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Graduate Neurobiology & Neurosciences Programs at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

6 Graduate Degrees Awarded
1 Graduate Award Levels

We’ve pulled together the essential facts you should know about graduate study in neurobiology & neurosciences at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. You can earn it at the Doctoral level, with undergraduate study also available. Jump to any of the following sections:

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate Neurobiology & Neurosciences Rankings

#101 in the U.S.
#4 in North Carolina
#15 in the Southeast Region

College Factual rates University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as a strong choice for neurobiology & neurosciences, ranked #101 out of 193 schools nationally.

Ranking Rank
Best Neurobiology & Neurosciences Schools 101 of 193
Best Neurobiology & Neurosciences Schools in North Carolina 4 of 4
Best Neurobiology & Neurosciences Schools in the Southeast Region 15 of 32

Graduate Neurobiology & Neurosciences Degrees at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Here is each degree level granted in neurobiology & neurosciences at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, along with how many graduates complete each level annually.

Degree Level Annual Graduates
Bachelor’s 190
Doctoral 6

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Neurobiology & Neurosciences Doctoral Degrees

In the most recent year for which we have data, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill handed out 6 doctoral degrees in neurobiology & neurosciences.

Doctoral Rankings

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is not yet ranked for neurobiology & neurosciences at the doctoral level.

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate Tuition and Fees

$29,678 Average Tuition and Fees (In-State)

Average full-time graduate tuition and fees are listed in the table below.

In State Out of State
Tuition $26,331 $48,121
Fees $3,347 $3,347

Read more about University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill tuition and fees.

Doctoral Student Diversity

For the most recent academic year available, 17% of neurobiology & neurosciences doctoral degrees went to men and 83% went to women.

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill gender breakdown of Neurobiology & Neurosciences Doctoral degree grads The largest share of neurobiology & neurosciences doctoral degree graduates at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill were White. Roughly 67% of graduates fell into this category.

The following table and chart show the ethnic background for students who recently graduated from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a doctoral in neurobiology & neurosciences.

Ethnic diversity of Neurobiology & Neurosciences majors at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Ethnic Background Number of Students
Asian 1
Black or African American 0
Hispanic or Latino 0
White 4
Non-Resident Aliens 0
Other Races 1

Neuroscience (Doctoral)

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill granted 6 doctoral completions in neuroscience in the most recent reporting year — 83% to women and 17% to men. The most common background among these graduates was White (67%).

Undergraduate Study in Neurobiology & Neurosciences at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Undergraduate study is also available at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Annual undergraduate completions by level are shown below.

Undergraduate Level Annual Graduates
Bachelor’s Degrees in Neurobiology & Neurosciences 190

References

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