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FLAS Fellowship [01/31]

Applications for Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowships for Summer 2025 and Academic Year 2025-26 now available!

FLAS Fellowships support undergraduate, graduate and professional students in acquiring modern foreign languages and area studies competencies. They are available to current or incoming UW students who are U.S. citizens, permanent residents, or nationals. Students from all UW departments and schools are encouraged to apply.

Please see the attached flyer for more information including a list of FLAS-eligible languages at the UW.

FLAS Fellows receive:

  • Academic Year Graduate: $18,000 tuition, $20,000 living stipend
  • Academic Year Undergraduate: $10,000 tuition, $5,000 living stipend
  • Summer Graduate/Undergraduate: $5,000 tuition, $3,500 living stipend

Please don’t miss this opportunity to secure important funding for your language and related area studies. The application deadline is January 31, 2025.

FMI:

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Graduate positions in sub-arctic and boreal biogeochemistry [01/15]

Graduate student positions in biogeochemistry and climate change interactions in sub-Arctic and boreal landscapes

 

Biogeochemistry of Boreal Ecosystems Research Group (BBERG), Earth Sciences Department, Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador St. John’s Campus led by Dr. Sue Ziegler, Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Boreal Biogeochemistry. Memorial University is located in beautiful, historic St. John’s, Newfoundland in eastern Canada, and has a student population of ~18,000.

 

MSc and PhD positions within the Earth Sciences Program: Start dates of May 1st or September 1st, 2025.

 

We are seeking highly motivated and curious MSc and PhD level students. Our research group specializes in advancing our understanding of high latitude ecosystem and landscape responses to climate change through the study of terrestrial-aquatic and river-marine interfaces and connections. We are a collaborative group of graduate, undergraduate, and high school students, technicians, coordinators, faculty and government researchers, and community members engaged in long-term environmental research centered around local and regional knowledge, needs and concerns in Newfoundland, Labrador, and Nunatsiavut (Inuit land claim area in northern Labrador). Our research culture and methods are based on values of unassuming respect, healthy, well-developed relationships, and accountability. 

 

We are looking for individuals who align with our values including the placement of community-based initiatives and knowledge at the centre of our work, and who will thrive working in an anti-oppressive, consensus-based research space with diverse colleagues. Those interested in pursuing an MSc program in our group should have research experience, ideally completing or having completed an undergraduate honours research thesis in the natural sciences (e.g. biology, chemistry, physics, biochemistry, geology, earth, environmental, or marine sciences). Those interested in pursuing a PhD program should also have research experience, ideally having completed an MSc thesis in the natural sciences. Successful candidates will be expected to work independently and as part of our community as we are a team-based group. This will include attending weekly research group meetings and providing feedback to members in the group.

 

Current graduate research opportunities in our group include: (1) Evaluating controls on boreal forest mineral soil carbon distribution, and developing predictive models and maps for soil carbon stocks, (2) Evaluating controls on carbon export and balance and informing predictions of terrestrial-aquatic carbon fluxes in boreal landscapes, and (3) Bridging scientific, local and Inuit knowledge to inform our understanding of coastal margin watersheds and how they interact with coastal ecosystems. These opportunities include co-supervision and networking with collaborators including researchers in the Nunatsiavut Government, Canadian Forest Service, Environment Climate Change Canada, Newfoundland and Labrador Geologic Survey, and faculty researchers at Memorial and other institutions in Canada and the U.S.. Graduate researchers in our group have opportunities to carry out laboratory and field-based research with support from experienced individuals in our team including local and Indigenous field experts. Successful candidates will be provided support in ethical data collection and management, data processing and analyses, communications and writing. They will also have opportunities for mentoring high school or undergraduate research students. In addition to full stipend support, funding is available for professional development that aligns with successful candidates’ career goals.  

 

Application details:  Review of applications will begin on December 20th, 2024 and continue until filled. We encourage informal inquiries via email. Feel free to direct these to Dr. Sue Ziegler, Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Boreal Biogeochemistry (sziegler@mun.ca) or other research group members based in St. John’s. 

 

To apply please submit your application to Dr. Sue Ziegler at sziegler@mun.ca (with subject line: BBERG Graduate Position): (1) letter describing your background and suitability for graduate research in our group, (2) CV, (3) unofficial transcripts, and (4) names and contact information for 2 references.

 

Please note: To be eligible for graduate program enrollment with full financial support within the Department of Earth Sciences in 2025 candidates must also apply through the School of Graduate Studies at Memorial University before January 15, 2025.

 

View Flyer

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Postdoctoral Investigator – Indigenous Knowledge Systems

CICOES Postdoctoral Scholar Program 2025

The Cooperative Institute for Climate, Ocean, and Ecosystem Studies (CICOES) seeks applications for Postdoctoral Scholars with research interests in climate, oceanography, and/or ecosystem science including human dimensions and policy. We anticipate offering up to three Postdoctoral Scholar appointments. Postdocs are appointed at any one of the CICOES consortium universities: University of Washington (UW), Oregon State University (OSU), and University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF) and may be located at one of our National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) sponsored laboratories: the Alaska Fisheries Science Center (AFSC), the Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NWFSC), and/or the Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (PMEL).

More Information

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Digital Forestry Postdoctoral fellows with Purdue University

The Purdue University Institute for Digital Forestry invites applications for multiple postdoctoral positions. Successful applicants will become part of a multidisciplinary cohort, collectively addressing research areas of interest. Fellows will be co-mentored by faculty of different disciplines and include development of both technical and professional skills to ensure the most successful outcome for individual growth and career preparation. The Institute for Digital Forestry is a transdisciplinary collaboration of over 30 investigators from the colleges of Agriculture, Engineering, Liberal Arts, Libraries, Polytechnic and Science that integrates expertise in AI/ML, computer applications and modeling, geosciences, satellite and drone sensing platforms, social sciences, education, and forest biology, ecology, health, and management for sustainable and equitable rural and urban forest management.

More Information

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ARCTIC 401: Environmental Change and Challenges — looking for students!

This year, ARCTIC 401 focuses on environmental change and challenges in the Arctic, ecosystem management, and impacts on northern peoples. Taught annually by the 2024-25 Fulbright Canada Visiting Research Chair in Arctic Studies, this year the course will be run by Andrew Medeiros from Dalhousie University.

The class was mistakenly published with ARCTIC 200 as a prerequisite, but this is not required. Students can get an add code for the class if they haven’t taken ARCTIC 200.

2024 arctic 401 flyerm

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Graduate positions in sub-arctic and boreal biogeochemistry

Graduate student positions in biogeochemistry and climate change interactions in sub-Arctic and boreal landscapesBiogeochemistry of Boreal Ecosystems Research Group (BBERG), Earth Sciences Department, Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador St. John’s Campus led by Dr. Sue Ziegler, Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Boreal Biogeochemistry. Memorial University is located in beautiful, historic St. John’s, Newfoundland in eastern Canada, and has a student population of ~18,000.

 

MSc and PhD positions within the Earth Sciences Program: Start dates of May 1st or September 1st, 2025.

We are seeking highly motivated and curious MSc and PhD level students. Our research group specializes in advancing our understanding of high latitude ecosystem and landscape responses to climate change through the study of terrestrial-aquatic and river-marine interfaces and connections. We are a collaborative group of graduate, undergraduate, and high school students, technicians, coordinators, faculty and government researchers, and community members engaged in long-term environmental research centered around local and regional knowledge, needs and concerns in Newfoundland, Labrador, and Nunatsiavut (Inuit land claim area in northern Labrador). Our research culture and methods are based on values of unassuming respect, healthy, well-developed relationships, and accountability. 

 

We are looking for individuals who align with our values including the placement of community-based initiatives and knowledge at the centre of our work, and who will thrive working in an anti-oppressive, consensus-based research space with diverse colleagues. Those interested in pursuing an MSc program in our group should have research experience, ideally completing or having completed an undergraduate honours research thesis in the natural sciences (e.g. biology, chemistry, physics, biochemistry, geology, earth, environmental, or marine sciences). Those interested in pursuing a PhD program should also have research experience, ideally having completed an MSc thesis in the natural sciences. Successful candidates will be expected to work independently and as part of our community as we are a team-based group. This will include attending weekly research group meetings and providing feedback to members in the group.

 

Current graduate research opportunities in our group include: (1) Evaluating controls on boreal forest mineral soil carbon distribution, and developing predictive models and maps for soil carbon stocks, (2) Evaluating controls on carbon export and balance and informing predictions of terrestrial-aquatic carbon fluxes in boreal landscapes, and (3) Bridging scientific, local and Inuit knowledge to inform our understanding of coastal margin watersheds and how they interact with coastal ecosystems. These opportunities include co-supervision and networking with collaborators including researchers in the Nunatsiavut Government, Canadian Forest Service, Environment Climate Change Canada, Newfoundland and Labrador Geologic Survey, and faculty researchers at Memorial and other institutions in Canada and the U.S.. Graduate researchers in our group have opportunities to carry out laboratory and field-based research with support from experienced individuals in our team including local and Indigenous field experts. Successful candidates will be provided support in ethical data collection and management, data processing and analyses, communications and writing. They will also have opportunities for mentoring high school or undergraduate research students. In addition to full stipend support, funding is available for professional development that aligns with successful candidates’ career goals.  

 

Application details:  Review of applications will begin on December 20th, 2024 and continue until filled. We encourage informal inquiries via email. Feel free to direct these to Dr. Sue Ziegler, Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Boreal Biogeochemistry (sziegler@mun.ca) or other research group members based in St. John’s. 

 

To apply please submit your application to Dr. Sue Ziegler at sziegler@mun.ca (with subject line: BBERG Graduate Position): (1) letter describing your background and suitability for graduate research in our group, (2) CV, (3) unofficial transcripts, and (4) names and contact information for 2 references.

 

Please note: To be eligible for graduate program enrollment with full financial support within the Department of Earth Sciences in 2025 candidates must also apply through the School of Graduate Studies at Memorial University before January 15, 2025.

 

 

Susan Ziegler (she/her)
Professor
Canada Research Chair in Boreal Biogeochemistry
Department of Earth Science
Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador
709.864.2669 (cell 709.769.9411)
sziegler@mun.ca
https://www.esd.mun.ca/wordpress/sziegler/

We acknowledge that the lands on which Memorial University’s campuses are situated are in the traditional territories of diverse Indigenous groups, and we acknowledge with respect the histories and cultures of the Beothuk, Mi’kmaq, Innu and Inuit of this province.

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New Coastal Resilience Fellowship Positions

Hello CHRN – new fellowship announcement!

 

Washington is getting four new coastal fellows through the NOAA Climate Resilience Regional Challenge. Two fellows will be working with King County and two will be working with the WA Department of Ecology. These positions are open to anyone with a bachelor’s degree. Please pass this along to anyone you think would be interested in these positions.

 

NOAA Coastal Resilience Fellowship Program. Application due: February 28, 2025. Successful applicants will support Climate Resilience Regional Challenge grant recipients as they implement projects that build climate resilience within coastal communities. Each project includes a focus on serving marginalized, underserved, and underrepresented communities. Project descriptions for each of the 33 fellowship opportunities are posted here.

Washington has four fellowship openings:

          King County fellows will support the Small Communities Cohort Program, which is designed to directly support work on community-identified climate preparedness priorities in up to 12 smaller and less-resourced jurisdictions and Tribes in the Puget Sound Basin. Apply here.

Washington State Department of Ecology has one Climate Resilience, Equity, and Engagement Fellow working on coastal resilience projects in partnership with communities and Tribes that are most vulnerable to the impacts of sea level rise and other coastal hazards. Apply here. The other WA Department of Ecology will be a Climate Resilience Outreach and Storytelling Fellow that will support the Washington State Coastal Climate Resilience Partnership by working with project partners and their communities to document, co-create, and share stories through various multimedia. Apply here.

 

Additionally, through the NOAA Climate Resilience Regional Challenge, Washington Sea Grant will be starting a new Coastal Resilience Fellowship program (different from the one above) starting up this summer. While details are forthcoming, it’s exciting to note that Washington will welcome 8–10 new fellows over the next year, all focused on advancing coastal resilience across the state!

Best,

Noah Linck | he, him

Coastal Planner

Shorelands & Environmental Assistance Program

nlin461@ecy.wa.gov

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Summer 2025 REU Internship at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center

NSF REU Summer Internship Program at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center in St. Louis, MO

Application Deadline: February 3, 2025, 11:59PM ET

Program Dates: May 27, 2025 – August 1, 2025

Estimated Stipend: $7,550.

 

Students in the program have really appreciated the exposure they get to research outside of academia and the opportunities for interaction with scientists at all levels of experience, and from a variety of countries. We feel strongly that our program is an excellent steppingstone to a future career in research, or research support fields.

 

Eligibility: Our internships are available to undergraduate students who will not have graduated by May 2025.

 

To apply for the Danforth Center’s REU opportunity, the undergraduate will need an account on the NSF ETAP website.

 

Once you have created an account, you can then apply to our program’s opportunity by simply searching “Danforth” or by visiting the following link: https://etap.nsf.gov/award/2777/opportunity/9936

 

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us directly at reuinternship@danforthcenter.org.

2025 Danforth REU Flyer