When I applied to orthodontic residency programs, the top 5 were University of Washington, University of North Carolina, Conneticut, Michigan, and University of Southern California (USC).
This was in 2003.
If a Medical Student wants to be competitive for top residency programs, they usually require a 4.0 overall GPA. Residency Programs look at this the most. With a 4.0 overall GPA, you will be able to get into any residence program you desire.
Sackler school of medicine Sackler school of medicine
Unfortunately, there is no actual ranking system for pathology residency programs or pathology fellowship programs. However, there is a Pathology Resident Wiki (pathinfo dot wikia dot com) that has a complete pathology residency program directory and pathology fellowship program directory. Another good source of info is studentdoctor dot net.
There are literally hundreds of pediatric residency programs in the US.
Yes. In order to be an orthodontist, you have to complete dental school, and then be accepted into, and complete orthodontic residency. However, you do not need to be a practicing dentist first - you can go straight from "regular" dental school to a residency if you are accepted.
Yes, you will practice various clinical rotations in US Hospitals as a part of your residency.
Premed degree, Medical Degree, Dental Specialty, Orthodontic Residency You should also know how to spell 'college'
Brigham Women's/Mass General Magee Women's UCSF UNC UT-Southwestern University of Colorado University of Alabama University of Washington Northwestern
Brigham Women's/Mass General Magee Women's UCSF UNC UT-Southwestern University of Colorado University of Alabama University of Washington Northwestern
UCSF (Univ of CA at san francisco) is considered the top radiology program in CA. It is considered by many to be the most competitive (although not "the best") to get into in the country. I'm not sure what those previous programs listed were, but they were not radiology residency programs. Perhaps they were radiology technologist training programs. A radiologist is an M.D. who goes through 4 yrs undergrad, 4 years med school, 1 year general internship, 4 years residency and likely 1-3 years fellowship (14-16 yrs post high school) whereas a tech is a two yr program after high school (some prefer a 2-4 yr degree first though I believe).
A residency is an intensive 3-5 year program for veterinarians that want to become board certified in a specialty such as internal medicine, surgery or pathology. Most residency programs are very difficult to get into and require a great deal of dedication to complete.
There are no special programs for "single mothers." There are online programs for RN to BSN, but all require some residency. Go to www.bestnursingdegree.com/programs/rn-to-bsn where you can research the various offerings.