirement to attend and present in an established seminar series.
Grades
Students must maintain a 3.0 grade-point average to remain in the MCB program and to graduate. In addition, if a student receives a grade of "C+" or less in more than two courses, she/he will be terminated from the MCB program.
Research Proposal
With the approval of her or his adviser and committee members*, the student will prepare and submit a specific research proposal to her or his DAC by the end of the third semester (excluding summers) in the program. The proposal should follow the format dictated by the National Science Foundation or the National Institute of Health as indicated by the adviser and shall include a half-page Abstract, a Project Description (comprised of Specific Aims, Background and Significance, Preliminary Data, Experimental Plan, Expected Outcomes and Pitfalls and a Time Table for Completion) and References. The Project Description should be no more than 15 single spaced pages, 11-12 pt font with 2.5 cm margins on all sides. The abstract and list of references shall not be counted in the 15 page limit.
The DAC will meet and advise the student on the merits and weaknesses of the proposal. If deficiencies are discovered, the DAC will ask the student to prepare again for another meeting (including revision of the proposal if required). A second unsatisfactory presentation will lead to termination from the MCB program. Some home departments have unique requirements for documentation of the proposal defense. Please see the Table of Required Forms to determine the specific requirement for each home department.
*This requirements can be met either formally by a meeting of the committee or informally by individual meetings between the student and each committee member.
Comprehensive Examinations
Written Examination: After the research proposal requirement, the student must pass a written comprehensive examination prepared by their DAC. The DAC will decide which member (other than the student's adviser) will administer the examination. The student should speak with each member of the DAC to determine how she/he should prepare for the examination. It is the student's responsibility to contact the DAC members for this information. After notifying the student of the general content of the examination, each member of the DAC will prepare written examinations. These examinations will then be submitted to the DAC member administering the examination. The DAC member will administer the written examinations to the student, who will take the examinations one or two per day over a 10-day period. The DAC members will evaluate their respective exams and compile a final grade within two weeks after completion of the last examination. The student is to be notified by the DAC (in writing) of the results of the written examination within one week thereafter (original and repeats). If more than one examination(s) are failed, the DAC will determine which examination(s) are to be repeated, whether additional course work is required, and when the examination(s) are to be repeated. An examination may be repeated no more than one time.
Oral Examination: Within one month after completion of the written examinations, and after being notified by the DAC chairperson of the general content of the examination, the student will be evaluated in an oral examination administered by the DAC. Within one week after completion of the examination, the student must submit form CAS#4 - Report of the Comprehensive Exam [PDF] to the MCB program administrative assistant. If the student fails the oral