Two-years of Research Assistantship funding and a tuition wavier are available 
for a Ph.D. student to 
study island restoration and recovery in Dr. Holly Jones' Lab 
http://www.bios.niu.edu/jones/lab/ at 
Northern Illinois University.  The student is expected to seek extramural 
funding for research 
expenses during their RAship and to pursue external funding or a TAship to 
cover their remaining 
years' salary.

I am looking for a highly motivated, bright student, interested in joining the 
Biological Sciences 
graduate program at NIU.  There is some latitude about research subject though 
the research should 
focus on ecosystem recovery following invasive vertebrate removal on New 
Zealand islands.  The 
student will build on ongoing efforts to understand how different ecosystem 
variables (nutrient 
cycling, diversity, abundance) respond both to invasive species removal and 
active restoration of 
seabirds.  Competitive candidates will have strong GRE scores and GPAs, 
previous field experience, 
demonstrated writing ability, and strong letters of recommendation.
 
Northern Illinois University is a 25,000-student research university situated 
an hour from downtown 
Chicago in DeKalb, Illinois, a diverse community of 50,000 with a low cost of 
living.  Regional 
research resources include The Field Museum, Burpee Museum of Natural History, 
TNC’s Nachusa 
Grasslands, Morton Arboretum, Fermilab, Argonne National Laboratory, NIU’s 
Lorado Taft campus, 
and numerous local county forest preserves and state parks.

Intended start date for this position is Fall 2014. Details of the graduate 
program and application 
process are available at http://www.bios.niu.edu/graduate_studies/.  The 
deadline for application 
materials is February 15, 2014.  However, prospective students should contact 
Dr. Jones well in 
advance of applying to discuss research interests and relevant qualifications.  
Applicants should 
review the Jones Lab website to make sure their research interests are a good 
fit and send the 
following via email to [email protected] to get the conversation started:

1.      A cover letter that describes your research interests and your short- 
and long-term career goals 
and how pursuing a graduate degree in my lab will help you attain those goals.
2.      An unofficial copy of your transcripts
3.      A writing sample that demonstrates your ability to synthesize and 
evaluate complex information 
(e.g. a journal article, technical report, or paper from a class).
4.      Your resume or CV summarizing your work and academic experience and 
with names, titles, 
email, and phone numbers of three professional references.
5.      An unofficial report of your GRE scores

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