Graduate Program in Biomedical Science and Translational Medicine
Application Information
Admission Requirements
- Completed Application
- Statement of Purpose – 3 double-spaced pages maximum, detailing his/her reasons for wanting to pursue graduate study in Biomedical Science and Translational Medicine. The statement of purpose is carefully considered in the selection process and is very important, please be as concise and specific as you can.
- Letters of Recommendation – Three (3) letters must be submitted from persons who have supervised the applicant’s research and/or academic work. Letters must be accompanied by the Recommendation Form which can be downloaded from the website. Letters must be sent directly to Graduate Office.
- GRE Scores (Verbal, Quantitative, Analytical) – Official GRE General Test scores are required. These must be sent directly from ETS to CSMC Graduate office (GRE Institution code 5739).
- Degree - Bachelor’s Degree (BA or BS) in a Biomedical discipline or science-related field, MCAT acceptable.
- Official Transcripts sent directly to Graduate Office.
- TOEFL Scores – For students whose first language is not English, official TOEFL scores are required. These must be sent directly from ETS to CSMS Graduate Office (GRE Institution code 5739).
Application Materials
Applications from Candidates with MD or Equivalent Degrees
The program does not have a special MD track, since the goal of educating scientists of such caliber is independent of prior training. However, consideration is given for course-work completed during training of such degrees so that the duration of the graduate training may be shorter in appropriate cases.
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Prospective students who hold an MD or equivalent degree from an accredited institution can be admitted to the program. The principles for such admission are that they receive the same core curriculum as the regular track with the exception that advance credits for medical school courses in Biomedical sciences may be given (up to 18 credits) after an evaluation of prior coursework by the curriculum committee
and (ii) that they complete their thesis research in the same time period (goal of 3 years.)
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During the first year 3 laboratory rotations of 2 months each are required. Because there could be less required coursework in biomedical sciences, this shortened laboratory rotation time is expected to achieve the same exposure as that achieved by regular students who are engaged in the curriculum of biomedical sciences. When a student knows at the onset, which laboratory and primary mentor they are likely to elect for their thesis research, the two required rotations should be in laboratories other than this one. Should there be uncertainty; an additional rotation will be permitted.
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During the first year students are expected to attend and achieve credits for the “Special Topics” and “Issues in Biomedical and Translational Medicine” series which are held twice weekly in the late afternoons.