Neuroscience 4+1 (B.S./M.S.)

A female graduate student and her professor both look at a computer monitor as he demonstrates how to operate UD's fMRI scanner.
Keith Schneider, associate professor of Psychological and Brain Sciences and director of the Center for Biomedical and Brain Imaging (CBBI) operates UD's 3 Tesla Function Magnetic Resonance Imaging scanner as part of a graduate student seminar: "Introduction to MRI" (PSYC667). Students in the class designed experiments utilizing the fMRI, volunteered to act as study participants, and learned to analyze the data collected.

Fast-Track Your Neuroscience Career

The Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences at the University of Delaware affords exceptional neuroscience majors an opportunity to earn both a bachelor’s degree and a master’s degree in neuroscience (30 graduate credits) in just five years of study. Students save about 50 percent in expenses and time required for a traditional master of science degree.

In addition to coursework and lab research, students in the accelerated 4+1 B.S./M.S. degree program must complete a research-based master's thesis. Students would normally begin working in a research lab at least one year prior to applying.

Applications are due in December of the applicant’s senior year.  Upon being admitted to the program, a student would then complete a graduate summer research internship (6 credits) and thesis proposal; a fifth-year curriculum of graduate studies in neuroscience; and submit their master’s thesis research and defend it orally.

Eric Roth

Director of Neuroscience Undergraduate and 4+1 B.S./M.S. Programs

Learning Objectives

The program is designed to train scientists in the biological foundations of behavior, with research foci including learning and memory, development, neural plasticity, social behavior, and animal models of developmental and affective disorders. The program reflects the multidisciplinary nature of the neurosciences and training involves a wide range of modern neuroanatomical, neurophysiological, neuropharmacological, and behavioral techniques. ​By the end of the program, graduates will be able to:

  • Demonstrate expertise in select domains of neuroscience and their implications for interdisciplinary research through fluent scientific discussion, writing, and presentation.
  • Think critically and programmatically. Synthesize knowledge into novel scientific insights.  Constructively critique scientific theories, hypotheses, experimental procedures, data-analytic approaches, and results. Generate empirically or theoretically grounded hypotheses and experimental designs.
  • Learn and apply the statistical and quantitative methods in service of their own research as well as their ability to critically evaluate research in the literature. This includes descriptive procedures for summarizing data, statistical procedures for performing inferential tests, and development of appropriate data visualizations.
  • Effectively implement rigorous experimental designs. Learn technical skills necessary to collect and manage data. Analyze and report outcomes.

Check UD Catalog for Requirements

Requirements

Applicants to this program are recommended to have at least a cumulative 3.0 GPA.

The first step is to identify a faculty member who agrees to serve as the applicant's 4+1 research mentor. We recommend that the applicant work in that faculty member's lab for at least the first semester of your junior year to establish a basis for that faculty member's decision to become your 4+1 research mentor.

Once a faculty member has agreed to mentor the applicant's 4+1 research, the applicant should construct an application packet and submit it, by the free add-drop deadline of the second semester of the applicant's junior year (usually the end of the second week of classes) to Dr. Eric Roth, director of the 4+1 Program in Neuroscience.

The application packet should include two letters of recommendation from faculty at the University of Delaware, one of which must be from your 4+1 research mentor. The applicant's application packet should also include a University of Delaware transcript, and a two-page statement of purposeThis statement should discuss anything that might be relevant to an admissions decision and address: a) why the applicant wishes to be admitted to the 4+1 B.A./M.S. Program in Neuroscience, b) the applicant's preparation for the program, c) a brief summary of the research project the applicant expects to complete, and d) plans after receiving the Master's Degree.

Admission Procedure

Neuroscience majors who properly submit their application materials for the 4+1 Program in Neuroscience will have their application materials reviewed by the neuroscience admissions committee comprised of the behavioral neuroscience faculty who, in turn, make a recommendation to the director of graduate education in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences for final approval of admission.

Applicants are generally notified of their admission status within 30 days of their application. One should note however that: a) admission is competitive, so meeting the minimal requirements for admission will not guarantee admission, and b) junior-year admission to the 4+1 Program in Neuroscience is provisional until the applicant satisfies his or her senior year evaluation as per below.

The GRE is not required for admission to the 4+1 Program in Neuroscience. However, applicants who are not U.S. citizens or permanent residents must complete the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) with a score of 550 or higher on the paper-based test or 79 or higher on the Internet-based test. Previous education, training, or residence in the U.S. does not exempt foreign nationals from these requirements. Applicants who need further training in English prior to attending graduate school may apply for admission through the University of Delaware English Language Institute's Conditional Admission Program.

Senior Year Evaluation

Students provisionally enrolled in the 4+1 Program in Neuroscience must maintain at least a 3.25 GPA in their neuroscience courses through the first semester of their senior year, and must be reevaluated by the admissions committee the beginning of the second semester of their senior year. This evaluation, which is based on GPA and level of senior year research engagement, is conducted by the director of the 4+1 Program in Neuroscience in consultation with the student's 4+1 mentor, and is subject to final approval by the director of graduate studies in the Department of Psychological and Brain Studies.

Students who are permitted to continue in the 4+1 Program must be eligible to receive their B.S. degree in neuroscience from the University of Delaware at the end of their senior year, and must immediately complete an online application to UD's Graduate College

The latter is necessary to allow one to be promoted to graduate student status so one can register for the required Summer Research Residency and Fifth Year of Graduate Studies. For students who are granted permission to continue, this final application procedure, albeit required, is largely a formality.

Senior Year Research

In addition to completing the requirements for the B.S. degree in neuroscience, students provisionally accepted into the 4+1 Program in Neuroscience must register for three credits of undergraduate research per semester (NSCI368) during their senior year. This undergraduate neuroscience research must be conducted in your 4+1 research mentor's laboratory, and is usually technique-focused and exploratory in nature. However, it is often used also to satisfy the requirements for a Senior Thesis if the student so chooses, and is the foundational "pilot work" that the 4+1 neuroscience student exploits to set up a successful 4+1 master's degree thesis proposal and research project, as per below.

Summer Research Residency

Upon completing the Bachelor's Degree in Neuroscience and achieving graduate student status, students admitted into the 4+1 Program in Neuroscience transition immediately into their summer research residency, for which they must register for six credits of graduate research in neuroscience (NSCI868-Graduate Research). This step is particularly important since summer is a time when graduate students and their faculty mentors can devote the greatest amount of undistracted time and attention to research, particularly to the gathering and analysis of data for one's master's thesis research. During their summer research residency, 4+1 students must write and defend their master's degree proposal, (deadline August 25) described below, and initiate their master's thesis research.

Master's Degree Proposal

Students will present a concisely written thesis proposal to their master's thesis committee and defend it orally. The thesis committee shall consist of the student's faculty mentor and at least two other members of the faculty from the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences. Faculty from other departments or colleges within or outside the University may also serve as a research mentor and serve on the student's thesis committee, by mutual agreement of all parties involved and subject to approval by the director of graduate education in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences.   

Fifth Year of Graduate Studies & Research

Students in the 4+1 Neuroscience Program complete graduate course work in neuroscience, attend area and departmental colloquia each semester (NSCI 866: Neuroscience Colloquium), and complete graduate research in neuroscience (NSCI 868: Graduate Research and NSCI 869: Master's Thesis).  Colloquia and seminars are an important forum for faculty, graduate students, and invited guests to present and discuss recent research.

Hence, upon graduation, students in the 4+1 Neuroscience Program will have completed a total of 30 graduate credits beyond the Bachelor's Degree in Neuroscience. Please note that neuroscience courses that were taken as an undergraduate cannot be taken again or credited toward graduate work.

Neuroscience Colloquia

Students in the 4+1 Neuroscience Program are required to register for one credit of NSCI866 each fall and spring semester, and regularly attend the Neuroscience "Brown Bag" Colloquia and Seminar Series that meet for one hour each week. These colloquia and seminars are an important forum for faculty, graduate students, and invited guests to present and discuss recent research.

Master's Thesis Completion

The culmination of a successful master's thesis research project results in a written master's thesis. Expectations for the master's thesis research are established by a student's faculty mentor with oversight by the student's thesis committee and must be approved by the director of graduate education. To allow for final revision and submission of the document in time to apply for the June graduation, the neuroscience master's thesis must be submitted to, and orally defended in front of, the students master's thesis committee by April 15 of the second semester of the fifth year. 

Advisement

Primary advising for students enrolled in the 4+1 Program in Neuroscience will be the responsibility of the student's faculty research mentor.

Financial Aid

Neuroscience majors who are receiving scholarships or other forms of financial aid as undergraduates are advised that such aid applies only toward the completion of the bachelor's degree or to the first four years of their undergraduate studies (which may nonetheless include taking some graduate courses during their senior year). Thus, students who pursue the 4+1 Program in Neuroscience may want to seek support for their summer research residency and fifth year of graduate study through student loans and other financial aid. A limited amount of support is sometimes available to 4+1 program students through the research support of their faculty mentor, or on a competitive basis from other sources.

The following is a suggested program plan. Please check UD's Graduate Academic Catalog for current degree requirements of the accelerated B.A./M.S. program in neuroscience.

Visit UD Catalog for Requirements

Requirements

 

Summer Research Residency

NSCI868, Graduate Research
Master's Thesis Proposal

 

First Semester of Fifth Year

Neuroscience Core Course
NSCI868, Neuroscience Research
NSCI869, Master's Thesis
NSCI866, Neuroscience Colloquium

 

Second Semester of Fifth Year

Neuroscience Core or Elective Course
NSCI868 Neuroscience Research
NSCI866 Neuroscience Colloquium
NSCI869 Master's Thesis