Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Website. augusta.edu/mcg. The Medical College of Georgia (often referred to as MCG) is the flagship medical school of the University System of Georgia, the state's only public medical school, and one of the top 10 largest medical schools in the United States. [5] Established in 1828 as the Medical Academy of Georgia, MCG is the oldest and ...
The Technical College System of Georgia (TCSG), formerly known as the Department of Technical and Adult Education (DTAE), is the body which supervises the U.S. state of Georgia's 22 technical colleges . Albany Technical College, Albany. Athens Technical College, Athens. Atlanta Technical College, Atlanta. Augusta Technical College, Augusta.
Atlanta. , Georgia. , United States. Website. www.msm.edu. Morehouse School of Medicine ( MSM) is an independent and private historically-Black medical school in Atlanta, Georgia. Originally a part of Morehouse College, the school became independent in 1981.
1884. 1915. Homeopathic. 1881 – 1888 Hahnemann Medical College, 1888–1902 Hahnemann Hospital College of San Francisco, 1902–1915 Hahnemann Medical College of the Pacific, 1915 merged with University of California Medical School [ 2] California. Oakland College of Medicine and Surgery.
Campbell–Hagerman College, Lexington (founded in 1903; closed in 1912) Cedar Bluff College, Woodburn (closed in 1892) Clinton College, Clinton (co-ed in 1876; closed in 1915) Elizabethtown Female Academy, Elizabethtown, incorporated in 1848, [5] grew out of the boys-only Hardin Academy, established in 1806.
In 2017, the entering class of 143 medical students hailed from 65 different colleges and had an average undergraduate GPA of 3.7 and an average MCAT of 514. In the 2017 entering class, 57% of the students were female, 8% were MD/PhD, 15% were MD/MPH, the average age at matriculation was 23.6 with a range of 21 to 31.
1850: Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania (now part of Drexel University) trained and graduated the first female physicians and the first black female physicians in the country. 1850: Carolina Female College was established in Anson County by an act of the North Carolina legislature. It closed in 1867 for financial reasons.
Atlanta Metropolitan Red-Eyed Panthers. Atlanta Metropolitan College. Atlanta. Georgia Collegiate. Central Georgia Tech Titans. Central Georgia Technical College. Macon. Georgia Collegiate. East Georgia State Bobcats.