Concentrations
- Community Health - The Community Health Education concentration enables students to blend public health,
communication, human services, nursing and sociology courses in their professional
preparation. Health education specialists who work in community health settings, design,
implement and evaluate programs at the individual, group, institutional, community
and system-level to improve community health indicators. Health education specialists
also act as a resource on health information and advise on health policy.
- Worksite Health Promotion - The Worksite Health Promotion concentration enables students to blend public health,
communication, business and leadership courses in their professional preparation.
Health education specialist who work in the business and industry setting, plan and
coordinate programs in areas such as nutrition, fitness, weight control, smoking cessation,
hypertension, and stress management. In addition to assisting employees to maintain
or improve their health, they also advise companies on health policies.
- Health Coaching and Patient Education - The Health Coaching and Patient Education concentration enables students to blend
public health, communication, human services and sociology courses in their professional
preparation. Health education specialists who work in health care and medical insurance
settings, plan and coordinate programs in areas such as nutrition, fitness, weight
control, smoking cessation, hypertension, and stress management to improve patient
health literacy. In addition to program planning, health education specialists also
counsel clients to implement theoretically based behavior modification interventions.
Health Promotion & Physical Education Additional Information
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Program of Study
Core IMPACTS Curriculum (42 Credit Hours) (see KSU Undergraduate Catalog)
Lower Division Major Requirements (18 Credit Hours)
- PHE 2000: Writing and Analysis for Public Health
- PHE 2100: Introduction to Public Health
- PHE 2400: Behavior Theory and Applications
- WELL 2000: Foundations of Health and Wellness
- HPE 2250: Functional Anatomy and Physiology
- HS 2300: Cultural Competence in the Human Services
Public Health Core (33 Credit Hours)
- PHE 3150: Applied Analytic Techniques in Public Health
- PHE 3400: Disease Prevention and Management
- PHE 3850: Fundamentals of Program Planning
- PHE 4200:Introduction to Community and Worksite Health
- PHE 4300: Environmental Health Issues
- PHE 4350: Methods of Public Health Research
- PHE 4500: Epidemiology
- PHE 4600: Program Implementation and Evaluation
- PHE 4650: Health Coaching and Patient Education
- PHE 4710: Introduction to Public Health Internship
- PHE 3330: Health Systems & Health Policy
OR
- PHE 4720: Introduction to the Public Health Internship
Public Health Capstone (12 Credit Hours)
- PHE 4750: Public Health Seminar and Internship
Public Health Internship (6 or 9 Credit Hours)
- PHE 4750: Public Health Internship
Free Electives (9 Credit Hours)
Any course offered by the university regardless of prefix.
Note: Students who complete 9 credit hours of internship will need to complete 18
credit hours of Free Electives. Those who complete 6 credit hours of internship will
need to complete 21 credit hours of Free Electives.
Program Total (120 Credit Hours)
Select 18 or 21 credit hours of 1000-4000 level coursework from the University Catalog
depending on the number of Internship credit hours completed.
Note: Public Health majors are encouraged to consider a minor or certificate program
to fulfill elective requirements.
More information
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Public Health Policies
Course and Academic Expectations
In addition to the specific course and program related expectations and requirements specified by each faculty member in their course syllabi, the PHE program upholds high expectations of PHE Major’s performance in the classroom and in all related academic, departmental, professional, and field experiences. These expectations include but are not limited to the following:
Professional Dispositions
PHE majors are evaluated on their professional dispositions in every PHE related course in which they are enrolled. Dispositions reflect the values, commitments, behaviors, and professional ethics that demonstrate students’ behaviors toward the PHE Major, instructors, advisors, peers and other students, colleagues, communities, and the profession as a whole. Dispositions serve to guide as well as reinforce students’ learning, academic behavior and performance, as well as professional growth as future PHE practitioners.
The PHE and program-related faculty complete the disposition assessment either during (as warranted) or at the end of each semester (as warranted)—see below for Dispositions Rubric:
PHE Dispositions Rubric
What happens if a major receives a negative disposition evaluation?
PHE Professional Dispositions Scoring Guide: The minimal acceptable level on the Disposition Rubric is “L3 – Acceptable.” If a PHE Minor/Major is rated as a “L2 – Marginal” on any component of the Disposition Rubric in a course (either during or at the conclusion of a course as warranted), the course instructor notifies the PHE Program Coordinator and student. The course instructor then meets with the student and PHE Program Coordinator (if necessary), to determine how to improve performance in future courses. If a PHE Minor/Major is rated as a “L1 – Unsatisfactory” on any component of the Disposition Rubric, a formal remediation plan is developed in consultation with the PHE faculty member, academic advisor (if applicable), PHE Program Coordinator, and the student for the following semester. The student may not be formally admitted to nor progress in the program until the remediation plan is completed and disposition concerns are effectively and consistently addressed.
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Public Health Internship
PHE 4750 - Seminar and Internship in Public Health
12 credit hour capstone experience (2 Seminar credit hours and 10 Internship credit
hours which includes 400 field-based hours) offered each semester for eligible PHE
Majors.
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