CONTACT: Christi Morgan, (850) 644-2788;
cmorgan@law.fsu.edu
Doug Carlson, (850) 645-1255;
doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu
By Jill Elish
September 2007FSU LAW, MEDICAL COLLEGES RANKED
IN TOP 10 FOR HISPANIC STUDENTS
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- Florida State University’s colleges of law
and medicine are among the best in the nation for Hispanics,
according to Hispanic Business magazine. The rankings appear in the
September issue.
For the second year in a row, the magazine has named the FSU College
of Law the sixth best in the nation in its annual rankings. It’s the
fourth year in a row that the law school has been ranked in the Top
10. The FSU College of Medicine, founded in 2000, made the Top 10
list for the first time this year, ranking ninth.
“We’re very pleased that Hispanic Business magazine has recognized
FSU’s medical and law schools,” said Provost and Executive Vice
President for Academic Affairs Lawrence G. Abele. “This speaks both
to the quality of FSU’s programs and our commitment to encouraging a
diverse community where all of our students can thrive.”
The magazine considered a variety of factors in determining its
rankings, including the percentage of Hispanic students enrolled,
the percentage of full-time Hispanic faculty, services for Hispanic
students, Hispanic recruitment efforts and retention rates and
reputation as reflected in U.S. News & World Report’s 2007 edition
of “Best Graduate Schools.”
For the 2006-2007 academic year, Hispanics made up 8 percent of the
law school’s 765-member student body and received 19 of the 245 law
degrees awarded to the Class of 2007. Seven percent of full-time
faculty members are Hispanic.
“Because other schools have even more Hispanic students and faculty
than we do, it is our reputation for academic excellence that puts
us over the top,” said College of Law Dean Donald Weidner.
FSU’s law school has Hispanics in key faculty and administrative
positions, Weidner said. Fernando Tesón holds the Tobias Simon
Eminent Scholar Chair and Manuel Utset is the Charles W. Ehrhardt
Professor. Associate Dean for Students Nancy Benavides runs the
school’s Summer for Undergraduates Program and other academic
support initiatives. The law school hosts programs and events geared
toward recruiting Hispanics and has several student organizations
that provide mentoring and peer support for current Hispanic
students.
At the College of Medicine, 12 percent of the 284 students are
Hispanic, and Hispanics received four of the 36 medical degrees
awarded in 2007. Eight percent of the college’s full-time faculty
members are Hispanic.
Part of the College of Medicine’s mission is to develop doctors who
are responsive to community needs, especially through service to
elder, rural, minority and underserved populations. All of the
college’s students take courses in cross-cultural medicine and
medical Spanish and have opportunities to actively participate in
research focused on culturally appropriate delivery of health care.
FSUCares, the largest student outreach program at the College of
Medicine, takes dozens of students on medical mission trips each
spring to work with Spanish-speaking patients in communities in
rural Florida, along the Texas-Mexico border and in Panama.
“The Hispanic population in Florida is growing, and the need for
more Hispanic physicians is growing along with it,” said College of
Medicine Dean J. Ocie Harris. “We’re pleased that our efforts to
make the College of Medicine a desirable destination for Hispanic
medical students is being recognized and hope that it will help us
achieve our goal of producing physicians to meet medical needs in
the Hispanic community. By doing so, these doctors will provide an
invaluable service to all Floridians.’’
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