Programs of Study
The department offers programs leading to M.S. and Ph.D. degrees.
The combined M.D./Ph.D. degrees are available in collaboration with the School of
Medicine. Postdoctoral training is an integral part of the program.
The first year is an interdepartmental, interdisciplinary program
(IGPBS) taught by faculty members from the Departments of Anatomy and Cell Biology;
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology; Molecular and Integrative Physiology; Pathology and
Laboratory Science; and Pharmacology, Toxicology, and Therapeutics.
The advanced curriculum includes specialized training in physical
biochemistry, protein structure-function, and advanced molecular genetics. The Ph.D.
candidacy examination usually is taken at the end of the second year. It consists of
written and oral comprehensive examinations. The written component is a grant
proposal in the format of the National Institutes of Health. The oral comprehensive
examination is a defense of the grant proposal and a test of the student's basic science
knowledge. The Ph.D. degree requires about 35 credit hours of courses emphasizing
theoretical concepts as well as practical aspects of laboratory work. It is
especially important that students develop the ability to apply this knowledge and
experience to an independent research problem. The program is flexible in
accommodating the individual student's prior educational and ultimate goals.
Completion of the requirements for a Ph.D. generally requires four or five calendar
years. The M.S. requires about one year of course work and a year of supervised
research leading to a thesis. Candidates for combined M.D./Ph.D. degrees enter this
program through the graduate and medical schools. Graduates of the M.S. and Ph.D.
programs have been placed in industrial and academic research positions.
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