Undergraduate programs in public health are growing rapidly. At colleges and universities throughout the United States, both the number of programs and the number of students have expanded greatly in the past decade. In response to this trend, the Council for Education of Public Health (CEPH) has begun to accredit undergraduate public health programs, with the first programs approved in 2014. Around the country programs exhibit wide variation, from concentrations in liberal arts colleges to pre-clinical foundations at doctorate-granting universities to undergraduate programs in accredited schools of public health. Faculty, both new and seasoned, are fully aware of the need to integrate undergraduate education in public health with graduate education—but the roadmaps of exactly how to do so are still nascent.
The purpose of this Research Topic is to gather articles describing this variation, with the intent that the collective body of work will facilitate analysis and discussion of what makes a quality education and builds a competent workforce. Articles to be welcomed include:
- Literature Review—what’s already out there about the pedagogy of UG PH edu
- Descriptions of curricula for degrees, certificates, or licenses
- Programs at universities, community and technical colleges, public and private institutions, other institutional sponsorship; on-line and in-person
- Career paths
- Student recruitment and counseling
- Evaluation of curricula, courses, teaching techniques
- Transition or ladders to graduate education, both clinical and other
- Use of technology and media
- Competencies and measurement at the undergraduate level
- Accreditation, certification, licensure
- National issues versus global context
- Commentaries
- Research and analyses
- Review and mini-reviews
Undergraduate programs in public health are growing rapidly. At colleges and universities throughout the United States, both the number of programs and the number of students have expanded greatly in the past decade. In response to this trend, the Council for Education of Public Health (CEPH) has begun to accredit undergraduate public health programs, with the first programs approved in 2014. Around the country programs exhibit wide variation, from concentrations in liberal arts colleges to pre-clinical foundations at doctorate-granting universities to undergraduate programs in accredited schools of public health. Faculty, both new and seasoned, are fully aware of the need to integrate undergraduate education in public health with graduate education—but the roadmaps of exactly how to do so are still nascent.
The purpose of this Research Topic is to gather articles describing this variation, with the intent that the collective body of work will facilitate analysis and discussion of what makes a quality education and builds a competent workforce. Articles to be welcomed include:
- Literature Review—what’s already out there about the pedagogy of UG PH edu
- Descriptions of curricula for degrees, certificates, or licenses
- Programs at universities, community and technical colleges, public and private institutions, other institutional sponsorship; on-line and in-person
- Career paths
- Student recruitment and counseling
- Evaluation of curricula, courses, teaching techniques
- Transition or ladders to graduate education, both clinical and other
- Use of technology and media
- Competencies and measurement at the undergraduate level
- Accreditation, certification, licensure
- National issues versus global context
- Commentaries
- Research and analyses
- Review and mini-reviews