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Dear prospective students:
Where you go in your career depends largely on what you want,
on your skill in identifying opportunities and experiences,
and on your talent and hard work. Graduate programs offer
opportunities and experiences, and try to recruit great students
and give them a firm footing for their careers. A student's
time with UW MDTP has 3 components: research, courses, and
teaching.
- Research
training is far-and-away the
main focus for students. You should look for a graduate
program and eventually a thesis lab that can provide you
with interesting scientific questions, approaches for answering
those questions, people to teach you how to use those approaches,
and resources for doing the work. UW MDTP encompasses over
80 faculty trainer labs covering a considerable range of
scientific questions and approaches. Entering students identify
rotation labs for short projects before joining a thesis
lab where they will learn and develop their scientific stories
before moving on in their scientific careers. Each student
prepares a thesis proposal that serves as the basis of her/his
preliminary exam usually in the 3rd year, does the research,
writes papers that comprise most of the dissertation, and
usually pursues postdoctoral training after graduation which
typically occurs 5-6 years after entry into the program.
- A wide range of excellent courses
is available, with breadth and depth both being worthy goals.
Increase your knowledge in your scientific focus area to
facilitate your research, or learn about other areas that
may interest you and provide future research possibilities.
MDTP has major and minor requirements, 10 credit hours each.
Most students complete their coursework in their first 2
years: 1-3 courses per semester for 3-4 semesters.
- Teaching and learning are intertwined.
You learn as you teach, both about the course subject material
and about the teaching process. Nearly all careers that
students may pursue involve teaching, as a formal component
in academia but also in industry, government service, private
foundations, etc. You will likely have several one-on-one
mentoring experiences in graduate school, being mentored
by your faculty advisor and also mentoring more junior graduate
students and undergraduates as you progress and gain independence.
In addition, MDTP has a 2-semester teaching practicum requirement,
usually performed in the 2nd year. The teaching practicum
is designed to provide you with valuable teaching experience
under the direction of a faculty member while also contributing
to the teaching missions of the core departments. There
are a wide range of Bacteriology and Medical Microbiology
& Immunology courses available spanning different formats:
large lecture, small discussion, and lab; undergraduate
and graduate. As with the courses you take, you may want
to teach in your research focus area, or learn a new area
while making a teaching contribution.
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