Previous research has documented that negative experiences in chemistry courses are a major factor that discourages many students
from continuing in premedical studies. This adverse impact affects women and students from under-represented minority (URM)
groups disproportionately. To determine if chemistry courses have a similar effect at a large public university, we surveyed
1,036 students from three entering cohorts at the University of California, Berkeley. We surveyed students at the beginning
of their first year at the university and again at the end of their second year. All subjects had indicated an interest in
premedical studies at the time they entered the university. We conducted follow-up interviews with a stratified sub-set of
63 survey respondents to explore the factors that affected their level of interest in premedical studies. Using a 10-point
scale, we found that the strength of interest in premedical studies declined for all racial/ethnic groups. In the follow-up
interviews, students identified chemistry courses as the principal factor contributing to their reported loss of interest.
URM students especially often stated that chemistry courses caused them to abandon their hopes of becoming a physician. Consistent
with reports over more than 50 years, it appears that undergraduate courses in chemistry have the effect of discouraging otherwise
qualified students, as reflected in their admission to one of the most highly selective public universities in the US, from
continuing in premedical studies, especially in the case of URM students. Reassessment of this role for chemistry courses
may be overdue.
Keywords Chemistry - Diversity - Ethnicity - Medical education - Minorities - Premedical education - Science education - Race
Data presented in this paper will also be included in a forthcoming book: Questioning the Premedical Paradigm—Enhancing Diversity in the Medical Profession a Century After the Flexner Report, by Donald A. Barr. Johns Hopkins University Press, estimated release in 2010.