Project Details
GSC 270: International Graduate School in Molecular Medicine Ulm
Subject Area
Medicine
Term
from 2007 to 2019
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 53244728
Ulm University has a strong national and international reputation in interdisciplinary research in molecular medicine. It is one of few German universities offering a consecutive course of studies in molecular medicine (BSc, MSc/PhD). The interdisciplinary bachelor and master course of studies, which are organised by the medical faculty, strictly follow the Bologna criteria. The training of doctoral students is organised by the International Graduate School in Molecular Medicine Ulm. The graduate school is a faculty-independent, central institution of Ulm University providing structured, high quality training for doctoral students working in this field. It is based on a three years course of studies in molecular medicine - called The International PhD Programme in Molecular Medicine - with transparent admission rules, a studies plan, intermediate evaluations and multilateral-interdisciplinary thesis advisory committees. The graduate school provides the international degree PhD and the corresponding German degree Dr. rer. nat., respectively.
The scientific basis for the graduate school are externally funded research networks with proven excellence. Doctoral training is organised in thematically focused Research Training Groups, that correspond to externally funded research networks and concentrate on particular fields of molecular medicine: "Signalling Networks in Development and Degeneration", "Signalling Networks in the Hematopoetic System and Oncology" and "Signalling Networks in CardioMetabolic Disorders".
In addition to the structured training, the graduate school will offer soft skill training opportunities, an International and Recruitment Office, a mobility programme, a Career and Social Centre, a mentoring programme and support for female and male doctoral students with children, respectively. In order to pool training resources, on the one hand, and to improve the thesis work of medical students (Dr. med.), which are interested in experimental scientific research, on the other hand, the graduate school also provides the structural basis for the programme "Experimental Medicine" of the medical faculty.
The scientific basis for the graduate school are externally funded research networks with proven excellence. Doctoral training is organised in thematically focused Research Training Groups, that correspond to externally funded research networks and concentrate on particular fields of molecular medicine: "Signalling Networks in Development and Degeneration", "Signalling Networks in the Hematopoetic System and Oncology" and "Signalling Networks in CardioMetabolic Disorders".
In addition to the structured training, the graduate school will offer soft skill training opportunities, an International and Recruitment Office, a mobility programme, a Career and Social Centre, a mentoring programme and support for female and male doctoral students with children, respectively. In order to pool training resources, on the one hand, and to improve the thesis work of medical students (Dr. med.), which are interested in experimental scientific research, on the other hand, the graduate school also provides the structural basis for the programme "Experimental Medicine" of the medical faculty.
DFG Programme
Graduate Schools
Applicant Institution
Universität Ulm
Spokesperson
Professor Dr. Michael Kühl
Participating Researchers
Professor Dr. Christian Buske; Professor Dr. Tobias Böckers; Professor Dr. Bernhard Otto Böhm; Professor Dr. Klaus-Michael Debatin; Professor Dr. Hartmut Döhner; Professor Dr. Peter Dürre; Professor Dr. Heiner Fangerau; Professor Dr. Hans-Jörg Fehling; Professor Dr. Hartmut Geiger; Professor Dr. Peter Gierschik; Professor Dr. Markus Huber-Lang; Professorin Dr. Anita Ignatius; Professorin Dr. Meliha Karsak; Professor Dr. Hans A. Kestler; Professor Dr. Frank Kirchhoff; Professor Dr. Bernd Knöll; Professor Dr. Christian Kubisch; Professorin Dr. Birgit Liss; Professor Dr. Jens Michaelis; Professor Dr. Wolfgang Rottbauer; Professor Dr. Karl Lenhard Rudolph; Professorin Dr. Karin Scharffetter-Kochanek; Professorin Dr. Tanja Weil; Professor Dr. Thomas Wirth