<p>I’m a course 9 planning (hopefully, with a lot of luck) to get an MD and PhD from HST after I graduate, so I’m fairly well suited to answer your question. HST is not offered an undergraduate major, minor, or degree at Harvard or MIT. It is a graduate program for training clinicians/scientists in interdisciplinary health and medical studies. There are 9 options for graduate study which you can read about here:</p>
<p>[MIT</a> Course Catalogue: Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology](<a href=“http://web.mit.edu/catalogue/degre.inter.divis.shtml]MIT”>http://web.mit.edu/catalogue/degre.inter.divis.shtml)</p>
<p>About 40% of HST students choose to pursue an MD and a PhD at the same time, through graduate departments at Harvard or MIT. </p>
<p>There are, however, undergraduate courses offered by HST at MIT (and maybe at Harvard too, I dunno). Go to this page:</p>
<p>[HST</a> and Undergraduate Students](<a href=“http://hst.mit.edu/servlet/ControllerServlet?handler=PublicHandler&action=browse&pageId=410]HST”>http://hst.mit.edu/servlet/ControllerServlet?handler=PublicHandler&action=browse&pageId=410)</p>
<p>and scroll down to the bottom. Some of these are full courses, some are only seminars. However, there is no major or minor offered by HST. If you’re like me and you’re very interested in an interdisciplinary approach to clinical medicine and medical research regarding the brain and neurology, you should major in course 9 as an undergrad and apply to HST for grad school (or any number of other great MD-PhD programs out there). Hope this helps.</p>