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Are there any programs other than Georgetown SMP that are good for master programs of one year.
Phil Anthropist said:Stanford has a one-year MS in Biological Sciences (not an SMP)
Colorado State has a one-year MS in Biomedical Sciences
In addition to the SMP, G-town also has a one-year MS in Tumor Biology.
Barry U has a one year MS in Biomedical Sciences.
Florida Atlantic U has a MS in Biomedical Sciences that can be completed in one year.
USF also has a program in the works. It's currently in its first year. It is a one year program, but I don't believe you take actual courses. My understanding is that the courses are patterned after USF's med school.
Northwestern has a one-year MS in Physiology and Neurobiology.
Loyola (Chicago) has a one-year MA in Medical Sciences.
Rosalind Franklin has a one-year MS in Applied Physiology.
Indiana U (Indianapolis) has a one-year pre-professional MS in Biology.
Ball State U has one-year MA programs in biology and physiology (there are actually many state schools that allow completion of an MA in Biology in one year)
Tulane has one-year MS programs in Pharmacology, Genetics, and Cell/Molecular Bio, but I don't know what's going to happen with those programs for next year.
Johns Hopkins has one-year Master of Health Science programs in various tracks.
Boston U has a one-year MA in Medical Sciences program.
KCUMB has a one-year MS in Biomedical Sciences
Dartmouth has an MS in Clinical Evaluative Sciences (this isn't really a hard science program)
UMDNJ (Newark and Stratford) have MS/MBS programs. The MBS programs can be completed in one year.
Columbia has a one-year MS in Nutrition.
Case Western has an MS in Applied Anatomy that can be completed in one year.
EVMS has a one-year MS in Biomedical Sciences.
I'm sure there are a lot more, but the SMPs with medical courses (G-town, BU, Rosalind Franklin, EVMS, etc.) are probably the best way of proving you can handle med school. Keep in mind, however, that these grades are not factored into your undergrad GPA.
There are also a lot of one-year certificate programs (e.g., Drexel IMS, VCU certificates). Some of them give you the option of taking medical courses and some give you the opportunity to stay a 2nd year for a master's.
The UMDNJ programs are the same ones in your NJ SMP thread. 😛NRAI2001 said:What exactly is the UMDNJ BMS program? Is it an SMP style program?
The program is physiology and neurobiology (combined, not separate). It's not an SMP. It's actually supposed to be a rigorous research-based program.Is the Northwestern physio and neuro programs smp style programs also?
NRAI2001 said:What exactly is the UMDNJ BMS program? Is it an SMP style program? Is the Northwestern physio and neuro programs smp style programs also?
Don't quote me on this, but I believe there is a student in the dental forum (he's the OP of a thread about sub-3.0 applicants or something; Yah-E? I'm too lazy to check 😛 ) who did the Midwestern program. He did the one in Glendale, AZ. I believe the programs in Glendale, AZ, and Downers Grove, IL, are basically the same thing.miraclegirll said:Hi,
Does anyone know anything about Midwestern's 2year master's program in biomed science? I have the basic info from their site but would like to know if anyone has actually participated in it or is thinking about it..
Rosalind Franklin's MS in Applied Physiology and EVMS' MS in Biomedical Sciences probably have the strongest linkages w/o glide year.confuse said:Thanks Phil. I know that some post-bac have linkages to med schools so that you can skip the glide year. Do you know of any master program that does that? Thanks. 👍
Not sure about admissions difficulty, but GRE only I think for your 2nd question.NRAI2001 said:How difficult is it to get into the Stanford has a one-year MS in Biological Sciences program?
Do they require the gre or can the mcat suffice?
NRAI2001 said:Does anyone have a link to the EVMS program? I tried searching for it but couldnt really find a link. Thanks.
Hass1786 said:http://www.evms.edu/hlthprof/ms-bio-medical/index.html
you can search in the forms by clicking search these forms...
Then you can just put something like EVMS website
and it will bring different posts where the website is located...
👍
NRAI2001 said:Cool, thanks. 👍
So this program has a strong linkage with the med school? Do you take med classes with med students? Does a certain percentage of the class enter the med school the next year? The website doesn't answer these questions.
Phil Anthropist said:Stanford has a one-year MS in Biological Sciences (not an SMP)
Colorado State has a one-year MS in Biomedical Sciences
In addition to the SMP, G-town also has a one-year MS in Tumor Biology.
Barry U has a one year MS in Biomedical Sciences.
Florida Atlantic U has a MS in Biomedical Sciences that can be completed in one year.
USF also has a program in the works. It's currently in its first year. It is a one year program, but I don't believe you take actual courses. My understanding is that the courses are patterned after USF's med school.
Northwestern has a one-year MS in Physiology and Neurobiology.
Loyola (Chicago) has a one-year MA in Medical Sciences.
Rosalind Franklin has a one-year MS in Applied Physiology.
Indiana U (Indianapolis) has a one-year pre-professional MS in Biology.
Ball State U has one-year MA programs in biology and physiology (there are actually many state schools that allow completion of an MA in Biology in one year)
Tulane has one-year MS programs in Pharmacology, Genetics, and Cell/Molecular Bio, but I don't know what's going to happen with those programs for next year.
Johns Hopkins has one-year Master of Health Science programs in various tracks.
Boston U has a one-year MA in Medical Sciences program.
KCUMB has a one-year MS in Biomedical Sciences
Dartmouth has an MS in Clinical Evaluative Sciences (this isn't really a hard science program)
UMDNJ (Newark and Stratford) have MS/MBS programs. The MBS programs can be completed in one year.
Columbia has a one-year MS in Nutrition.
Case Western has an MS in Applied Anatomy that can be completed in one year.
EVMS has a one-year MS in Biomedical Sciences.
I'm sure there are a lot more, but the SMPs with medical courses (G-town, BU, Rosalind Franklin, EVMS, etc.) are probably the best way of proving you can handle med school. Keep in mind, however, that these grades are not factored into your undergrad GPA.
There are also a lot of one-year certificate programs (e.g., Drexel IMS, VCU certificates). Some of them give you the option of taking medical courses and some give you the opportunity to stay a 2nd year for a master's.
U Penn has a non-masters enhancement program called the Special Science program. Some of the students are given conditional acceptances into UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson. However, my understanding is that you don't know if you have a conditional acceptance until you're already in the program.
I've been trying to put together a list with links and some basic info of some enhancement (mostly graduate-level) programs. I'll try to get around to that.CoffeeCat said:Phil, can we sticky these with links??
Colorado State doesn't have a med school, but some of the students in the program are accepted to the medical school at the University of Colorado.NRAI2001 said:Phil,
Are the Colorado state, BU, and Barry U MS's in Biomedical sciences SMP like programs? Do you take medical school courses? Do they accept a percentage of the MS students into their med class the next year?
On what basis are the students given the conditional acceptance?
Phil Anthropist said:I've been trying to put together a list with links and some basic info of some enhancement (mostly graduate-level) programs. I'll try to get around to that.
Colorado State doesn't have a med school, but some of the students in the program are accepted to the medical school at the University of Colorado.
Boston University allows you to take medical courses. BU takes a good number of the students in their MA in Medical Sciences program into their med school, but my understanding is that the students in the program have better luck after they've completed a year and then apply to BU. The GMS graduates could give you a better answer.
Barry doesn't have a med school, but in the past there were some teachers from Nova Southeastern, the neighbor osteopathic med school, that taught at Barry. Nova seems to accept a good number of students from Barry's program. However, Nova also has a program of its own, so if you're really interested in Nova it would probably make more sense to do their program. Barry's program is 1-2 years. Nova's is 2 years if I remember correctly.
I don't know the specifics on the conditional linkage between UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson and UPenn.
FYI, here is the email response I received from their admissions person:NRAI2001 said:How difficult is it to get into the Stanford has a one-year MS in Biological Sciences program?
Do they require the gre or can the mcat suffice?