Mentoring and Advisory Committees
Students admitted to the IBS Ph.D. program will be
assigned provisional advisors who will be responsible for
initial guidance. By the end of the first academic year,
students are required to have identified two co-advisors
and formed a Student Advisory Committee, which will be
responsible for facilitating the development of the
academic coursework plan and the research design. The
co-advisors must be from two different disciplines, both of
which must be integral to the proposed dissertation
research. The Student Advisory Committee will consist of
a minimum of four faculty members, at least two of whom
must be knowledgeable in the student’s area of research;
one must be from outside the student’s research area and
at least three must be members of the IBS Ph.D. program
faculty. A key feature of the IBS Ph.D. program is the coadvisor
concept.These co-advisors will expose students to
different perspectives and encourage and facilitate design
and completion of a research dissertation that addresses a
problem from at least two different but complementary
perspectives.