Rochester Bridges to the Doctorate - Program


Rochester Bridges to the Doctorate
Peek into the Bridges
Program Expectations
Bridges trainee’s master’s degree requirements, the following activities are designed to help trainees prepare for their PhD aspirations.
Bridges Curriculum |
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UR Coursework |
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Professional Conference |
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Research Experience |
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First Year
- Individual Ph.D. Readiness Team Meetings each semester
- Deaf Hub Explores Perspectives Seminar Series
- Professional Development Seminar Series
- Peer Mentoring Group Meetings
- Research Assistantship at RIT Laboratory
- Attendance at the Annual Biomedical Research Conference for Minoritized Scientists (ABRCMS)
- Fall UR Course: Ethics and Professional Integrity in Research
- Writing Workshop
First Summer
- 10 week Research Assistantship at UR Laboratory
Second Year
- Individual Ph.D. Readiness Team Meetings each semester
- Deaf Hub Explores Perspectives Seminar Series
- Professional Development Seminar Series
- Peer Mentoring Group Meetings
- Research Assistantships at UR Laboratories
- Present at a discipline-based professional conference
Second Summer
- 10 week Research Assistantship at UR Laboratory
Degree Programs
RIT Masters of Science Programs
The following programs offer training relevant to biomedical or behavioral science fields, but other relevant programs may also be considered.
College of Computing & Information Science
College of Engineering
College of Liberal Arts
College of Science
- Applied & Computational Mathematics
- Applied Statistics
- Bioinformatics
- Chemistry
- Environmental Science
- Imaging Science
- Materials Science and Engineering
Office of the Provost
Doctoral Programs
University of Rochester Doctoral Programs
Bridges trainees can take courses and work in laboratories within the following UR Doctoral Programs during their master’s training at RIT.
School of Medicine & Dentistry programs
- Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
- Biomedical Engineering
- Biophysics, Structural, & Computational Biology
- Statistics with Concentration in Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
- Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology and Physiology
- Epidemiology
- Genetics, Development, and Stem Cells/Genetics, Genomics, and Development
- Health Services Research and Policy
- Immunology, Microbiology and Virology
- Neuroscience
- Cell Biology of Disease
- Toxicology
- Translational Biomedical
Hajim School of Engineering & Applied Sciences, and School of Arts & Sciences
FAQs
Deaf and hard-of-hearing RIT master’s degree students who are accepted into the Rochester Bridges to the Doctorate program.
Two to three trainees will be accepted into the program each year.
You can apply now using this link, Bridges Application.
You can apply to Bridges whiie applying to an RIT MS program, but your application will be reviewed only after all required paperwork, including an acceptance letter from RIT Graduate Admissions, is received.
Unfortunately, this National Institute of General Medical Sciences grant only supports US Citizens and permanent residents.
In addition to the application materials required, you should be available for video conference interviews, and be ready to respond to e-mails as soon as possible.
The Bridges trainees must:
- Maintain a GPA of 3.5 or above
- Commit to continue their graduate training in a doctoral program in a biomedical or behavioral science discipline
- Participate in all of the required Bridges activities
- Travel to professional conferences
Funding is for up to two years per Bridges trainee, contingent upon the trainee’s satisfactory performance in their program and in Bridges.
This program provides:
- Interpreting services
- Tutoring support
- Travel coordination and expenses
- Paid research assistantships in labs at RIT and URMC, currently $28,244 annually
- Partial tuition waiver ($16,000 annually per trainee)
Yes, you must attend RIT for your master’s degree.
All Bridges trainees are expected to go for doctoral training but not necessarily at the UR. However, the Bridges program will give the trainees opportunities to begin working in laboratories at UR and take UR doctoral courses there to get to know the UR faculty. The transition to doctoral training at UR might be more streamlined than at another university. If trainees are accepted at UR, they might be able to continue to working in the same laboratory and continue to receive support from the same Bridges personnel who work at the UR.
The Bridges program is in person. Some components may have online portions, but all trainees are expected to be in person during the program.
Yes. Throughout their time in the program, all Bridges trainees are expected to work 12-15 hours per week in research laboratories, and up to 35 hours weekly during the summer.
It is likely that if a Bridges trainee receives more than one C, they will be asked to leave the Bridges program (but might be able to remain in the RIT Master’s program). An A/B average is acceptable, but an A average is preferable to maximize the trainee's chance to successfully enter a doctoral program.
While many biomedical and behavioral science Ph.D. programs do not require a master’s for admission, having a master’s degree in your chosen discipline from RIT will likely not shorten the length of time or credits required for your chosen Ph.D. program.