Dear Colleagues:

Would you please forward the following announcement to individuals who may be 
interested?  Thank you.

Sincerely,

Kevin Gutzwiller



PhD Students in Avian Macroecology



Positions

PhD students are sought to study the influences of habitat connectivity, 
landscape phenology, climate, or land-cover transitions on North American bird 
populations and communities.  Possible directions of research include but are 
not limited to interaction or cumulative effects of broad-scale ecological 
conditions and human dimensions (e.g., social, economic, cultural, or 
demographic factors).  Students will have considerable latitude and assistance 
with developing the direction of their work.  National and regional databases 
will be available for analysis and will enable unique perspectives and new 
syntheses regarding the macroecological drivers of avian population and 
community dynamics.  The overarching goals of this work are to improve 
understanding of the broad-scale ecological and human factors that drive short 
and long-term flux in bird populations and communities, and to use this 
knowledge to inform avian conservation policy, planning, and implementation.  
Applications are invited for positions that will start in the fall of 2017 in 
the Department of Biology at Baylor University in Waco, Texas.

Qualifications

Applicants must have a Master of Science degree in a relevant field.  Training 
and experience with GIS and statistical methods, through prior coursework or 
research activities, are essential.  Students should have a strong interest in 
developing additional expertise in GIS and quantitative methods.  Preference 
will be given to those who have published quantitative ecological research, who 
have presented research at scientific meetings, and who have some experience 
working with large databases.  Competitive applicants will have undergraduate 
and graduate GPAs of 3.5 or higher, verbal and quantitative GRE scores at or 
above the 70th percentile, and a GRE analytical writing score of 5.0 or 
greater.  Students with some but not all of these credentials will be 
considered and are encouraged to submit an application.

Compensation

For up to 5 years, and depending on qualifications, each position will include 
teaching-assistantship funding ($22,500-$30,500/12 months), tuition remission 
(up to 20 credits/12 months), health insurance benefits (80% of cost of premium 
covered), and funding for travel to professional meetings.  Support for a 
research assistantship may replace some of the TA funding during the course of 
the student's program.

Application Instructions

To apply, create a single pdf that includes: a letter of interest that 
describes your career goals and that explicitly addresses the position 
requirements; a resume; unofficial undergraduate and graduate transcripts; 
unofficial general GRE scores (no more than 5 years old by mid-February 2017) 
including percentile information; and a list of three references and their 
institution, email address, and phone number.  Before submitting an 
application, carefully consider the requirements for a PhD degree by examining 
the Department of Biology Graduate Student Handbook 
(http://www.baylor.edu/biology).  Email your pdf to Professor Kevin Gutzwiller 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>; 
https://sites.baylor.edu/kevin_gutzwiller), and contact him with questions 
about the positions.
The deadline for applications is 1 December 2016.  After a review of 
applications, Professor Gutzwiller will invite the most qualified applicants to 
apply formally to the Ph.D. Program in Biology.  An all-expenses paid campus 
visit will be offered to the applicants in the departmental pool that are the 
most qualified.  Final decisions about admission and an offer of an 
assistantship will be made by the Baylor Graduate School and the Biology 
Graduate Committee.

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