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Welcome to the Office of Student Affairs


Office of Student Affairs:Groups & Organizations
IMPORTANT:   Announcements  |  Composites  |  Officers  |  Site Map  |  Site Survey


Honor Council
Professionalism Committee
Council on Internat'l & Area Outreach (CIAO)
Medical Student Exec Council (MSEC)
Student Advisory Council (SAG)
Student Gov Assoc Exec Cncl (SGAEC)
American Medical Assoc (AMA)
American Med Student Assoc (AMSA)
Student Nat'l Medical Assoc (SNMA)
Org of Student Representatives (OSR)
Student Specialty Interest Groups
Honor Council

Composition

College of Medicine Honor Code
[formatted to include only the College of Medicine addendum]

The Honor Council of the College of Medicine shall consist of three elected representatives from each class and one elected alternate representative from each class. The alternate representative shall attend all regular meetings and shall participate in hearings in the absence of a representative from that class or if needed in order to constitute a quorum of the Honor Council for a hearing. During the interval between the graduation of senior representatives and the installation of new freshman representatives, all alternates shall function as full Council members and will participate in hearings held during this period.

Election of Members
Each new class shall select its Council members within six weeks of the first day of the beginning of classes.

Honor Council representatives may be reelected at the discretion of a class. However, it is recommended that Honor Council representatives be retained if satisfactory to provide better continuity of the Honor Council.

Vacancy
If a Council member is, for any reason, unable to sit in judicial capacity at the hearings, the respective class shall be represented by the elected Honor Council alternate representative, who shall assume all the regular powers of a Council member. Should a regular Council member be removed from office, the vacant position shall be filled by the alternate member from that class and a new alternate member elected by the class.

Faculty Advisor
The Associate Dean for Student Affairs is the Faculty Advisor appointed by the Dean to assist the Council in its operation, but shall not be present during Council hearings.

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Professionalism Committee

Professionalism Committee Charter  |   Code of Professional Conduct

The Professionalism Committee consists of three (3) elected members from each medical school class and is responsible for:
  • Fostering patient welfare
  • Colleague cooperation and teamwork
  • Personal growth
  • Civic duty
  • Professional ethics, honesty, integrity, accountability, respectful attitudes
  • Commitment to excellence

The Professionalism Committee deals with unprofessional behavior between peers, peers and faculty, and toward patients and staff.
  • Feedback strategies include verbal feedback, written feedback, appropriate course director/clerkship director contact, advisor consultation, committee action


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Council on International & Area Outreach (CIAO)

In 1996, one student from the College of Medicine, Class of 2000, founded a day on which all medical students would join to perform community service in Memphis. The following year, two students from the same class took a trip to Kazakhstan with a Memphis surgeon to operate on kids; they returned moved and determined to provide others with similar opportunities. Together, these and others from the Medical Student Executive Council sensed the growing need to organize public service on-campus. CIAO, The Council on International & Area Outreach, was founded in 1998 as a culmination of their collective efforts. To find out more about CIAO, visit the CIAO website at http://www.utmem.edu/CIAO.

If you are planning to travel through CIAO, you must complete and return the CIAO Travel Packet and Checklist to Pam Henry, 910 Plaza Room 1043, at least two (2) months prior to your expected travel date. NOTE: No student will be approved for travel via CIAO without having completed and returned this packet.

DOWNLOAD CIAO TRAVEL PACKET AND CHECKLIST [PDF 146KB] (UT NETID and password required)


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Medical Student Executive Council (MSEC)

The Medical Student Executive Council (MSEC) is the governing council of the student body of the University of Tennessee College of Medicine, representing the students to the administration and faculty of the University, and the Memphis community. The Council is headed by a President and Vice President, elected annually. Voting members include: 
  • Vice-President
  • Each class president (4)
  • Three class representatives (12)
  • Alpha Kappa Kappa Medical Fraternity (1)
  • American Medical Association - Student Section (1)
  • American Medical Student (1)
  • Family Practice Student Association (1)
  • Organization of Student Representatives to the American Association  of Medical Colleges (AAMC) (1)
  • Phi Chi Medical Fraternity (1)
  • Student National Medical Association (1)

The Council serves to represent all students in the College of Medicine, addressing academic, financial, social, and other issues affecting the students' overall learning experience. MSEC Meetings are held Thursdays at noon in the Student Alumni Center and are open to all students in the College of Medicine. Meetings are periodically visited by the Dean of the College of Medicine, Associate Dean of Academic and Faculty Affairs, and Associate Dean of Admissions and Students. Many of the changes in the curriculum are a direct result of MSEC action and support, either from the Council itself or its representatives on the Committee on Undergraduate Medical Education, Clinical Sciences Subcommittee, and Biomedical Sciences Subcommittee. These representatives report directly to the MSEC, as do the various other committee representatives. The effectiveness of the Council is related directly to its leadership and participation.

Visit the MSEC website at http://sites.google.com/site/uthscmsec/ (Username and password required)

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Student Advisory Group (SAG)

Mission Statement: The structure of the Student Advisory Group (SAG) is designed to provide the Office of Student Affairs the best possible advice and counsel in exercising its responsibilities to the College of Medicine students. The elected representatives (VP's for Student Affairs) from each class, along with its elected OSR's, are best able to provide this representation. Issues addressed are non-academic and deal with advancing the personal development and professional life of students.

The Associate Dean of Student Affairs will facilitate the regular meetings of the group. Staff in the Office of Student Affairs will participate in support of the group. Preview SAG Minutes.

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Student Government Association Executive Council (SGAEC)

The Student Government Association Executive Council (SGAEC) provides representation for all students at the UT Memphis campus. The presidents of each college within the UT Memphis system form this student government body. The president of the Medical Student Executive Council is the College of Medicine student representative on the SGAEC. The SGAEC studies matters of importance to students and submits recommendations expressing student views and concerns to the administration and faculty of the University.

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American Medical Student Association (AMSA)

The American Medical Student Association (AMSA) is a national organization which offers students an opportunity to become involved in community outreach projects through locally organized chapters. AMSA is well known for its commitment to facilitating student impact on medical education and practice by developing networks that would increase physicians' awareness and sensitivity to their patients and communities. As a national organization, AMSA offers many opportunities, such as preceptorships in a variety of specialties across the country, participation in the International Medical Student Association, and access to experiences of other AMSA chapters. AMSA chapters receive support from AMSA national staff and task forces. AMSA task forces publish newsletters and hold seminars on areas of interest other than those already covered by our curriculum. These task forces include: Nutrition and Preventive Medicine, Death and Dying, Women in Medicine, Law and Medicine, and many others. Another positive aspect of involvement with AMSA is the opportunity to meet and work with students attending other medical schools via regional and national conferences.

Activities of the UT AMSA chapter have included discussion of clinics by M-3s and M-4s, ongoing M-1 support group, blood pressure screenings in the community with the Memphis High Blood Pressure Coalition and CPR training sessions. The UT AMSA chapter is a forum for student concerns, both personal and professional. Please come and share your interests and ideas.

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American Medical Association Medical Student Section (AMA-MSS)

The American Medical Association Medical Student Section (AMA-MSS) is a national organization of medical student members of the AMA which is dedicated to improving medical education, developing leadership and promoting activism for the health of America.

The AMA-MSS offers students unique opportunities to interact with students and physicians from across the state and the country and UT Memphis has a long tradition of producing national leaders for the AMA-MSS.

As a member of the AMA-MSS, students are full members of the AMA and as such receive all the benefits that are available to physician members of the AMA including subscriptions to JAMA, AMNews - a weekly update on issues facing medicine, and Members Matters - a newsletter published by the AMA with more immediate concerns facing medicine. Members also receive a free copy of the Drug Evaluation textbook, a helpful resource during Pharmacology. 

UT Memphis members also receive the Journal of the TMA and other publications from the Tennessee Medical Association. On a local level, members receive Memphis Health Care News and updates both from our local chapter and the Memphis-Shelby County Medical Society. 

Members also receive special banking and insurance benefits through the AMA, as well as having the full resources of the AMA to call upon whenever needed for researching issues to finding information of externships and residencies.

Our local chapter also conducts a physician match program which matches M1 and M2 students with local physicians for a day to follow them around to learn more about the actuality of practicing medicine. UT's AMA-MSS chapter also conduct several seminars each year that offer students educational opportunities outside the traditional curriculum.

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Student National Medical Association (SNMA)

The Student National Medical Association (SNMA) was founded and organized in 1964. It is a non-profit corporate association of minority students in pursuit of a medical education. The SNMA is dedicated to: 

Leadership development by augmenting and enhancing individual efforts as well as providing collective group development of minority medical students, social awareness through student interaction with minority consumers and other health professional groups to keep abreast of social changes and their implications for the minority communities, and service to humanity through a commitment to professional excellence which will ultimately benefit others in their chapters and in the community. The SNMA supports the concept of a well-rounded, thoroughly-trained physician - one who can treat people, not just disease - and who can communicate with and understand the health needs of all Americans.

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Organization of Student Representatives (OSR)

The Organization of Student Representatives (OSR) provides student input into the Association of American Medical Colleges. The AAMC is a group with membership from American, Puerto Rican and Canadian Medical Schools, over 400 teaching hospitals, and 60 major academic societies. 

The Organization of Student Representatives (OSR) has both national and regional meetings once a year. During these meetings, the student members discuss the status and trends in medical education nationwide, pass resolutions, and elect officers who meet during the year to act upon those resolutions. For the College of Medicine, representatives are chosen by the Medical Student Executive Council. OSR representatives have information concerning issues at other medical schools and at the national level in medical education.

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Last updated: February 15, 2005
Office Hours: 8:00am - 5:00pm | Student Workstation: 9:00am - 4:30pm
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College of Medicine

 

Contact Information

 
Contact:

OWEN P. PHILLIPS, M.D.
   Associate Dean

   Office of Student Affairs
   910 Madison Ave #1043
   Memphis, TN 38163
   Phone: (901) 448-5684
   Fax: (901) 448-7085

Executive Dean:
Steve J. Schwab, M.D.


UT College of Medicine
NRMP Results Summary
 20082009

% UT System
% In-State TN (not UT)
% Out-State TN
% Primary Care
 # Unmatched

34 

62 
46 
*12 

44 

52 
42 

*Includes match to PGY2 only


2009 NRMP Residency Data
[Acrobat Reader required]

2009 Placement Listing
[UT NETID required]
[Acrobat Reader required>]

 

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"The University of Tennessee, College of Medicine has its roots in Nashville as the Nashville Medical College. That college as organized in 1876, and in 1879 was acquired by the University of Tennessee as its medical department. The Memphis Hospital Medical College was also found in 1876 but, because of the yellow fever epidemic in Memphis, did not actually hold classes until 1880. In 1909 two Nashville schools merged and were operating as the joint Medical department of the University of Nashville and the University of Tennessee. It moved to Memphis in 1911 and merged with the College of Physicians and Surgeons to become the University of Tennessee, College of Medicine... "

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