Microbiology

UC Berkeley's graduate program in microbiology provides an outstanding and rigorous course of study and is repeatedly ranked among the best in the world. The program is both immersive and thorough. Students take a variety of classes, teach as graduate student instructors, work with top scientists and perform research in our labs. 

Our graduate program consistently ranks best in the world for Microbiology. Our faculty is inclusive and engaging, and each graduate student is fully funded for five years.

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Pathway Through the Microbiology Phd Program

Before the beginning of the fall semester, new students discuss their background and interests with the graduate advisors, who help plan academic programs. During the first semester, all new students enroll in a two-credit seminar in which faculty members summarize their current research programs. Each student also rotates through three research laboratories for ten weeks each in the first academic year. The rotations give students the opportunity to explore areas of interest as possibilities for Ph.D. research.

In the first year, students must enroll in the two-semester core course, PMB 220A-F. The core course is comprised of 6 modules, which cover the following topics: microbial genetics, genomics and computational biology, microbial diversity and evolution, cell structure and function, microbial physiology and microbial ecology. The Qualifying Examination tests these fields of knowledge near the end of the student's second year. In addition to the core course, PMB 202 and PMB 210 are required. PMB 202 "Faculty Research Review" exposes students to the research of members of the Graduate Group, via capsule presentations of their ongoing research and its significance to the field of Microbiology. The objectives of PMB 210 “Scientific Reasoning and Logic” are to teach students to critically read and interpret scientific papers.

During the first two years, all students must enroll in two graduate-level seminar courses. Seminars offer students the opportunity for oral presentation of subjects of particular interest. Seminars also let students meet individual faculty and other students in a small-group setting. The Workshop on Teaching, PMB 300, must also be taken the Fall semester of a student’s second year.

Graduate Student Instruction (GSI)

Each student serves as a Graduate Student Instructor (GSI) for approximately 20 hours per week for two semesters. Students participate in the GSI training conference sponsored by the Graduate Division and the Graduate Assembly and enroll in a two-credit teaching workshop. Students are appointed as a GSI for a lower-division course before being a GSI for an upper-division course sponsored by the department. International students educated in schools where English is not the language of instruction are required to pass the Test of Spoken English (TSE) before they serve as teaching assistants.

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5 Year Program Pathway