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Applicable only to students admitted during the 2019-2020 academic year.
Health and allied working professionals who are unable to pursue a degree program during their regular working hours may earn the M.P.H. degree by completing course work in extended weekend sessions during the academic year. Courses are taught by the faculty of the School of Public Health.
Advising
An adviser is appointed for each new master’s student by the head of the department. Student and adviser together agree upon a study list for each academic quarter and any subsequent alterations must be approved by both the adviser and the Associate Dean of Student Affairs. Students are expected to meet with their advisers each quarter.
An adviser is responsible for the student’s academic progress. Progress is evaluated on an ongoing basis. At the end of each quarter, the Associate Dean of Student Affairs reviews academic listings of students and notifies them and the advisers when the cumulative grade-point average is below 3.0. Advisers review each case with their advisees and make recommendations to the Associate Dean of Student Affairs for continuance or dismissal. Students who wish to change advisers must file a petition which must be approved by the new adviser, the department chair, and the Associate Dean for Student Affairs.
Areas of Study
Community Health Sciences offers a concentration in health education/promotion.
Foreign Language Requirement
None.
Course Requirements
Community Health Sciences
The MPH | HP degree program is an executive-style program for people with at least three years of work experience in the health care field. It is a two-year program requiring 60 units and a Master’s Project. All students are required to complete Community Health Sciences 210, 211A-211B, 213, 281, 282, 292, 400, 482, 487, and M287. Students are also required to complete one course from each of the public health departments: Biostatistics 100A, Epidemiology 100, Health Policy and Management and Environmental Health Sciences 100.
Courses taken for S/U grading may not be applied toward degree requirements. Students must maintain an average of no less than 3.0 (B) in all courses required or elected during graduate residence at the University of California.
In lieu of field training, students are required to complete a Master’s Project. The Master’s Project gives students an opportunity to apply knowledge and skills gained through course work to a specific problem of significance in the field of health education and health promotion. This project must include original work. It is completed over a one-year period and represents 8 units (CHS 400 & CHS 482) of work. It can describe original research, design of an intervention, an evaluation design or other work. The student and supervising faculty member (Project Supervisor) negotiate the nature and parameters.
Teaching Experience
Not required.
Field Experience
None.
Capstone Plan
Students must pass a departmental comprehensive examination. Students may be reexamined once. The aim of the examination, as a culminating experience, is to assess the student’s ability to select theories, methods, and techniques from across the content matter of a field, integrate and synthesize knowledge, and apply it to the solution of public health problems.
Thesis Plan
None.
Time-to-Degree
From graduate admission to award of the degree, normal progress is two years of extended weekend sessions.
| DEGREE | NORMATIVE TIME TO ATC (Quarters) | NORMATIVE TTD |
MAXIMUM TTD |
| M.P.H. | 6 | 6 | 15 |
Termination of Graduate Study and Appeal of Termination
University Policy
A student who fails to meet the above requirements may be recommended for termination of graduate study. A graduate student may be disqualified from continuing in the graduate program for a variety of reasons. The most common is failure to maintain the minimum cumulative grade point average (3.00) required by the Academic Senate to remain in good standing (some programs require a higher grade point average). Other examples include failure of examinations, lack of timely progress toward the degree as determined by the dissertation committee, and poor performance in core courses. Probationary students (those with cumulative grade point averages below 3.00) are subject to immediate dismissal upon the recommendation of their department. University guidelines governing termination of graduate students, including the appeal procedure, are outlined in Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.