What do we do?
The Biology Graduate Students Association is the students group for all graduate students in the Biology Department at McGill University. We organize social events such as wine and cheeses and graduate student retreats, as well as educational and research events such as symposia and workshops.

Who is a part of BGSA?

All graduate students in the Biology department of McGill University are members of the BGSA.
Graduate Contact List

Click HERE to read our constitution!

Monday, April 26, 2010

Grad students lunches with candidates for the Animal Behavior position

Hi everyone,
In the following weeks, the Biology Department will welcome and interview five candidates for the Animal Behaviour position.
We received more than 95 applications from very strong candidates and these five are "la crème de la crème"!

As the grad student representative of the Animal Behavior Search Committee, I am strongly soliciting your participation to evaluate and give your impressions about
our top candidates. I am particularly interested to get your feedback during lunches where we can discuss and interact with candidates in a more relaxed atmosphere.
What I am expecting from you: Joining us for lunch (not that difficult) and, afterward, give me your general impressions about the candidate (not that difficult either!).

**Because I am having my Ph D seminar on April 28th and leaving May 7th for a month, Xoxo and Aerin kindly accepted to help me organize and coordinate
lunches with the grad students.

The five candidates are:
Simon Reader, Utrecht University, Behavioural Biology, The Netherlands

Seminar: April 28, 2010 – W4/12 4pm – “Cognitive mechanisms for a changing environment: The evolution and ecology of social learning”
Roundtable discussion: April 29th 10:30-12:00, room W5/2. Coffee & goodies will be served.
Lunch with grad students: April 29th 12:00 to 1:30

Mark Laidre, Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, and Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University
Seminar: May 3rd W4/12 4pm “The evolution of animal communication: displaying crabs, singing birds, gesturing monkeys, and gossiping humans”
Roundtable discussion: May 4th 10:30-12, room W5/2. Coffee & goodies will be served.
Lunch with grad students: May 4th 12:00 to 1:30

Julie Desjardins, Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, California
Seminar: May 5th, 2010 - N2/2 4pm seminar - "The influence of social information on the brain "
Roundtable discussion: May 6th 10:30-12:00, room W5/2. Coffee & goodies will be served.
Lunch with grad students: May 6th 12:00 to 1:30

Frances Bonier, Queen’s University, Department of Biology
Seminar: May 7th 9:30am W4/12 - "Coping Mechanisms: Behavioural and physiological responses to environmental challenges"
Roundtable discussion: May 7th, room N5/1. 10:30-12:00. Coffee & goodies will be served.
Lunch with grad students: May 7th 12:30 to 1:30

David Lusseau, University of Aberdeen, Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences
Seminar: May 13th 9:30am W4/12 - "Complex communal decisions emerging from simple socio-ecological interactions"
Roundtable discussion: room N5/1, May 13th 10:30-12:00. Coffee & goodies will be served.
Lunch with grad students: May 14th 12:30 to 1:30

Cheers!
--
Katrine Turgeon, Ph.D candidate
McGill University
Biology Department
1205 Docteur Penfield Ave.
Montreal, Quebec, H3A 1B1
Tel.: 1 514. 398.6462

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