CBMG 688I Spring 2010
|
| Home | Syllabus | Communications (recent) | Blackboard |
| Steve Mount | Links | Model Organisms | NCBI |
Permissions
CBMG688I, advanced eukaryotic genetics, is required for graduate students in CBMG and MOCB, but enrollment is limited to 30 students. Permissions are granted according to the schedule below. Before the beginning of the semester Sarah Biancardi, in the BISI graduate office (2101 Microbiology, 301-405-6991, sbiancar at UMD), is empowered to grant permission to students who are required to take the class. I (Steve Mount, the instructor for this course) grant permission to those in other Ph.D. programs personally on an individual basis until the class is full (I want to talk to them; final permission is still given by the graduate office).
The policy is that anyone who has been accepted into the MOCB or CBMG graduate program will automatically be granted permission by the department or program. Students in other Ph.D. programs will be granted permission from the instructor on a individual basis until the class is full. Other students must wait until the start of classes (Jan. 25, 2009, which is well before this class actually starts), when permissions for registration up to a total of 30 students will be granted. Students who are not in Ph.D. programs will be granted permission for registration after interview on a space-available basis.
Prerequisites: everyone must have had a course in genetics (BSCI 222 or equivalent). Masters students should have had an additional upper level course in molecular biology. Undergraduates, or students with an undergraduate degree from College Park, must have taken BSCI410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415 or 416.
Summary by type of student:
Ph.D. students in BISI (MOCB, CBBG or BEES), CBMG or MOCB:
Ph.D. students in other programs:
Masters students (all programs), Undergraduates and Advanced Special Students:
An advanced course in genetics, BSCI410 or equivalent, is a required prerequisite.
Permission may be granted on or after the term starts as space allows.
While advanced special students with an interest have been able to enroll most years this has not always been the case.