join us!

Prospective Graduate Students

***EXCITING NEWS! We are currently accepting applications for prospective awesome, motivated, responsible, and collaborative PhD students to join the Comparative Animal Ecophysiology Lab at Baylor in FALL 2024.

PhD students will have the opportunity to develop their own dissertation project that fits into the research scope of the lab. Through our lab, we offer experience and training in field and laboratory research, grant writing, statistical data analyses, and science communication. We value a team-based approach, where supervisors and lab members work effectively and collaboratively together on projects. We value diversity in our lab and welcome applicants from all backgrounds to join us. Our lab will provide a challenging but rewarding experience, and we are therefore seeking enthusiastic and capable students with strong interests in animal ecophysiology.

Students will be supported by internal and external fellowships. We encourage all prospective graduate students to apply for external funding, including the Dr. Nancy Foster Scholars Scholarship Program, Ford Foundation, Graduate Women in Science, and National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program. Please reach out if you would like to collaborate on a project proposal.

You can find more details about the Department of Biology at Baylor here and about the PhD graduate program here. Baylor’s graduate program application deadline is in early January. If you are interested in applying, you MUST reach out to me well in advance.

To express your interest in this position, please email Sarah_Kienle@baylor.edu with the following:

  • A cover letter detailing your relevant qualifications and experience, research topics/ projects that you are interested in, and how you see yourself fitting into our lab (~1 page in length)

  • Your CV (for guidelines, see The Academic CV blog post on this website)

A few FAQ’s:

  1. Do you accept master’s students? Unfortunately no, there is not a MS option available at Baylor.

  2. When should I contact Dr. Kienle about my interest in the lab? Anytime during the summer to mid-fall (end of October) is good. If you reach out after October, she may have already made her decision about who to encourage to apply to the program.

  3. What if I don’t hear back from Dr. Kienle right away? Give her a couple of weeks, and if there is still no response, send a polite follow up. She is continually shocked by how many emails she receives as a professor.

Postdoctoral Researchers

We welcome applications from postdoctoral scholars to join our lab. We encourage postdoctoral researchers to apply for external fellowships, including the NSF Postdoctoral Fellowship in Biology, Smith Conservation Research Fellowship, and/or the American Association of University Women.

If you are interested in collaborating on a research proposal, please contact me at Sarah_Kienle@baylor.edu.

Undergraduate Students

We are always interested in having motivated, enthusiastic, and talented undergraduate students join our lab as volunteers. If you are interested in joining the lab, you have two options:

Option 1: Please contact me at Sarah_Kienle@baylor.edu with the following information:

  • A brief (1-2 paragraph) description of your research background, research interests, and what you hope to gain from the experience

  • Your resume or CV (for guidelines, see The Academic CV blog post on this website)

Option 2: Reach out directly to one of the graduate students in the lab (see CEAL Team section on this website) to see if they are taking undergraduates. When reaching out, please include the following:

  • A brief (1-2 paragraph) description of your research background, research interests, and what you hope to gain from the experience

  • Your resume or CV (for guidelines, see The Academic CV blog post on this website)

Collaborations

I am always interested in new projects and opportunities! Please contact Sarah_Kienle@baylor.edu if you are interested in collaborating.

 
 

We respectfully acknowledge that Baylor University in Waco and its original campus in Independence are on the land and territories originally occupied by Indigenous peoples including the Waco and Tawakoni of the Wichita and Affiliate Tribes, the Tonkawa, the Nʉmʉnʉʉ (Comanche), Karankawa, and Lipan Apache. These Indigenous peoples were dispossessed of and removed from their lands over centuries by European colonization and American expansionism. In recognition that these Native Nations are the original stewards of Baylor's campus locations, the University strives to build sustainable relationships with sovereign Native Nations and Indigenous communities through education offerings, partnerships, and community service.