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Posted
5/15/2008
New programs offer wide array of career options for students
The Arnold School of Public Health is introducing two undergraduate
degree programs this fall, a move aimed at addressing an increasing
shortage of trained public health workers in the state and nation.
In adding the Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science programs, the
school joins only seven other accredited schools of public health to
offer undergraduate majors nationwide. The first class, with a modest
initial enrollment, is expected to expand dramatically over the next
five years.
The programs will provide an undergraduate education that
conveys a general understanding of public health history,
cross-cutting competencies, and current issues;
requires a broad liberal education with exposure to many
disciplines and develops intellectual and civic capabilities;
instills a strong sense of values and ethics, and;
provides the capacity to adapt acquired knowledge and abilities to
address new challenges.
The programs provide two paths to a broad pre-professional degree. In
addition to general education and public health-related coursework in
epidemiology, environmental health, biostatistics, health promotion, and
health administration, the BA curriculum will prepare undergraduates
through rigorous study of the social and behavioral sciences for entry
into social science-based graduate programs, business, and, perhaps, law
schools.
Students in the BS major will receive the same general and public
health core courses. Additionally they will take courses in the natural
sciences leading potentially to graduate work in the public health
sciences, allied health, or medicine.
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Dr. Greg Hand |
Associate Dean for Academic Affairs Dr. Greg Hand, who was
responsible for much of the planning for the new degrees, said South
Carolina’s public health workforce is both undertrained and losing staff
at an alarming rate. Nationally, 25 per cent of this workforce will
retire by 2012.
Hand’s expectation is that these degrees will result in an increased
number of well-trained public health workers, a pool of post-graduate
trained persons capable of stepping into leadership positions within
state and federal agencies and international organizations, and a
general understanding of public health issues among USC students who
pursue other careers.
A 1999 analysis discovered only 3.6 percent of the S.C. public health
workforce is academically prepared in public health. In addition, the
public health system is challenged by a large number of retirees and an
inadequate number of replacements,
“This drain on the pubic health system is compounded by severe budget
cuts, leaving agencies searching for strategies to enhance and retain
the workforce as well as recruit new employees,” the Arnold School noted
in its report to the S.C. Commission on Higher Education, seeking
approval for the programs.
The application to the CHE also noted that the new degrees can be
expected to strengthen the numbers of students in the Arnold School
graduate programs, more widely disseminate the body of knowledge
regarding public health to USC undergraduates, and attract students
interested in law, social sciences, public health sciences and medicine.
Admission requirements for the new degrees include:
New freshmen who meet University admissions standards are eligible
for admission to degree programs offered by the Arnold School of Public
Health. A student who wishes to enter the Arnold School from another
college on the Columbia campus must be in good standing and have a
cumulative GPA of 2.75 or higher.
A student who wishes to enter the Arnold School from another USC
campus must fulfill one of the following requirements:
Be in good standing, meet the admission requirements for a
baccalaureate degree on the Columbia campus, and have a cumulative GPA
of 2.75 or higher.
Be in good standing and have completed 30 semester hours with a GPA
of 2.75 or higher on a USC campus.
For more information visit the Arnold School website at
http://www.sph.sc.edu/undergrad.
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