Diversity Hub
Explore the free education and training we offer the UCSF community on topics of
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Related Programs (52):
The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and the Pitts Family Foundation is proud to offer a summer internship program for minority students interested in journalism as a career and who want to learn about science writing. Experience what it's like to cover the scientific and technological issues that shape our global community. Science is a global activity, but the demographics of the journalists who cover it don't reflect that diversity. The Minority Science Writers Internship is for students who are interested in pursuing a career in journalism and who want to learn more about science writing. The internship takes place each summer at the Washington, DC headquarters of AAAS's Science magazine, the largest interdisciplinary journal in the world. Interns spend 10 weeks at Science under the guidance of award-winning reporters and editors, and have a chance to experience what science writers do for a living. Interns are expected to contribute to the weekly news section, including bylined articles in the print and electronic news service. The paid internship provides for travel to and from the internship site in Washington, DC. Living accommodations and expenses are the responsibility of the Intern. The internship runs from June to mid-August.The program is a paid, 10-week experience under the guidance of the weekly magazine's award-winning staff of professional science writers and editors.
UCSF Learners Underrepresented Minorities Female
People with Disabilities Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship
For more information contact us:
Email address
Phone
202-326-6400
Duration
June to mid-August
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
The Haile T. Debas Diversity Fellowship was established to support the Department of Surgery's goal of increasing the number of underrepresented minority academic surgeons. The General Surgery Residency Training Program has a long tradition of training academic general surgeons. Participating in a 4th year sub-internship at UCSF provides the student with the opportunity to experience first-hand this environment of clinical excellence, inquiry and investigation. To help defray the costs of a clerkship in San Francisco, the Fellowship Award provides a stipend of $2,500.00, usable towards tuition, transportation, housing, and incidental expenses. Haile T. Debas, M.D., Maurice Galante Distinguished Professor of Surgery, Emeritus at University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), and Director Emeritus of the UC Global Health Institute (UCGHI), is world-renowned for his contributions to academic medicine and widely consulted on issues of global health. His storied career as a physician, researcher, professor, and academic leader spans over four decades in Canada and the U.S.
Undergrad Open to the Public Underrepresented Minorities
Academic Education/Training Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Heidi L Crist
Email address
Phone
415-476-1239
Duration
Summer 2017, Fall 2017, Winter 2018, Spring 2018
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Parnassus
UCSF Mission Bay
UCSF Mt. Zion
UCSF SFGH
The HENAAC Scholars Program addresses the immense need that the United States has to produce more domestic engineers and scientists. The goal of the program is to ensure STEM college retention with a 3.0 grade point average or higher; to guarantee college graduation with an undergraduate technical degree in four-five years; and, to contribute to Hispanic communities by producing STEM role models for future generations and securing the country's place as the finest technological leader in the world.
Undergrad K-12 Open to the Public
Underrepresented Minorities First Generation to College Female Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship
For more information contact us:
Contact
Gary Cruz
Email address
Phone
323-262-0997
Deadline
The application deadline every year is APRIL 30.
Participation
Application
Location
California
The School of Medicine Office of Post Baccalaureate and Outreach Programs visits 5-6 local community colleges annually to talk about medical school admissions. Schools include: SF City College, Ohlone College, Laney (Peralta Colleges), Diablo Valley College, De Anza College.
Undergrad Open to All Underrepresented Minorities
First Generation to College Outreach Community Building UCSF Medicine
For more information contact us:
Contact
Valerie Margol, MD
Email address
Phone
415-502-1646
Website
Duration
varies: usually fall-winter of each year
Location
Bay Area
Promoting Underrepresented Minorities Advancing in the Sciences (PUMAS) is a paid biomedical research internship program funded by an NIH/NHLBI grant. PUMAS aims to identify community college students from disadvantaged background who currently live in the Bay Area. During the program, PUMAS interns are paired with a scientific mentor and work on an individual research project in one of our laboratories. PUMAS interns work part-time (20–25 hours per week) over the course of 8-weeks and participate in a final poster session where they present their research findings to the scientific community here at Gladstone and UCSF.
Undergrad Underrepresented Minorities First Generation to College
People with Disabilities Mentorship
For more information contact us:
Email address
Deadline
Friday, March 12, 2021
Duration
Thursday, July 1, 2021, to Friday, September 10, 2021
Participation
Application
Location
UCSF Mission Bay
This grant mechanism provides support for senior fellows, instructors, assistant, associate and full professor faculty from historically disenfranchised racial and ethnic groups that are under-represented in health sciences, or from economically disadvantaged backgrounds. The goal is to encourage fellows and faculty from these groups to remain in academia as career professionals and thus to increase the diversity of our faculty. Research can be any area relevant to clinical and translational research which includes bench-to-bedside/laboratory-to-human (T1) translational research, clinical research and bedside-to-community/evidence-to-practice (T2/T3) research. Social, behavioral and economic research as it affects health is included. If not directly involving the study of people or populations, the proposed research must be clearly justified as being on the path to potential use in humans.
UCSF Learners UCSF Faculty Underrepresented Minorities
Research Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship CTSI
For more information contact us:
Contact
Erin Breed
Email address
Phone
415-514-8086
Deadline
September and February annually
Duration
Fiscal Year
Participation
Application
The Visiting Scholars Program (VSP) is a funded program designed to give students with a diverse background a chance to experience the training that the University of Washington Department of Medicine has to offer. Students will spend four weeks on an internal medicine elective at the University of Washington Medical Center or Harborview Medical Center and care for a variety of patients in our tertiary care centers. Near the completion of the elective students will be offered an opportunity to interview with the internal medicine residency program. Accepted applicants will receive funding for their travel and lodging expenses.
UCSF Learners People with Disabilities Underrepresented Minorities
Academic Education/Training Grant/Scholarship/Fellowship
For more information contact us:
Contact
Kathi Sleavin
Email address
Phone
206-543-7430
Deadline
May 1st. Rolling thereafter.
Duration
Summer through Fall quarters annually.
Participation
Application
Location
National
he National Institute for General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) Initiative for Maximizing Student Development (IMSD) Fellows and Affiliates Program at UCSF is designed to support historically underrepresented and marginalized PhD students in basic science graduates programs. UCSF’s first IMSD grant was awarded in 1997, which supports selected students in the first two years of their graduate studies. To date, over 100 students have benefited from an IMSD Fellows and Affiliates Program at UCSF.
UCSF Learners Underrepresented Minorities Community Building
Fellowship Mentorship UCSF Graduate Division