Barely out of high school but with their sights already set on medical school, several dozen University of Massachusetts freshmen began their journeys to become doctors when they came to UMass Medical School on Friday, April 13, to participate in the first UMass Five-Campus Bacc MD Pathway Symposium.
They are all members of the inaugural class of the UMass Bacc MD Pathway Program, which comprises students from all four UMass undergraduate campuses who have joined the pathway program in its first year. Accompanied by their campus’s pre-med and other academic advisors and deans, they came with eyes and ears open to learn what they need to accomplish, what they can expect and what to look forward to along the road to medical school and beyond.
UMass Boston student Ridge Solomon learned about the program at his freshman orientation last fall and signed on as a Pre-Medical Scholar, the first component of the two-part, four-year pathway that links the baccalaureate degree to the MD. “I wanted to join because I felt it was a way to begin college with resources, and to have a support group,” he said.
“I’m here today to get more information because you can never have too much information!” added UMass Boston classmate and fellow Pre-Medical Scholar Shabre Almeida.
Designed to increase the early identification and recruitment of qualified pre-medical students from the University’s undergraduate campuses who represent the cultural and economic diversity of the state’s population, the UMass Bacc MD Pathway was collaboratively created by leadership of the system’s five campuses. Becoming a Pre-Medical Scholar is the first phase of the pathway program, which continues throughout the four-year undergraduate experience, preparing its participants for application and entrance to any medical school. Students can be considered for progression to the second component after two years as Pre-Medical Scholars, at which time a selected number will be chosen as UMass Chan Medical Scholars, eligible for conditional admission to the School of Medicine upon successful completion of all program components and all regular admission requirements. All Pre-Medical Scholars, even those who do not become UMass Chan Medical Scholars, will benefit from the pathway’s structured curriculum, focused academic advisement and enrichment components.
Following a warm welcome from Chancellor Michael Collins, Marcellette Williams, PhD, the University’s senior vice president for academic affairs, student affairs and international relations, and Michel Pugnaire, MD, senior associate dean for medical education at UMMS, attendees delved into the essentials of successfully preparing for and getting into medical school, be it UMMS or any other one for which the Bacc MD Pathway will prepare them.
Students rotated among four roundtable discussions that addressed the questions:
- How do I decide if a career in medicine is right for me?
- How do I apply to medical school?
- What else is important besides academics?
- What is medical school like?
UMMS community members led the roundtables, sharing personal as well as professional insights.
Students learned not only about what they need to accomplish, but how the UMass system will support them. After lunch, an opportunity fair hosted by UMMS faculty, staff and students, introduced many of the resources and programs available at UMMS.
Undergraduates also got a behind-the-scene glimpse of the medical school from current stud