Boston university post bac dental program
The below cost per credit is for non-lab courses. You can find the cost per credit of lab courses by visiting our Tuition and Fees page. Request Info Apply. Experiential Learning Northeastern's signature experience-powered learning model has been at the heart of the university for more than a century.
Industry-Aligned Faculty Our industry-aligned faculty bring relevant real-world experience, knowledge, expertise, and connections that will help you achieve your career goals. Earlene Avalon Associate Teaching Professor. Admissions Fall, Spring, Summer.
The MS program takes four semesters to complete. The majority of enrolled students complete the degree in one calendar year enrolling in classes in late July and completing the program the following July; this allows students to matriculate to dental school without requiring an additional gap year. In addition to dental coursework, students also are able to take courses across a variety of disciplines including public health, ethics, evidence-based dentistry and research.
Program Foundation. The 32 credit master degree is completed in 4 semesters over 1, 1. This flexibility allows students to choose a completion path that best fits their individual credentials, dental school application timeline and DAT test prep schedule. To maintain this unique environment for students, two DMD courses are now offered in a blended live lecture and online streaming format Stoichiometry, states of matter, acids and bases, equilibrium, and selected chemical systems.
Laboratory course. Three hours lecture, one hour discussion, three hours lab per week, and one hour postlab discussion per week. Covers thermodynamics, atomic structure and bonding, electrochemistry, chemical kinetics, and selected chemical systems.
Three hours lecture, one hour discussion, three hours lab, and one hour postlab discussion per week. Fundamentals of contemporary organic chemistry, including skeletal and electronic structure, stereochemistry, and reactions of important functional groups.
Applications of organic reactions to important synthetic targets in materials and drug discovery will be highlighted, as will reactions pertinent to biochemistry. Laboratory includes training in basic organic chemistry skills, such as extraction, reaction performance, spectroscopy interpretation and chromatography. Fundamentals of contemporary chemistry, including electronic structure, stereochemistry, and reactions of important functional groups.
Laboratory includes extraction, distillation, and chromatography. Three hours lecture, one hour discussion, one hour prelab lecture, three-and-a-half hours lab in alternate weeks. Structure and reactivity of organic compounds. Synthesis, reaction mechanisms, bonding, stereochemistry, laboratory methods. Coverage of the families of organic compounds, including molecules of biological interest.
For students who plan to major in the natural sciences or environmental science, and for premedical students. Required for biology majors.
No prerequisite. High school biology is assumed. The evolution and diversity of life; principles of ecology; behavioral biology.
Three hours lecture, three hours lab including several field studies. For students planning to major in the natural sciences and for premedical students. Three hours lecture, three hours lab. Assumes year of high school biology and chemistry.
For premedical students and students who plan to concentrate in the natural sciences. Required of biology concentrators. Each course has three hours lecture and three hours lab.
Course examines cells, genetics, development, physiology, and neurobiology. Introductory biochemistry. Protein structure and folding, enzyme mechanisms, kinetics, and allostery; nucleic acid structure; macromolecular biosynthesis with emphasis on specificity and fidelity; lipids and membrane structure; vitamins and coenzymes; introduction to intermediary metabolism.
Three hours lecture, one hour discussion, four hours lab. Three hours lecture, one hour discussion. Protein structure and folding, enzyme mechanisms, kinetics, and allostery; nucleic acid structure; lipids and membrane structure; bioenergetics; vitamins and coenzymes; introduction to intermediary metabolism. Students must register for two sections: lecture and laboratory. View course descriptions. Back to Programs Curriculum. Please note: Summer Term tuition-per-credit varies each academic year.
The above costs do not include lab fees or registration fees. Certificate programs are not eligible for federal financial aid.
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