I know there’s cognitive science, which is what i would do, but it seems a bit vague about whether or not there’s a neuroscience major as well.
Also, how is the cognitive/neuroscience program at Case? What makes it distinct?
I know there’s cognitive science, which is what i would do, but it seems a bit vague about whether or not there’s a neuroscience major as well.
Also, how is the cognitive/neuroscience program at Case? What makes it distinct?
I think if you look at neuroscience across many universities its made up of the same types of courses that Case offers. This page explains how to create a neuroscience undergrad major at Case, same as bopper’s link.
http://cognitivescience.case.edu/cognitive-neuroscience-at-cwru/
Neurosciences are located at the Case School of Medicine. There are PhD programs, because neuroscience is such a complex field, its something you need a PhD in, if you want to work in any of the five areas below. Are you interested in neuroscience research work? It is expanding at Case. Here are all the areas that Case has professors and PhD programs, so you may want to contact professors in your area of interest and see if they take undergraduates. Many research programs at Case will train undergrads in their labs.
Developmental Neurobiology
Cellular and Molecular Neurosciences
Systems and Cognitive Neurosciences
Computational Neuroscience
Applied Neuroscience
https://neurowww.case.edu/gradphd/program
If you are premed, then you may want to do other clinical research work at Case.
Here are 400 level courses in neuroscience. Case Western allows my son to take graduate level physics and math so you may be able to take these courses to satisfy undergrad requirements, once you get the required biochemistry under your belt. ( My son can take many graduate courses at Case for his Bachelors degree in math/physics, which for him is a huge advantage of Case Western over other colleges he might have picked )
https://neurowww.case.edu/courses/index
The courses are taught in the School of Medicine, check about whether undergrads can enroll in them, they are not medical schools courses, they are graduate level neuroscience classes. I suspect you can take them, but check.