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Georgetown University's Master of Science in Pharmacology is a 12-month, non-thesis graduate program providing a solid academic foundation through intensive coursework, with opportunities for research or specialized study through electives across biomedical disciplines.
With an intimate class size of 15-20 students, participants enjoy close faculty mentorship in both classroom and lab settings. The program's core curriculum is delivered by departmental faculty and researchers, including medical school instructors. Notably, Program Director Dr. John Partridge also oversees the Medical Pharmacology curriculum for Georgetown's first- and second-year medical students.
Graduates advance to doctoral programs (PhD, MD, and related health sciences) or secure positions at leading institutions like the NIH, FDA, pharmaceutical firms, biotech companies, and academic labs. Among those pursuing advanced degrees, 65% gain admission during the program or within one year post-graduation, with 85% accepted within three years.
The department also provides an in-depth Ph.D. program. Pharmacology—the science examining how drugs and chemicals interact with biological systems—naturally integrates multiple disciplines, drawing from physiology, biochemistry, cell biology, neuroscience, and molecular biology. Faculty and students employ pharmacological agents as investigative tools to decode cellular and organ system functions and their regulatory mechanisms.