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Each year, approximately 20 students enroll in the school’s MD-PhD Program, one of the original Medical Scientist Training Programs established and funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). [1] Graduate students in the combined program in the Biomedical and Biological Sciences earn a PhD degree through the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
The Graduate School administers 75 degree-granting programs. 56 of these programs grant Ph.D.s., while 19 terminate in master's degrees. [7] It also offers joint-degree programs with several of Yale's professional schools, as well as opportunities for advanced non-degree study.
The Faculty of Arts and Sciences is a division of Yale College that acts as a College of Arts and Sciences. [1] It consists of four divisions, humanities, social sciences, sciences and engineering and applied sciences. [2] (Ref 2 says "The FAS spans three broad intellectual areas, represented by the divisions of Humanities, Social Science, and ...
The Humanities Quadrangle (HQ), originally the Hall of Graduate Studies (HGS), is an academic quadrangle at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. First opened in 1932, the building was designed as a Collegiate Gothic structure by architect James Gamble Rogers .
In 2018, Rothlin became the Director of Graduate Studies in Immunobiology at Yale. [9] In 2019, she was appointed the Dorys McConnell Duberg Professor of Immunobiology. [9] She is also a Professor of Pharmacology, a member of the Yale Cancer Center, and the Co-Leader of the Cancer Immunology Program at Yale. [10]
medicine.yale.edu /pharm /people /mark _lemmon.profile Mark Andrew Lemmon FRS [ 2 ] (born 1964) an English-born biochemist, is the Alfred Gilman Professor and Department Chair of Pharmacology at Yale University where he also directs the Cancer Biology Institute.
The program's founder, Dr. Alfred M. Sadler Jr., served as its first director in 1970. Yale School of Medicine maintains the only PA program named "Physician Associate" program instead of a "Physician Assistant" program in the United States, as it pre-dates the formation of the accreditation body and has elected to retain its original name. [1]
The Yale School of Public Health (YSPH) was founded in 1915 by Charles-Edward Amory Winslow and is one of the oldest public health masters programs in the United States. YSPH is both a department (established in 1915) within the school of medicine as well as an independent, CEPH-certified [ 1 ] school of public health (established in 1946).