The lab is open as of Fall 2024 and I am recruiting folks at multiple levels. If you have any questions, please reach out directly (jackie.weissman@stonybrook.edu).
If you are interested in joining the lab, I would be more than happy to work with you to develop proposals for postdoc fellowships relevant to the work our lab does.
This is one good resource for finding fellowships. Please reach out if you are interested in developing such a proposal. In particular, I’d be very happy to work with someone to put together a proposal to the NSF PRFB or the Simons Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship in Marine Microbial Ecology. Prior to coming to SBU, I was the Director of Proposal Development at the City College of New York, where part of my job was training early career scientists how to submit successful grant and fellowship proposals. I see such training as an important part of your postdoctoral journey; grant-writing skills are essential within academia, and are also very transferable to non-academic career paths. In case it isn’t clear - I am very supportive of trainees following the path of their choosing, whether that takes them to industry, government, non-profit, higher ed admin, or academia in its many forms. I’ll work with you to build the skills and experience you need to be successful on that path.
Stony Brook’s IRACDA Teaching Postdoc Fellowship program will open applications in the spring. This is a great opportunity for trainees interested in working in teaching-focused roles long-term.
Applications have now closed for the Ecology & Evolution PhD Fall 2024 admissions cycle. If you are interested in applying for the next cycle (applications due Fall 2025) please reach out to me in late summer or early fall to discuss your application.
I primarily recruit through the Ecology & Evolution program, though could potentially arrange to take students from other programs at SBU (I am currently also affiliated with the Genetics PhD program).
A basic expectation when applying for a position in my group as a PhD student is that you have done computational research before and have a clear idea of why you want to pursue a PhD in my group specifically. I ask that students have some prior experience in computational research (broadly defined) because a PhD is a massive investment of your time and effort, and it is important that you know going in that the kind of work we do is a good fit for you. I am open to taking students from a range of academic backgrounds as long as you have a strong justification for why our lab is a good fit for your research interests.
If you are interested in working with me, I strongly recommend that you reach out to me to discuss applying in late summer/early fall. In general, this is an expectation of nearly all PhD mentors in Ecology & Evolution, though it often goes unstated. At the very least, you should reach out before the December application deadline so we can chat about whether my mentorship style is a good fit for you and whether your research interests are a good fit for the lab. I try to meet with all students who express an interest in the lab to answer questions about our research and lab culture (this is not an interview), but all admissions decisions will be made by the relevant PhD program (I cannot guarantee you a spot in any program at Stony Brook).
I know it can be a little intimidating to cold-email a prospective PhD mentor. Please don’t let that stop you from reaching out! I really do want to hear from you. Here are some things that would be great if you could include in that email (a few lines each is fine, I don’t need an essay):
Hopefully, by the time you are done answering these questions you will have a head-start for writing your personal statement for the PhD application!
Are you a Stony Brook undergraduate student? Did you think some of the stuff on this website was interesting? Consider joining the lab! We are a computational biology lab but no experience in computational biology or coding is required to join the lab at the undergraduate level. If you are enthusiastic about learning about these topics, we can train you. I firmly believe anyone can be a great computational biologist. Most of the undergraduate students I have worked with in the past started out with absolutely zero coding experience, but quickly learned with hands-on training and a cool question in front of them. I am happy to have biologists, environmental scientists, computer scientists, and mathematicians join the lab (and even people from totally different fields if computational biology has caught your eye).
All summer students who work with me will be paid (I will not take unpaid volunteers). Unfortunately, this may limit available positions. Depending on the summer I may have funding to pay one or more students to work with me. Otherwise, I encourage you to apply for summer research programs available at SBU.
While the lab is being set up in Fall 2024, we are not taking undergraduate researchers during the semester unless they are working on thesis/senior projects. Check back in the winter or spring for potential spring/summer openings.