Overview
Over the last 29 summers, the Horizons in Medicine program at Wright
State University Boonshoft School of Medicine has offered local high
school students, mostly from disadvantaged or minority backgrounds,
the opportunity to see first hand the science and delivery of health
care that forms the foundation of a career in medicine.
In this unique program students can begin to prepare for careers
in science and health care, get a summer job that pays, and earn
a college scholarship. Students who will have completed their junior
year of high school and taken chemistry by the time the program begins
are encouraged to apply.
Horizons in Medicine is designed to give Dayton-area
students a sense of the career possibilities in health care and to
show them the kind of serious preparation needed to enter such careers.
Students spend mornings in classrooms and laboratories at Wright
State, where they are introduced to subjects such as anatomy, biochemistry
and physiology. They spend afternoons working in hospitals, doctors
offices and community clinics affiliated with Wright State University
Boonshoft School of Medicine.
During the six-week program, students will work 100 hours at minimum
wage in their work assignments. Every morning students will participate
in lectures; lab experiences or other academic activities structured
to introduce them to various areas related to the study of medicine
and other health professions. Attendance is required from 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Since 1979, more than 570 Dayton-area high school students have
completed Horizons in Medicine; with more than 90 percent entering
college and approximately 80 percent graduating from college. Many
Horizons alumni are now M.D.'s, and several former Horizon participants
are currently enrolled in medical school at Wright State's Boonshoft
School of Medicine. |