The Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School Singapore (Duke-NUS) is a collaboration between the Duke University in North Carolina, United States and the National University of Singapore.
Duke-NUS follows the American model of post-baccalaureate medical education in which students begin their medical studies after earning a bachelor’s degree.
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Duke-NUS’ M.D. program is a four-year program that follows the Duke University School of Medicine curriculum.
Duke-NUS accepted its first students in 2007. The first batch of students graduated in 2011.
Duke-NUS accepts 56 students every year. Students are from Asia, Europe, and North America. The average age of a student is 24 years old.
The Duke-NUS curriculum has the same structure as Duke School of Medicine:
Duke-NUS employed extensive team-based learning method, which it labelled as TeamLEAD. Students are given pre-reading materials and videos to watch, come to class to do multiple choice questions and discuss open-ended questions in small group and big group setting. The faculty will mainly facilitate students in discussion, not to deliver pedagogical teaching.
All applicants are required to submit their MCAT scores. The mean MCAT score of the 2011 admission was 33. The MCAT range for entrants to date has been 26-40. Most students admitted had at least 10 on both Physical and Biological Sciences. Although the school did not have a minimum cutoff for MCAT score, a score of 29 or above is considered positively. Besides MCAT, the Admission Committee also evaluates applicants' academic qualifications, voluntary or community work experience, research experience, and social maturity.
Duke-NUS offers MD-PhD programme, lasting 7 years, in which student complete 1 year basic science, 1 year clinical, 4 years of PhD work in Singapore, and 1 final clinical year.
Major research areas in Duke-NUS include: