At the Health Science Campus
The Health Science Campus offers an academic environment that attracts the most high-qualified students and faculty by integrating advanced research, innovative education and patient care.
It has approximately 400 full- and part-time faculty members. More than 1000 area physicians, nurses, physical and occupational therapists and other health professionals serve as advisors and student preceptors.
Cutting-Edge Technology
The Health Science Campus has always been on the cutting edge of advance technology for education of tomorrow's researchers, health care providers and educators.
Wireless campus
Classrooms and buildings across campus offer convenience of wireless technology.
Pod-casting lectures
Various lectures are archived for students to access.
Academic Intranet
Academic Intranet provides web access to course materials, handouts, announcements, and lectures for a variety of programs.
Center for Creative Instruction
Center for Creative Instruction (CCI) is dedicated to developing innovative applications to support teaching and learning.
Clinical Skills Center
The Clinical Skills Center provides an interactive and formative education experience for students, residents in graduate medical education training programs, and healthcare professionals to hone their personal and empathetic skills, as well as their diagnostic and problem solving techniques.
Academic Testing Center
Offers comprehensive support for student testing in UT's School of Medicine and is one of only eight centers nationwide approved to administer the National Board Examinations computer-based (USMLE steps I, II and III).
The Standardized Expression Measurement Center
The Health Science Campus has the world's first standardized testing center for measuring gene activity.
Higher Level of Research
Research is a primary component of the University of Toledo's mission. As an academic health science center, UT's research focuses on health-related issues affecting humans. Biomedical research at the Health Science Campus spans the spectrum from basic understanding of cellular and molecular processes to applied clinical-based research. Over the last ten years, the Health Science Campus research funding has increased from an average of $10 million per year to $20 million per year.