Graduate Student Resources

Graduate Courses

Please click here for a description of each graduate course in Chemistry & Biochemistry.

Click the button below to search for current and upcoming courses, including dates, times, and locations.

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Research and Publications

Our faculty represent all sub-disciplines of chemistry and are dedicated to supporting student research and professionalization.

Our graduate students coauthor publications with their faculty mentors, conduct research as part of faculty research labs, and present at local and national conferences. Our hallways are filled with student-led posters, and graduate students work in all of our labs. Many of our students have won awards to cover their research expenses and travel needs.

Learn more about individual faculty specializations here and about the work going on in our labs by clicking below.

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Financial Support

The Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry has a limited number of $15,000 annual Graduate Teaching Assistantships available. Application for these is a competitive process, and recipients are required to teach four labs over the course of the year (two each in the fall and spring semesters). Please see the Graduate Teaching Assistant Handbook for more information on responsibilities and resources.

Additional graduate student financial support opportunities, including research fellowships and scholarships, are listed in this document. Please contact Dr. Carlos Diaz, our Graduate Program Director, for more information.

Where Graduates Are

Recent graduates of our program work for the following companies and institutions:

logos of companies employing recent Chem & Biochem graduates

Graduates who chose to enter PhD or medical programs are currently studying at top institutions around the country. Learn more here.

Applying to the Graduate Program

faculty and students presenting research poster

Students choose to earn an MSc for a variety of reasons. An MSc in Chemistry or Biochemistry is a great option for students who:

  • Want to pursue leadership roles in industry
  • Desire to strengthen critical thinking and writing skills before applying to professional programs in medical, dental, or pharmacy school
  • Are interested in pursuing a PhD one day but are not ready to make the commitment to a 4+ year-long doctoral program, but know the value of graduate education
  • Serve as secondary-education teachers and desire to strengthen the depth and breadth of their training in chemistry or biochemistry
  • Are interested in teaching at the college-level

We offer the MSc–Chemistry option and MSc–Biochemistry option. For both options, a student can fulfill the requirements of the research track with completion of a thesis or complete the requirements of the course track (non-thesis).

Students apply through the Graduate School website for the MSc program. For AMP applicants, start by filling out your AMP Intent Application and Department AMP Application.

FAQs

If you are unable to find answers to your questions here, please contact Dr. Carlos Diaz, our Graduate Program Director for Chemistry & Biochemistry.


Admission to the MSc program requires that the student meet the following requirements:

  • Has attained a Bachelors degree in chemistry, biochemistry, or related major* (students in related majors must complete core requirements of UCCS BA degrees in chemistry or biochemistry) from an accredited college or university, and
  • Has an undergraduate cumulative GPA of 3.00 or higher for regular admission or GPA of 2.75-3.00 for provisional admission.
  • If a student desires the research track, a research faculty mentor must agree to mentor the applicant prior to admission.

International students: The Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry welcomes you! We will accept either path for demonstrating English proficiency for non-native English speakers seeking admission to the program:

  • Bachelors or post-secondary degree from a US-accredited institution or program where English is the language of instruction, or
  • Demonstrated proficiency in English with earned scores of 100 on the TOEFL, 7 on the iELTS, or 120 on Duolingo.

Students apply through the Graduate School website and pay the $60 application fee. The following application materials must be uploaded through the application portal by the following deadlines:

Description of application typesApplication Type*
RegularStreamlinedAMP + StreamlinedInternationalProvisional
Applicants with GPA of 3.0 or betterUCCS alumni with GPA > 3.2 (completed your degree within the last 4 years and completed 45 credits at UCCS)Current approved AMP students with GPA > 3.2Applicants who are not US citizens or do not yet hold a US Permanent Resident statusStudents with a GPA between 2.75 and 3.0
DeadlinesApril 15th (research and course track) for FALL admission; 
Sept 15th (research and course track) for SPRING admission 
Applications for Financial Support are due by April 15th for support beginning the following academic year
Application materialsApplication requirements
GPA requirement?3.0 or above3.2 or above3.2 or above3.0 or above2.75 – 3.00
Personal statement?YesYesYesYesYes
General GRE required with combined scores above 50th percentile?Waived for UCCS alumni OR non-UCCS alumni with GPA > 3.3NoNoYesWaived for UCCS alumni
Letters of recommendation & number neededYes – 4Yes – 2Yes – 2Yes – 4Yes – 4
Transcripts?Yes – official from all institutionsUnofficial UCCS transcriptsUnofficial UCCS transcriptsYes: We recommend that your transcript be evaluated by a NACES.org member. Transcripts evaluated by ECE or WES are considered to be official.Yes – official from all institutions (non-UCCS) or unofficial UCCS transcript
Additional requirements?   Please review the information for International Students to ensure that you have met visa requirements.Provisional students are required to take two CHEM 5000-level courses and earn a grade of B or better in both to be considered regular admission students.

*Contact Dr. Carlos Diaz, our Graduate Program Director, if you are unsure of which application type you should submit.

  1. For UCCS alumni applicants with a GPA > 3.0, the general GRE is not required. UCCS alumni applying to our program with a GPA 2.75 – 3.0 do not have to take the GRE but will be admitted on provisional status and are required take two CHEM 5000-level courses, earning a grade of B (3.0) or better in both courses. Upon earning a B or better in both courses, provisional applicants will be considered ‘regular’ admission students, making them eligible for Financial Support mechanisms.
  2. If an applicant is from an outside domestic (US) university, the general GRE is waived for students with a GPA > 3.3. Students below this GPA (3.0 – 3.3) will be required to take the GRE. Provisional applicants (UG GPA 2.75 – 3.0) from domestic institutions will be required to take the GRE and meet the provisional admission requirements set forth previously.
  3. Students who are applying after receiving an undergraduate degree from an international university will be required to take the general GRE exam. Additionally, students who earned a degree in which English was not the official language of instruction will be required to demonstrate proficiency in English: score of 100 on the TOEFL, 7 on the iELTS, or 120 on the Duolingo exam.

Your approximately 500-word personal statement should describe your motivation for seeking a graduate degree and what previous research, educational, or work experiences prepared you for study in a graduate program. If you are applying to the research track, please highlight which faculty member(s) you desire to work with and what research questions interest you.

If you are a UCCS student applying to the MSc program in chemistry or biochemistry, your unofficial UCCS transcripts are sufficient. For non-UCCS applicants, please provide official transcripts from all institutions attended. For applicants who attended an international institution, you will need to have your application evaluated by a NACES.org member. Transcripts evaluated by ECE or WES are considered to be official.

The Accelerated Master’s Pathway (AMP) offers highly qualified UCCS chemistry and biochemistry majors (and biology majors who have completed the core requirements for a BA in Biochemistry) the opportunity to pursue the Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science (BA or BS) in Chemistry or Biochemistry and the Master of Sciences (MSc) in Chemistry or Biochemistry concurrently. The main benefit of the program is that it allows students to take up to three courses (nine credit hours) that will count towards the credit requirements of both the Bachelor’s and Master’s programs. The program is designed to be a five year or five year+ (less than six) program for currently enrolled UCCS chemistry or biochemistry majors.

If you are a current UCCS chemistry, biochemistry, or qualified biology major interested in the AMP, learn more here.

A letter of recommendation should address how your recommender knows you, the student applicant, and for how long. We also want information about how you have performed in undergraduate coursework. If you have a recommender writing a letter of support for you who is NOT a former instructor, please have this person write a letter about their supervision of you in a professional setting.

Students interested incompleting their MSc degree requirements part-time are encouraged to apply! Please note that for full-time students, the typical period for completion of the degree is 1.5 to 3 years. For part-time students, you’ll need to double that time frame (3 – 5 years). Please note that the MSc degree must be completed in under six years.

Yes! We most typically help our students financially through the Graduate Teaching Assistantship program. To become a GTA, you must apply by April 15th for support in the following year. This program is competitive. GTAs teach four laboratory sections per year, and are paid for their work in the Department while also receiving funds to offset tuition. Other funding opportunities are also available. For excellent out-of-state students, we offer one yearly out-of-state student scholarship (application due by April 15th).

Applicants with degrees in biology must meet the core requirements of a BA in Biochemistry, which include the following: General Chemistry I & II with associated laboratories, Organic Chemistry I & II with associated laboratories, one semester of Analytical Chemistry with laboratory, two semesters of Biochemistry, one semester of Biochemistry laboratory, and Biophysical Chemistry. You can still be admitted to our program if you don’t have one or more of these courses, but please know that you will be expected to take these courses at the undergraduate level, and this will lengthen your time in the program.

We don’t admit students to our research (thesis) track unless we have a research advisor for that applicant. If you are interested in working with a particular faculty member, please email that faculty member directly to see if they have room in their research group. If we don’t have space in the research track, you will be admitted as a course-based (non-thesis) MSc student.

Absolutely. If you start out as a research student, up to three credits of CHEM 5904 (research) will be counted towards the 30 credits required in the course track. Three credits of CHEM 7000 (thesis) will be substituted for the required CHEM 7050 of the course track. If you are on the course track and decide to switch to the research track, keep in mind that only twelve credits of coursework (CHEM 5000-level) are required in the research track. Any courses taken beyond the required four will not count towards your graduation requirement.

Sure. We will evaluate your undergraduate transcript AND your selected graduate-level courses to review for deficiencies. For example, if you haven’t taken Physical Chemistry before, you will be required to take that course sequence, including lab, before you can switch to the Chemistry track.

Yes, but we don’t recommend it. Once you start on a research project with an advisor, it is best to finish your research for timely graduation. Switching advisors will lengthen your time in the program.

A thesis committee is constituted for students on the research (thesis) track and includes your research advisor as your chair and two or three additional faculty members. Of these additional faculty members, at least one must come from the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.