Diversity Hub
Explore the free education and training we offer the UCSF community on topics of
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Related Programs (13):
The UCSF Department of Emergency Medicine welcomes medical students interested in completing a 6-week summer fellowship in our emergency department. This fellowship is open to medical students who are underrepresented in medicine (URM) and have completed their 1st year in medical school.
UCSF Learners Open to the Public Underrepresented Minorities
Academic Education/Training Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Email address
Website
Participation
Application
We in the department of Neurosurgery are working in partnership with the non-profit organization Oasis for Girls to offer paid internship programs for underserved high school female youth of color (ages 14-18) to expose them to medical and healthcare professional careers with mentorship, career path exploration, and professional development through hospital rotations in labs, the OR, and other academic or healthcare locations, with research projects, presentations, and interactive activities. We accept a group of 15-18 youth per cycle with 3 application / intern cycles per year. We are expanding our programs to reach other demographics (e.g. young Black males, LGBTQ+ youth, college pre-med students). Altogether these programs are housed under the title Neurosurgery Community Internship Programs (NCIP).
K-12 Community Members Open to the Public
Open to All Underrepresented Minorities LGBT First Generation to College Female People with Disabilities Academic Community Building Education/Training Mentorship Outreach Research Volunteer UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Marisa McFarlane
Email address
Phone
415-514-8657
Deadline
Seasonal (Spring, Summer, Fall)
Duration
4 weeks, 4:30p - 6:30p in Spring / Fall, 2p-6p in Summer
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Parnassus
San Francisco
MAP to College! is a free, one-day, annual college-going event held in the fall for Bay Area students in the 12th grade and their parents or guardians. Fall semester of a students' senior year in high school is a critical time for college applications. As colleges become more competitive and selective, it is important that students understand the nuances of each college application and how to write a strong personal essay. Attendees of MAP to College! can attend workshops on the UC application and personal statement, the CSU application, the Community College transfer path, the application and admissions process for private colleges and financial aid. Financial aid workshops are presented in English, Spanish and Cantonese. This event is targeted to students in the twelfth grade, but students of all grades are welcome to attend!
K-12 Open to All Underrepresented Minorities
First Generation to College Academic Outreach Community Building Education/Training Informational Session Office of Diversity & Outreach
For more information contact us:
Contact
Don Woodson
Email address
Deadline
Week before event, September or October
Duration
September October
Participation
Open Invitation
RSVP
Location
UCSF Parnassus
Plan on College! is a free, one-day, annual event for Bay Area students in the eighth grade and their parents or guardians. Attendees of Plan on College! will receive valuable information on course selection for high school, factors that impact college eligibility, college financial aid, and long-term benefits of a college education. Parent workshops are presented in English, Spanish and Cantonese by experts in the field.
K-12 Open to All Underrepresented Minorities
LGBT First Generation to College Female People with Disabilities Outreach Community Building Education/Training Informational Session Office of Diversity & Outreach
For more information contact us:
Contact
Don Woodson
Email address
Deadline
Week of event for online registration
Participation
Open Invitation
RSVP
Location
San Francisco
The purpose of the Minority Training Program in Cancer Control Research (MTPCCR) is to increase ethnic diversity in the field of cancer control research by encouraging minority students in master's level health programs as well as master's trained health professionals to pursue a doctoral degree and a career in research. The program has been designed to enhance participants'; (1) Understanding of the power of research to effect change; (2) Awareness of the strengths and limitations of research methods, theory, and interventions in eliminating health disparities; (3) Interest in cancer control research, from surveillance to epidemiology, individual behavior change, health services, and policy research; and (4) Research, networking, information seeking skills, and motivation and ability to successfully apply to a doctoral program.
UCSF Learners Undergrad Open to the Public
Underrepresented Minorities LGBT Research Education/Training Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship Mentorship
For more information contact us:
Contact
Vanessa Mercado
Email address
Phone
415-514-9409
Website
Deadline
February (yearly deadline)
Duration
June
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Mission Bay
Funded by a $1.6 billion grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, GMS was established in 1999, as a twenty year commitment, to provide greater access and opportunity to higher education for outstanding students from underrepresented backgrounds (1,000 selected each year; 20,000 in 20 year commitment). The program promotes academic excellence and encourages students to pursue and complete an undergraduate education in all discipline areas and graduate education for those students pursuing studies in computer science, mathematics, life/physical science, engineering, education, public health, library science and/or information science. GMS supports its scholars in a variety of ways including but not limited to personal, leadership and professional development opportunities, networking and mentorships opportunities, as well as financial and academic support to prepare its scholars to be the next leaders in their professions and communities.
K-12 Underrepresented Minorities Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship
For more information contact us:
Phone
310-975-3700
Participation
Application
Location
California
National
HSF (Hispanic Scholarship Fund)/General College Scholarships are designed to assist students of Hispanic heritage obtain a college degree.
K-12 Underrepresented Minorities Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship
For more information contact us:
Phone
310-975-3700
Participation
Application
Location
California
National
Interested in the field of human resource management? This program will immerse you in the central functions of the SHRM organization from employment, benefits, employee relations, training, and performance management. In addition, your scholarship will help with college expenses like tuition, room and board, and books.
Community Members Underrepresented Minorities Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship
For more information contact us:
Contact
Crista Arias
Email address
Participation
Application
Location
National
100 Black Men of the Bay Area Inc. offers scholarships to students in Bay Area schools who are bound for a four-year college/university, junior/community college or trade/vocational school. The program also accepts applications from undergraduate and graduate students who attended school in the Bay Area.
Open to the Public Underrepresented Minorities Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship
For more information contact us:
Email address
Phone
510-763-3661
Participation
Application
Location
Bay Area
The Diversity Visiting Student Program is a funded program designed to give students from diverse backgrounds the opportunity to experience the outstanding training that is available in the Department of Diagnostic Radiology at the University of Washington and to experience life in Seattle, a thriving, dynamic, beautiful city with mild, dry, sunny summers. Our clinical sites in Seattle serve a diverse group of patients in a five-state region (Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana, Idaho) that encompasses 27% of the landmass of the United States. We care for a substantial population of urban and rural under-served patients from a variety of socioeconomic and racial/ethnic backgrounds. In the Diagnostic Radiology Clerkship, students will spend four weeks rotating through four services (including Body Imaging, Chest Imaging, Emergency Radiology, Gastrointestinal/Genitourinary Fluoroscopy, Musculoskeletal Imaging, Neuroradiology, Nuclear Medicine, Pediatric Radiology) at three of the five major teaching institutions that the encompass the department's activities: UW Medical Center, Harborview Medical Center, and Seattle Children's Hospital. This will give the visiting student multiple options for experiencing how we care for a wide variety of patients in the nationally recognized tertiary care centers that we service. If space is available, students may opt instead for a single four-week rotation in Interventional Radiology at UW Medical Center and/or Harborview Medical Center. Overall, students will participate in the daily clinical services on site, and will also have the opportunity to attend resident teaching sessions and conferences and, for the Diagnostic Radiology Clerkship, didactics specifically geared for medical students.
Open to the Public Underrepresented Minorities Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship
For more information contact us:
Contact
Kevin Nguyen
Email address
Participation
Application
Location
National