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We accept qualified high school seniors into our Pharm.D. program. We assure progression for students who enter our program from high school (without re-application) directly through our six-year pharmacy program as long as academic progress and standards are met.
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The majority of students will be admitted to the College of Pharmacy from high school based on strong academic performance. If academic, professional, experiential, progression, and technical standards are met, you should expect to continue in pharmacy until graduation.

Recommended Minimum Qualifications

  • Four years of English, math, and science

  • A combination of six years of social sciences and foreign language

  • ACT composite score of 23 or new SAT composite score of 1150. (The ACT (or SAT) score is optional for students entering in fall of 2023)

  • High school GPA of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale

Application Process

Apply to the University of Findlay, College of Pharmacy
  • Applicants who meet the above requirements may apply directly through the University of Findlay.
  • Send official high school transcripts
  • Send all official college transcripts (If you have taken College Credit Plus classes, dual enrollment, etc.)
  • Send ACT and/or SAT scores (optional for students entering in fall 2023)
  • Submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)
Contact the Interim Coordinator of External Engagement and Enrollment in the College of Pharmacy, Elizabeth Trevino at [email protected] or 419-434-5646 with questions.

Next Steps
  • Schedule an interview with the College of Pharmacy
  • Participate in a face-to-face or virtual interview with a College of Pharmacy faculty or staff member
  • Receive a decision notification from the College of Pharmacy
Last Steps
  • Submit a $500 pharmacy enrollment deposit to accept your seat in the program
  • Select your Residence Hall
  • Sign up for a New Student Registration date
  • Attend for New Student Orientation
  • Review Payment Plan information
University of Findlay's Doctor of Pharmacy program and subsequent eligibility for pharmacist licensure requires a certain level of cognitive, behavioral, and technical skills and abilities inherent to a professional education. It is to these principles and standards that Doctor of Pharmacy students are held accountable in order for admittance, progression, retention, and completion of the program to take place.

All students are expected to successfully fulfill the same core educational requirements. While Findlay will make reasonable efforts to enable students with disabilities to complete the Doctor of Pharmacy program, where possible and within our guidelines, some accommodations cannot be made. One example of an unacceptable accommodation is a trained intermediary. Professionals in a clinical setting who rely on intermediaries are subject to interpretation or filtering of information by this intermediary.

Students who graduate from the program will be eligible to take a general licensure exam, which presumes the capability to competently perform the required duties in any pharmacy practice setting; therefore, in our curriculum, students must be able to successfully complete the entire program without exception.

Pharmacy students are expected to:

  • Be able to acquire their Ohio intern license by the end of their first professional semester
  • Maintain their Ohio intern license until graduation and pharmacy licensure examination
  • Complete the academic program within a reasonable amount of time
  • Maintain their physical and mental health and conduct themselves socially in a manner that will contribute to, and never detract from, a safe patient environment.
The UF College of Pharmacy has the responsibility to protect the patients with whom our graduates will interact, directly or indirectly. In addition, the safety of the student in each of the potential practice environments in which they train must also be considered. It is with both the patients’ safety and the students’ safety in mind that our technical standards have been specified.

While many of the skills required by these standards are expected to develop and/or improve during the course of training, the following criteria are considered essential for successful completion of this program. At the time of application to the UF College of Pharmacy, candidates must meet the following technical standards:

Observation

Students must personally be able to observe, evaluate, interpret, and apply information. This necessitates the functional use of visual, auditory, and tactile senses. Such senses are expected to be used in the classroom, the laboratory or in clinical practice training for the following: direct patient encounters (e.g. interviews and physical assessments), when evaluating drug information or orders for medications, or inspecting compounded or pre-manufactured medications.

Communication Skills

Student pharmacists must be able read and communicate effectively in written and spoken English. Additionally, students must demonstrate appropriate use and recognition of nonverbal communication cues. Finally, the ability to communicate clearly with faculty, staff, other members of the healthcare team, or with patients and their families must be conducted in a timely manner is expected.

Motor

Student pharmacists must have coordination and the functional use of both gross and fine muscular movement with reasonable accommodation in order to participate in pharmacy-related activities including, but not limited to: use of a computer, compounding medications, use of diagnostic equipment for basic patient assessment, and delivery and administration of drug therapies.

Intellectual, Conceptual, Integrative, and Quantitative Abilities

Student pharmacists must demonstrate a fundamental and progressive ability to use problem solving, critical reasoning, and technology appropriate for their level of training in the profession of pharmacy. Such skills are expected to be used personally and in collaboration with peers and other healthcare professionals. Students must demonstrate that they can use these skills in incorporating new information learned in practice with that which was obtained during didactic training. Information must be obtained, measured, analyzed, and integrated in an efficient and timely manner. They must then demonstrate the ability to apply such information to provide optimal patient care.

Behavioral and Social Attributes

Student pharmacists must demonstrate appropriate mental and emotional health to allow them to practice and function in a variety of situations requiring good judgment and ethical decision-making. Student pharmacists must be able to demonstrate integrity, compassion, courtesy, and respect for the patients, families and other healthcare professionals with whom they interact. Students must be able to accept constructive criticism with maturity and modify future actions and behavior accordingly.

Ethics and Professionalism

Students must successfully complete a criminal background check according to College of Pharmacy policies. The student pharmacist must demonstrate both the ability and the willingness to adopt the recognized professional and academic standards of the School and University.

Submission of an application to the UF College of Pharmacy will serve as testimony that the prospective student pharmacist has performed a self-evaluation and does hereby consider him or herself to verifiably meet these technical standards. All students will be held accountable to these technical standards by the UF College of Pharmacy from application to the program through graduation.

Individuals with questions or concerns about their ability to meet these standards are encouraged to contact the Assistant/Associate Dean for Internal Affairs.

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