Username:
Password:
What's this?

Hot Topics





Full Story from The Independent Florida Alligator

Share This
Filed in Admissions, Administration, Editorials, Opinion
Tags: No Tags

1 comment


Thomas Breslin said, in April 9th, 2008 at 11:00 am

If Mendelsohn is from southeast or central Florida, you can be pretty sure he was the subject of geographical discrimination to begin with. In 2004-05, for example, one in about 3,000 Hillsborough County residents was in a public medical school in Florida. One in 5,000 or 6,000 Alachua and Leon County residents was in a public medical school in Florida. But in Palm Beach county only one resident out of 33,000 was and in Miami-Dade County, only one out of 50,000. Residents of the counties in the University of Central Florida service area were being enrolled in about half the numbers you might reasonably expect given their proportion of the state population.

Florida’s public medical schools have been regional schools with admissions heavily favoring applicants from their immediate locales. Nonetheless they seek funding from the whole state. Making the picture more grim, when central and southeast Florida sought public medical schools USF and UF officials opposed new public medical schools.

If the Mendelsohn case is pursued, let it be an entry into the far more significant issues of geographical and other forms of discrimination in medical and other realms of higher education in Florida.

Thomas A. Breslin
Miami, FL

Comment on this story...


Name (*required)

Subject (*optional)

Please note: Comment moderation may be active so there is no need to resubmit your comment.