Why Choose Medical Technology?
Medical Technologists perform laboratory analyses to help the physician detect, diagnose and treat disease. Technologists work with sophisticated laboratory instruments and computers that must be kept in optimal operating condition to give the most accurate results. The volume and sophistication of laboratory testing will increase as the population grows and lives longer. Physicians base about 70 percent of their diagnosis and treatment decisions on the results of laboratory testing.
Medical technologists work in such divisions of the medical laboratory in the blood bank, clinical chemistry, microbiology, hematology, serology and body fluid analysis under the supervision of a medical director.
The program combines classroom instruction and laboratory practice on-campus with internships in hospitals throughout the state to prepare program graduates to perform a wide range of tests.
The program is fully accredited by the National Accrediting Agency for Clinical Laboratory Sciences.
Get a Great Job
Career opportunities exist in the clinical laboratories in hospitals and medical centers; pharmaceutical industry in quality control, research and biotechnology; government crime labs, accreditation offices, environmental technology, veterinary medicine and lab information systems; humanitarian work in the Peace Corps, Project Hope and medical missionary workers. Many assume positions as laboratory directors and supervisors.
The median annual base salary of full-time medical technologists in this area of the country was $40,000 in 2004. Medical technologists who worked as laboratory supervisors and managers averaged $62,005. Salaries are increasing annually. Many employers pay sign-on bonuses because of the shortage of qualified medical technologists.
Admission Requirements
Students must be admitted to the university. To be qualified to enter the professional sequence of the program, a student must have earned at least a 2.5 gpa with a minimum grade of a "C" in the following courses or their equivalent: MATH 115 or MATH 117 ( or have an ACT Math subscore of 24) and CHEM 114, CHEM 214 and BIOL 205 with a minimum grade of "C".
To assure students of a quality technical education in classroom/lab and clinical practice, enrollment is limited. Students who meet or will have met the program’s qualification criteria by the end of Spring semester are required to apply to the program’s professional sequence between January 15 and January 30 of the year prior to the August professional sequence entry. Admission will be based upon date of qualification.
Graduation Requirements
To graduate from the program, a student must have earned a minimum grade of “C” in each CLLS course, BIOL 205 and CHEM 114 or equivalent, and the CAHS core courses. A minimum cumulative gpa of 2.0 is required.
Ferris will find you an internship in the last semester of the program, although due to limited space, specific clinical site locations cannot be guaranteed. If a student interrupts progression in the professional sequence of the program, re-entry cannot be guaranteed due to space limitations in laboratory and clincial placement sites.
More Information
College of Allied Health Sciences
Ferris State University
200 Ferris Drive
Big Rapids, MI 49307
Phone: 231-591-2270 or
1-800-462-8553 ext 2266