Applicants are advised that it is in their best interest to initiate the application process outlined below as early as possible and well before the December 1 deadline. The applicant must assume all responsibility for determining whether the required information has been submitted and received on time.
Applicants must begin the application process by completing an online AMCAS application and designating the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine as the institution to which the application is to be forwarded.
For information about the AMCAS application process and to open an account to complete an AMCAS application,
go to: http://www.aamc.org/students/amcas
This site also contains information about AMCAS deadlines, application fees, the fee assistance program,
policies and procedures, frequently asked questions, and has links to sites that will help you find a pre-health advisor.
MCAT scores are necessary to complete your application. Applicants must take the MCAT exam no later than the fall preceding the year in which they hope to enroll in the School of Medicine. Scores from tests taken earlier will be considered only if they are no more than three years old at the time of application. You must register to take the MCAT exam.
Applicants for the 2010 entering class must take the MCAT exam no later than the August, 2009, test date. MCAT scores from the January, 2010 test dates will not be considered.
For information about the MCAT exam, registration dates and procedures, a list of test dates, practice tests, and the MCAT fee structure and assistance program, go to: http://www.aamc.org/students/mcat
The Miller School of Medicine has a new policy of sending secondary applications to all US citizens and permanent residents who submit an AMCAS application. It will be the applicant's decision whether to fill out the secondary application and submit it. In this regard, all applicants should remember that our last three entering classes had an average undergraduate cumulative GPA of 3.7, a science GPA of 3.6, and an average MCAT composite score between 31 and 32. To be truly competitive potential applicants should have credentials comparable to those of our most recent classes. Supplemental applications received in the Office of Admissions after January 15th will not be processed.
Letters of recommendation and transcripts should only be provided on behalf of applicants invited to submit a secondary/supplemental application. Do NOT have letters of recommendation, transcripts or other documents sent to us until after you have submitted your supplemental application on line. Sending them to us beforehand can actually slow down the processing of your application. Sending transcripts is strongly discouraged unless they include substantial coursework not included on your AMCAS application.
The Committee on Admissions requires either:
a letter of evaluation from the premedical advisory committee at your school (greatly preferred) who can provide an evaluation both of your academic ability and of your personal qualifications for a career in medicine
OR
three letters of recommendation from faculty members who can provide an evaluation both of your academic ability and of your personal qualifications for a career in medicine. Letters from individual faculty members should help the committee learn how well the faculty member knows you as well how long and in what capacity. It is also helpful if the faculty member writing the letter describes how you compare with other candidates for whom other letters have been written.
In addition to the letters described above, applicants may submit a maximum of two more letters to support their application. These letters may not be substituted for the required letters. Letters that can add substantially to the overall picture of you as a candidate for medical school are most desirable. Letters from relatives and friends of the family, roommates or teaching assistants, or elected officials are strongly discouraged unless they can provide truly unique information about you that is not available from other sources.
An evaluation interview conducted on the medical campus by a member of the Admissions Committee is an integral part of our selection process. Interviews are conducted only at the request of the Office of Admissions and are generally held on select Tuesdays and Thursdays between the middle of September and the end of April. Because it is important for prospective students to see Boca Raton and/or Miami, the medical campuses, faculty, staff, students and facilities, regional interviews are not held.
The University of Miami Miller School of Medicine at Florida Atlantic University uses an interval-based admissions process. This means that the Committee meets at regular intervals between October and May and at each meeting candidates may be accepted, placed on the alternate list, or rejected. Applicants are notified of the outcome initially by email, followed by an official hard-copy letter. The Admissions Committee is the duly appointed body representing the collective expertise of the faculty of each campus. As such, all Committee decisions are final.
In general, a Florida resident is one whose parents or guardians (or the applicant, if independent) have established legal residence in, and resided permanently in, the State of Florida for twelve consecutive months immediately prior to the first day of classes. Applicants can not claim Florida residency as a result of living in Florida while attending a college or university.
In order to receive initial consideration as a Florida resident, applicants must declare Florida as their state of residence on their AMCAS application. Exceptions to this requirement will not be granted.
Florida residents are encouraged to apply if they meet the following criteria:
have an undergraduate cumulative GPA of at least 3.2
OR
a post-bac or graduate cumulative GPA of at least 3.5 for a minimum of 15 credits.
Up to 35 non-Florida residents may be enrolled in each first year class. Residents of states other than Florida are encouraged to apply if they meet the following criteria:
All applicants must be US citizens or permanent residents of the United States with an alien registration receipt (green) card in their possession at the time they complete the AMCAS application. Applicants who apply as permanent residents will be required to submit a photocopy of their alien registration receipt card.
The University of Miami Miller School of Medicine at Florida Atlantic University accepts students who have completed a minimum of 90 semester hours of college work, including the required courses below:
| Course | Semesters | Quarters |
| English | 2 | 3 |
| Chemistry + Labs | 2 | 3 |
| Organic Chemistry + Labs | 2 | 3 |
| Physics + Labs | 2 | 3 |
| Biology + Labs | 2 | 3 |
| Additional Science | 2 | 3 |
A course in biochemistry is strongly recommended and may be substituted for one semester of organic chemistry. Additional sciences include mathematics, natural or social sciences, and computer science.
In addition, please note that CLEP credits are not accepted. AP credits are accepted and can be used to satisfy requirements for English, biology, and inorganic chemistry, as long as the credits appear on a college transcript and are verified by AMCAS. The English requirement can also be met by literature courses, or by writing-intensive courses in any subject.
All coursework must be taken in a college or university located in North America or Puerto Rico and approved by a national accrediting agency and listed in the current Education Directory of the US Office of Education. Except for study-abroad courses taken while attending a qualified institution, credits earned at foreign institutions are not accepted. It is expected that the major portion of required science courses will be taken at the senior college level. An application that presents only a junior college academic record will not be considered.
All academic requirements must be completed no later than August 1 of the year of entrance. This is a firm requirement for all accepted students, including those in the Honors Program in Medicine and the Medical Scholars Program. Accepted applicants must provide official final transcripts of all coursework taken before they matriculate into the School of Medicine.
June 1, 2009 - December 1, 2009 UMMSM AMCAS Application Submission
June 15, 2009 - January 15, 2010 UMMSM Secondary Application Submission
September, 2009 - April, 2010 UMMSM at FAU Interviews
TBD $100 Deposit Due to Hold Place in Class for Accepted Applicants
October 15, 2009 - Beginning of Acceptance Notifications
August 2010 First Year Academic Year Begins / New Student Orientation
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"I chose to come to Florida Atlantic University because of the intimate learning environment and the excellent opportunity to tap into the physician population in the community." - Erica Murray |
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"I couldn't have asked for a better clinical experience or exposure to the fields of medicine that attracted my interest. These opportunities not only contributed to my medical knowledge, but also allowed for personal guidance into a surgical career." - Reagan Ross |
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"UMMSM at FAU provides us with a wealth of clinical experience." - Lauren Smith |
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"I chose UMMSM@FAU because it had the strong reputation of Miami coupled with a small intimate class size and brand new state of the art facilities. I have loved it here in Boca Raton because of the feel of being a family with my classmates and the community as well as taking part in the beginning of something special." - Gordon Markham |
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"The small class size at UMMSM at FAU has fostered such a comraderie between students. We are like a family." - Rachel Bardowell |
New Entrants = 194 (Both Campuses)
| Gender | Women 47% Men 53% |
| Ethnicity | Asian 16% African American 7% Hispanic 14% White 56% Not Reported 7% |
| Academics | Cumulative GPA = 3.72 Science GPA = 3.71 MCAT = 31.9 |
| Legal Residence | Florida Residents = 137 Non-Florida Residents = 57 |
| Colleges and Universities Represented | 63 |
| Interview Time Range | 8:30 AM - 2:30 PM (8:30 AM -- Discussion w/ Medical Student Ambassadors) |
| Lodging/Accommodations |
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| Airport(s) | |
| Ground Transportation from Airport | Click here to see Interview Day Bulletin
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| Weather | Click here for live weather |
| Parking at UMMSM at FAU | if you plan to drive to the campus on interview day (personal vehicle or rental car), a parking tag will be available upon your arrival to the building. |
| Directions to Interview Location |
777 Glades Road, Boca Raton, FL 33431. (561) 297-2202 or (561) 297-2219 Directions coming from East Glades/US 1:
Directions coming from West Glades/I-95:
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It is located on the campus of Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, Florida, about 60 miles north of Miami. Starting in 2007, the students admitted to our regional campus will complete all four years of the medical curriculum in Boca Raton. Hospital affiliates include Boca Raton Community Hospital, Bethesda Memorial Hospital, and JFK Hospital.
Yes, there are some differences in emphases. See the pages about the MD Curriculum located at this web site.
Yes, it is accredited under the umbrella accreditation awarded to the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, the oldest, continuously accredited medical school in Florida.
The University of Miami Miller School of Medicine will grant all MD degrees.
No. The tuition structure is exactly the same whether you attend medical school at the Miami campus or at the Boca Raton Campus of the Miller School of Medicine.
The class size at the regional campus is currently 48, but will grow to as many as 64 students per year in the near future.
When you fill out your supplemental application for the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine you will be asked to indicate whether you prefer to attend the regional campus in Boca Raton, the Miami campus, or that you have no preference. Applicants who choose the Boca Raton Campus will be considered only for admission at the regional campus. Those who list the Miami campus will be considered only for admission to the campus in Miami. Those applicants who list no preference will be considered independently for admission to either campus.
No, they are exactly the same.
No. You must initiate the application process by filling out and submitting an AMCAS (American medical College Application Service) application on line. Click here to go to the AMCAS web site.
Yes. This change reflects the growing national prominence of the Miller School of Medicine and our goal of becoming a truly national medical school. Up to 35 residents of other states may be accepted to each entering class. Right now, our total class size is 198 students; 150 at the Miami campus, 48 at the regional campus in Boca Raton.
No, we discontinued our early decision program several years ago.
No. Applicants must be US citizens or unconditional permanent residents of the US with an alien registration receipt (green) card in their possession when they fill out the AMCAS application.
No. You must have your green card in your possession at the time you fill out the AMCAS application.
Get a copy of Medical School Admissions Requirements published by the AAMC (Association of American Medical Colleges). To order a copy on line, click here. Alternatively, you may find this book in your university bookstore or at a commercial bookstore. The MSAR is the only guide fully authorized by all medical schools and contains the most accurate up-to-date information of any book about medical schools. It contains information about every accredited allopathic medical school in the US and Canada, including how their individual application processes work, even their selection factors. This book is required reading if you are a serious applicant for medical school.
Nuestros Buenos amigos en la Universidad de Florida no saben de lo que hablan.
The deadline for submitting your AMCAS application to AMCAS in Washington, DC, is December 1.
No. Deadline extensions are not granted for any reason.
No. We will begin the application process and make decisions only on electronically-transmitted, verified files sent to us from AMCAS. So the best thing you can do is to stay in touch with AMCAS and make sure your file is verified in a timely fashion. Most delays are caused by schools not sending your transcripts to AMCAS so be sure to check with the registrar at your school to make sure your transcripts have been sent.
No. we will accept changes to your application only when they are transmitted to us by AMCAS. Therefore, you must make all changes in contact information through AMCAS. AMCAS will then relay the changes to all the schools to which you applied. You also should inform AMCAS when you change email accounts. This is extremely important because more and more schools are relying on email almost exclusively to communicate with applicants.
Yes, it is hosted by a commercial organization.
It is $75, about the average for all private medical schools. The application fee is non-refundable and is charged to all applicants who complete a secondary application.
All US citizens and permanent residents of the US will be invited to complete a Supplemental (Secondary) Application. Everyone should keep in mind the profile of the latest entering class when deciding whether or not to complete the secondary.
All Applicants who complete the secondary application must also provide a recent photograph (passport sized, 2" x 3") of themselves. Photos sent as email attachments are unacceptable. Permanent residents of the United States must provide a copy of their alien registration receipt (green) card. A non-refundable application fee of $75 is charged to all applicants.
There is if you are a Florida resident and have subsequently done post-bac or graduate work (at least 15 credits of either must appear on your AMCAS application) and have a GPA of at least 3.5. Post-bac and graduate work is not considered when sending secondary applications to non-Floridians.
Not unless you call the Office of Admissions (305-243-6791). We do status checks Monday-Thursday between 2-5PM. Call us during those hours and we will tell you what you need to send us to make your file complete. Most applicants forget that a recent passport sized photograph is required. Next year you will be able to check on-line for any items missing from your file.
We ask that you submit your secondary within two weeks after you are invited to complete the application. But clearly understand that we will not process secondary applications that are received after January 15.
No. But only those who complete the application are considered for an interview. Getting invited for an interview is acompetitive process in which the admissions committee ranks the strength of each completed application and invites those applicants with the highest rank.
Most admissions committees feel that there are differences between junior college courses and senior college courses. Whether this view is justified or not, you should contact medical schools in which you are interested to see how they view coursework taken at the junior college level. The Miller School of Medicine will accept junior college courses but much prefers that the premed courses be taken at the senior college level. Perhaps a more important question to ask yourself is how these courses are going to prepare you to take the MCAT and to survive in medical school.
No. The only credits earned at foreign institutions that we accept are those earned while the applicant was studying abroad under the auspices of an accredited college or University located in North America. In that case, the credits earned abroad must be recognized by your home university and appear on your transcript.
Yes, we will accept them but this is something that any admissions committee is going to look at very carefully when making a decision. Better questions to ask yourself are: 1) will those 10-year old courses give the necessary foundation in the sciences that I will need in medical school, and 2) am I going to be prepared to take the MCAT with knowledge that is 10 years old.
Of course they do. Everybody understands that unpleasant roommates, adjustment to college, girl-friend/boy-friend problems, problems at home and a myriad of other things can lead to a disastrous academic performance. Hopefully, it is a temporary problem. Be prepared to discuss any poor academic performance in your personal statement or in an interview.
Yes, you must take the MCAT exam and have your scores released to the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. MCAT scores are required to make your application complete. Therefore, you must take the exam no later than the August, 2008, test date if you are applying for entry in 2009.
Admissions offices get this question all the time and for us the answer is no. Scores from the August test usually reach medical schools in the first half of October. Most schools are just beginning the interview process at that time. If you are going to take the MCAT in August, the best thing to do is to send in everything else needed to complete your application way before October. That way, when your MCAT scores arrive in October your application will become complete instantly.
Check with the schools to which you are applying. The Miller School of Medicine will not accept MCAT scores that are more than three years old at the time of application.
All parts of the MCAT are important. Committees look particularly carefully at the verbal reasoning score because that is something that is not taught in medical school and medical school involves tons of reading and fast comprehension. The admissions committee here looks at your score on the writing sample as only a tertiary factor in the admissions decision.
Yes. The AMCAS application will show your testing history and include the date of every MCAT you have taken since 1991.
It all depends on the size of the decrease and the nature of extenuating factors, if any, associated with the second test. Be prepared to discuss why your score went down, either in your personal statement or in an interview.
First, it is illegal to base admissions decisions on age. Second, if anything, being an older (some people say non-traditional) applicant usually works to your advantage because, rightfully or wrongfully, admissions committees generally consider older applicants as having had more life experiences and therefore, more mature.
Community service and volunteer experiences, particularly patient contact experiences, can only strengthen your application but they generally do not offset basic numerical credentials. Applicants should look at community activities and volunteer experiences as a way of demonstrating to an admissions committee what kind of person they are and their motivation to study and practice medicine. These are things that admissions committees look at right after they look at GPAs and MCAT scores.
Committees realize that some applicants have to work and they generally look at such candidates as having those things that one gets from having a job such as being punctual and resourceful, dependable, being able to get along with co-workers, etc. Do not forget, everybody on the admissions committee has a full-time job and they are basically going to be sympathetic.
It all depends on the program and the school to which you are applying. At UMMSM it is not essential unless you are applying to the MD-PhD program. In that case, one of the selection factors is the extent, value, and productivity of your research experiences. For general admission to MD programs, however, research experiences can be undervalued by admissions committees.
Do not, under any circumstances, have letters sent until you are requested to send them (after you have submitted your secondary). Sending letters before you complete the secondary application is risky because they can get filed away and often can not be found again to be added to your file in a timely way. If at all possible, have them sent electronically through VirtualEvals.
You need to submit either 1) a composite evaluation from your schools premed advisory committee, or 2) three letters from individual faculty members, two of whom must be science faculty who have taught you. Admissions committees greatly prefer composite letters because they are arrived at by consensus and are often more thorough and insightful.
The best letters are from faculty members (and others) who know you well enough to comment in some depth not only on your academic performance, but also on your personal qualities for a career in medicine. Both things are equally important. They should mention how long they have known you and in what capacity, and how well they know you. They should also put their remarks about you into some kind of comparative context with others for whom they have written letters.
There are few letters that are more disadvantageous than letters from elected officials who do not know you personally. It looks like you are trying to pull strings and impress the committee with whom you or your parents might know. Letters from physicians you have shadowed have a tendency to be uniformly positive and do not offer the committee any really solid way of distinguishing among applicants. Letters from alumni can be helpful, especially if the alumni is known to members of the admissions committee.
Contact each medical school to which you are applying. Some may accept substitute letters, some may not. Military commanders (for military personnel) and immediate supervisors (for applicants with lengthy employment histories) may be good people to write such letters. But contact each school to see if such letters are acceptable.
At UMMSM applicants are interviewed exclusively by members of the admissions committee. At the present time, applicants are interviewed by one committee member and the interview lasts for approximately one hour. The interview is open-file and the format is relaxed and is meant to be a forum for information exchange.
Basically, they are trying to assess all of those things that are almost impossible to put down on paper such as interpersonal skill level, maturity, depth of motivation, soundness of decision, experiences, and the like. In general, they are trying to find out what kind of person you are and how motivated you are to study medicine.
Some sources will tell you that you can not prepare and that you should just be yourself. There are some common sense things you can do, however, to make a better presentation. First, do your homework about the school you are visiting. You can make points with your interviewer if you know something about the school. Second, there are a lot of books in the library on interviews. Check one out and read it. Third, some students find that mock interviews are helpful. Sometimes, however, mock interviews are far tougher than the real thing. Finally, there are many web sites for medical school applicants that are full of information about interviews, including sample questions you might be asked at a particular school. One of these sites is www.studentdoctor.net. The bad thing about all these sites is that, since the entries are anonymous, anyone can write anything about a school or the interview day. So take everything you read at these sites with a provebial grain of salt!
We give preference to Florida residents because the Miller School of Medicine is subsidized by the State Legislature for each Florida resident enrolled.
The definition of a Florida resident for tuition-paying purposes is outlined in State Statute 240.1201 and is pretty complex. In general, you (if independent) or your parents (if you are dependent) must have lived in Florida for 12 consecutive months immediately prior to the first day of medical school. If you came to Florida to attend an institution of higher learning, then the time you have spent in school does not count toward the 12 month requirement. Just owning property in Florida is insufficient for purposes of establishing residency.
In general, you need a paper trail covering at least the 12 months immediately before the start of medical school. Federal income tax returns, W-2 forms, lease agreements, rent receipts, homestead exemptions and fee statements from Florida colleges and universities that you attended showing that you were a Florida resident for fee-paying purposes are acceptable documents. Drivers licenses and voters cards by themselves are insufficient documents to claim residency.
In that case, you will be assessed a non-resident tuition for each of the years of medical school in which you are enrolled. Currently, the non-resident tuition is about $8,000 more than the resident tuition. Remember, your best chance of getting into medical school is in the state in which you are a bona fide resident.
No. Because this issue has caused problems and misunderstandings before, we require that applicants list Florida as their state of residence on their AMCAS application to be considered by us as a Florida resident. We will not entertain requests to do otherwise. Other medical schools in Florida have the same requirement. If I get accepted as a resident of a state other than Florida, can I change my residency to Florida after a year in medical school? Do not forget: if you came to Florida for the purposes of higher education, you can not accrue time toward residency while you are enrolled in school. While it is theoretically possible to change your residency, very very few of our students have been able to develop the substantial ties to the State of Florida that this requires. Substantial ties include, for example, buying a home (in your name) and living in it for at least a year and being employed in Florida (in addition to such things as getting a drivers license, registering to vote, and registering your car in Florida, etc.
UMMSM at FAU
Office of Regional Medical Campus Admissions
777 Glades Road / BC 71
Boca Raton, FL 33431
Phone: (561) 297– 2202
Fax: (561) 297-2221
E-mail: med.admissions@fau.edu
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