Northwestern university pre medical scholars program




















At the end of the program, students will showcase their achievements at a poster session attended by organizational leaders. In addition to project work, our weekly rotating observations expose interns to a variety of clinical environments, broaden their scopes of interest and allow them to gain an understanding of new and different areas of medicine. Step into the operating room, shadow physicians while they perform a procedure or test, or observe face-to-face daily interaction between a trusted care provider and a patient.

You'll have the opportunity to learn from some of the most forward-thinking minds in medicine. Leaders from Northwestern Medicine and Feinberg School of Medicine will share their knowledge and experience in a lecture series. Lecture topics include getting into medical school, life as a physician, choosing a specialty, women in medicine and much more.

Meet Our Faculty Partners. Ready to apply? Proseminar 2: This course prepares students for the application cycle. The course will also allow students to practice their interviewing skills and plan for their glide year. The NUPP student group is first and foremost a community dedicated to the successful admission of its members into programs that lead to careers in medicine, health, and veterinary practice.

In addition, NUPP serves as a forum for the discussion and presentation of professional and academic experiences, as a collective resource of relevant information, as a social network and as a representative for the body of non-traditional pre-health students and their unique needs. Students are selected for these shadowing opportunities through an application process during their program. The rigor of Northwestern's Premedicine post-bacc program prepares students for successful application to and completion of programs at top medical schools nationwide.

View the list of recent medical school acceptances. Overview of the development, structure and function of the human nervous system; terminology and principles of neuroanatomy, neurochemistry, physiology, and molecular biology. How the brain works and its role in human behavior and psychopathology. Issues raised by new medical technologies.

General biological sciences introduction. Topics include evolution, biomolecules, cell biology, genetics, population biology, and the relationship between structure and function in organisms. The course is geared toward students with an interest in the topic but without a background in biological sciences. Principles of inheritance; gene function; mechanisms by which DNA is replicated, transcribed into RNAs, and translated into proteins; basics of the process of natural selection.

Prerequisite: one year of general chemistry with laboratory. Organization and functioning of the major organ systems in mammals. Mechanisms that cells use to compartmentalize and transport proteins, to move, to regulate growth and death, and to communicate with their environments.

Laboratory techniques and experiments in fundamental aspects of transmission genetics and molecular biology. Credit for this course is 0. The program is not designed to be a fast-track to medical school.

Transfer students may apply if they meet the listed requirements and coursework was conducted at a similarly rigorous program. Each year, approximately six to eight students are offered early acceptance to Feinberg via this program.



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