Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
As a partnership between the Sloan Kettering Institute and Weill Cornell Medical College, WCGS offers seven PhD programs as well as four distinct Masters programs. Additionally, the school offers two Tri-Institutional PhDs, a Tri-Institutional MD/PhD and the opportunity for students to participate in an Accelerated PhD/MBA program.
The first research doctorate was the doctor of philosophy, which came to the U.S. from Germany, and is frequently referred to by its initials of Ph.D. As academia evolved in the country a wide variety of other types of doctoral degrees and programs were developed.
Candidate of Sciences (Candidatus scientiarum – CSc., replaced by common Ph.D. in the Czech Republic in 1998 and by PhD. in Slovakia in 1996); Doctor of philosophy (Philosophiae doctor – Ph.D. or PhD., awarded since 1998 and 1996, respectively; requires at least 3–5-year doctoral study and coursework of 120-180 Credits)
Danyelle M. Townsend is a biomedical scientist, and academic.She is a Professor and acting Department Chair of Drug Discovery and Biomedical Sciences at the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC).
Macalester College (B.A. 1998) Northwestern University (M.S. 1999, Ph.D. 2003) Awards: Guggenheim Fellowship (2018) Sloan Fellowship (2010) NIH Director's New Innovator Award (2008) Scientific career: Fields: Chemistry, analytical chemistry, nanotechnology, immunochemistry, toxicology, electrochemistry: Institutions: University of North ...
Milos Vratislav Novotny (born 19 April 1942) [1] is an American chemist, currently the Distinguished Professor Emeritus and Director of the Novotny Glycoscience Laboratory and the Institute for Pheromone Research at Indiana University, [2] and also a published author.
Michael L. Gross (born 1940) is Professor of Chemistry, Medicine, and Immunology, at Washington University in St. Louis. He was formerly Professor of Chemistry at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln from 1968–1994. He is recognized for his contributions to the field of mass spectrometry and ion chemistry.
Raychelle Burks is an associate professor of analytical chemistry at American University in Washington, D.C., and science communicator, who has regularly appeared on the Science Channel. In 2020, the American Chemical Society awarded her the Grady-Stack award for her public engagement excellence.