Graduate Program Information

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DEPARTMENT OF ENTOMOLOGY, OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY

1735 NEIL AVENUE, COLUMBUS, OHIO 43210

April, 1995

GRADUATE DEGREES OFFERED: Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy

APPLICATION MATERIALS: If you have not already received application materials from the Admissions Office, they may be secured by writing to:

Admissions Office - Graduate Studies
The Ohio State University
Lincoln Tower, 1800 Cannon Drive
Columbus, OH 43210

ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS: Minimum requirements include: 1) a baccalaureate or professional degree from an accredited college or university; 2) in general, a 2.7 or better cumulative point-hour ratio (based on the A = 4.0 system) for all previous academic work, including graduate work, if any; 3) prerequisite academic work which gives evidence that the applicant should be able to pursue effectively the graduate program of this department. For Entomology, this minimum background is 40 quarter hours of biology courses, 10 quarter hours of mathematics, and 18 quarter hours of chemistry, including a course in organic, biological, or physical chemistry (each semester hour earned equals 1.5 quarter hours); 4) the Graduate Record Examination (GRE), including Aptitude, Quantitative, Verbal, and the Advanced (Biology) portions; 5) three letters of recommendation.

Applicants in their senior year as undergraduates may apply in January of that year; if successful, they will be admitted provisionally until the Bachelor's degree is actually conferred. Applicants with inadequate preparation or an unacceptable cumulative point-hour ratio may occasionally be admitted as regular or conditional graduate students, at the discretion of the Department Graduate Committee, and the dean of The Graduate School. Students admitted on a conditional basis will follow a program to supplement preparation and correct academic deficiencies before being changed to the status of a regular graduate student. Conditional students may not become Teaching Associates, Research Associates or Trainees.

DEGREE REQUIREMENTS: The requirements for the Master's Degree (Plan A) are as follows: 1) completion of a minimum of 45 hours of graduate credit at this University; 2) Insect Physiology (Ent. 631), Insect Morphology (Ent. 623), Insect Systematics and Diversity (Ent. 621), at least one of these courses - Medical Entomology (Ent. 661), Advanced Economic Entomology (Ent. 660), or Insect Toxicology (Ent. 662), and a Special Topic Seminar (Ent. 795) are required courses; 3) achievement of a cumulative point-hour ratio of at least 3.0 in all courses taken for graduate credit (failure to maintain the 3.0 minimum at any time results in probation); 4) presentation of at least one departmental seminar; 5) presentation of an approved thesis; 6) successful completion of a comprehensive oral examination. The Master's degree may be by-passed by students permitted to work directly towards the Ph.D., but the adviser and student must petition the Graduate Committee for this privilege. Normally this petition must include evidence of significant experience in research.

Integrated pest management students may work toward a Master's degree without a thesis (Plan B). In addition to numerous required courses, the IPM student must complete a comprehensive final written exam. In the future, Plan B may be available for other specialized areas of study.

The University requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy Degree, in part, as follows: 1) completion of 90 quarter hours of graduate work beyond the Master's degree; 2) a period of concentrated resident study beyond the Master's during three consecutive quarters; 3) successful completion of a written and oral comprehensive candidacy examination; 4) presentation of an acceptable dissertation in the immediate field of investigation.

Additional requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy Degree as set by the Department of Entomology are as follows: 1) Teaching Requirement: for all students, a minimum of one quarter of Teaching Associate experience, or equivalent, in Entomology or General Biology. Teaching experience gained during work on the M.S. degree will count toward this requirement. The teaching requirement may be waived by the Department Graduate Committee if the student has held a previous teaching position at another college or university; 2) Foreign Language Requirement: the authority is vested in the Graduate Advisory Committee to determine if specific training or testing in one or more foreign languages is essential to the student's program of study; 3) Required Courses: Insect Physiology (Ent. 631), Insect Morphology (Ent. 623), Insect Systematics and Diversity (Ent. 621), at least one of these courses - Medical Entomology (Ent. 661), Advanced Economic Entomology (Ent. 660), or Insect Toxicology (Ent. 662) and participation in at least, two Special Topic Seminars (Ent. 795); 4) Seminar: A departmental seminar on the student's dissertation research is required.

ADVISER SELECTION AND STUDENT ORIENTATION: Each student's program (course of study and research) is determined in consultation with his/her adviser and advisory committee. Upon admission and entrance, each new graduate student is assigned a temporary adviser who will assist the student in course selection. Following these consultations, the initial schedule is approved by the temporary adviser or Chairman of the Graduate Committee. The temporary adviser or permanent adviser (together with the student) will select an advisory committee: two other faculty members (one may be from outside the department for Ph.D. candidates). The advisory committee will administer an oral proficiency conference during the first quarter in residence. This examination will assist the advisory committee to propose a course of study for the student.

A required Orientation Program given each Autumn Quarter assists the new student in choosing a field of specialization within the department and in the selection of a permanent major adviser. The Orientation Program is of value in giving the new student an overview of the Department and is required of all new graduate students, even if they have already selected a major adviser. This program includes a visit to The Ohio Agricultural Research an Development Center at Wooster, Ohio.

FACILITIES: The Columbus campus includes classrooms, well-equipped laboratories, a large collection of insects and acarines, and an apiary. There is an excellent library system at Ohio State University, with the majority of its extensive entomological holdings housed in the branch library in the classroom building. The Instructional and Research Computer Center is one of the finest in the country. Facilities at The Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, Wooster, Ohio, include classrooms, well-equipped laboratories, computers, technical library, insectary, glasshouse space, and extensive field plots. Additional plots are available at ten other Branches throughout the State. Excellent opportunities exist for interaction with related agricultural research programs. The Franz Theodore Stone Laboratory at Put-in-Bay operates as a summer biological field station of the University, and offers unusual opportunities in aquatic and field biology. Other field areas in the State are available to graduate students in Entomology.

FINANCING GRADUATE EDUCATION: Graduate students may be employed as Graduate Teaching or Research Associates at the Columbus and Wooster (OARDC) campuses. Students holding appointments in Columbus are usually appointed on a half time basis (20 hrs/week) for 9 months and those at Wooster are on annual appointments where they work full time half the year and the remaining half year is for classes. In addition to the stipend provided by these appointments, tuition and fees are paid for Graduate Teaching and Research Associates, and for Fellows and Trainees. Information on Fellowships is sent to all students applying for admission to the Graduate Program.

Graduate Associates who are Ph.D. candidates and have entered the program with a M.S. degree will normally not be reappointed beyond 16 quarters, and those who are M.S. candidates will normally not be reappointed beyond 12 quarters. In exceptional cases, support beyond these limits may be obtained by petition to The Graduate Committee.

Foreign-speaking international applicants are cautioned that it is difficult for them to secure financial assistance during their first year of residence. The department does not employ them as Graduate Teaching Associates until they have demonstrated, during their first year here, an ease of communication in spoken and written English, as well as continued academic excellence. Employment applications for Graduate Teaching Associates, after their first year, will be in competition with other eligible applicants. Graduate Research Associateships may occasionally be available for foreign-speaking international students. These employment arrangements are made between the student and individual faculty member in charge of externally funded research projects.

That portion of the Department of Entomology located at The Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, Wooster, employs a variable number of students each summer on its research projects; these students are paid on an hourly basis. Programs at Wooster include all phases of agricultural entomology, economic entomology, insect-plant interactions, insect behavior, ecology, and biological control. Students are normally hired from early June to mid-September, but there is considerable flexibility available. Students interested in such employment should contact the Associate Chairman, Department of Entomology, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, Wooster, Ohio 44691 (Phone: 216-263-3725) - preferably by March of the year to be employed.

FIELDS OF SPECIALIZATION: Our large graduate faculty offers training and experience in the following fields of specialization: Acarology, Aquatic Entomology, Apiculture, Biological Control, Chemical Ecology, Economic Entomology, Insect Biochemistry, Insect-Plant Interactions, Insect Behavior, Insect Ecology, Insect Genetics, Insect Morphology, Insect Physiology, Insect Tissue Culture, Insect Toxicology, Insect Virology, Medical and Veterinary Entomology, and Systematic Entomology.

GRADUATE FACULTY: The Graduate Faculty in Entomology is about evenly divided between those based on the Columbus campus (OSU) and those at The Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center (OARDC) at Wooster. Professors in Graduate Category II may advise M.S. students and serve on Ph.D. examination committees. Professors in Category III may advise Ph.D. students, chair Ph.D. examination committees, and perform all other functions of the Graduate Faculty. Professors in other departments may serve as advisers, subject to the approval of the Graduate Committee.