KSMU selects international students in a typical manner according
to minimum requirements of Admissions. (minimum requirements
could change periodically)
In so doing, our goal is to accept as students those applicants
it feels hold greatest promise of becoming outstanding physicians.
Of
course, full consideration is given to prior academic performance
and scores. The basic performance must include a history of
academic excellence. Although the majority of our students
have had outstanding scores, major in the science. We welcome
applicants who have a broad education in the humanities and
may have completed their premedical requirements.
We
consider all the factors of intellect, character, and personality
that point towards the applicant's ability to become an informed
and caring physician. In addition to purely academic factors,
we look for students who show clear evidence through their
activities of a strong motivation towards medicine and sense
of dedication to the service on others. Personal qualities
of character and personality are evaluated from letters of
recommendation, from the personal statements, and from the
interview. KSMU does not deny admission to any applicant on
the basis of race, gender, religion, national origin, age,
or handicap.
Premedical
Coursework
Students who successfully complete Premedical course or secondary
education are allowed to join undergraduate programs of KSMU.
To join a major field on undergraduate studies the submitted
date should include specified credits with reference to minimum
requirements for Admission in chemistry, physics, biology
(zoology) and English.
Each
student's credentials must include minimum of:
- Inorganic or general chemistry 2 semesters
- Organic chemistry 2 semesters
- Physics 2 semesters
- General biology 2 semesters
KSMU
Admission Test
All candidates are required to take the Medical College
Admissions Test ones they reach KSMU. This test is viewed
by the dean’s office as evidence of minimal academic
competence and as a standardized test, which allows appropriate
comparisons.
Professional
Development
We'd like to give you some advice here...
What
do we mean by professional development and what does that
got to do with you as a medical university applicant?
Applicants
often ask what they should do before they apply to KSMU.
Perhaps you have asked. Perhaps what you really meant
was -- what should you do to help you get into the medical
university? Is volunteering in an emergency room a good
thing to do? How about research? How much? What kind?
Those
questions suggest a "recipe" approach -- one
semester of research plus a stint in an ER plus a visit
to a soup kitchen equals a successful medical school applicant.
We
disagree. There is no checklist of approved activities
and there is no formula for getting into medical school.
So
what do we want? We want you to be convinced -- and then
to convince us -- that you have the aptitudes, interests,
and motivation to be a good physician. We want you to
be convinced -- and then to convince us -- that you've
tested the waters and know that it's right for you. To
do that you need to actually have done some things --
research, hospital volunteer, tutoring, shadowing, AIDS
education, VISTA, Peace Corp, whatever -- and that you
have: