BS in Health Science - Curriculum Requirements

Technical Competencies - Health Science

All students are expected to carry out the tasks that are required in both foundational and advanced science courses, laboratories, clinical experiences either without accommodation(s) or with those accommodation(s) that are reasonable in the range of settings and circumstances in which the educational program is based.

These skills encompass academic and non-academic technical standards essential to Centenary University Health Science Program.

Observation

The ability to observe is required for demonstrations, visual presentations in lectures, laboratories, field trips, clinical experiences and/or internships. They must be able to evaluate performance of self and others critically, and process sensory information from people and from the environment.

 

Students must be able to observe, participate in, and conduct experiments within the laboratory, instructional setting, and/or healthcare facility as required by the Health Science Program.

Communication

Students must be able to communicate effectively and efficiently in both oral and written English, either independently or through the use of an intermediary. If a student uses an intermediary, the intermediary is permitted to function only as an information conduit and may not serve in an integrative or evaluative role.

Students must be able to:

  • communicate effectively with others, both verbally and written, and also demonstrate awareness of own non-verbal communication and how it may be interpreted by others.
  • communicate theoretical, experimental or clinical findings as required by the program with faculty, peers, patients/clients, or other professionals.
  • present information to the class using visual media aids.
  • respond to questions in a manner that reflects the norms of professional discourse.

Students must possess communication skills at a level sufficient to accomplish, in a timely manner, all administrative requirements and to meet the performance expectations of the faculty in all areas of the curriculum.

Sensory and Motor Function

Students must possess motor and sensory capacity to perform activities required for the Health Science Program. They must be able to execute movements to complete classroom activities or provide instruction for a proxy to complete the task. These tasks may include, but are not limited to standard use of the equipment, instruments, apparatus, or tools required by the appropriate area of study, practice, internship, or research.

Students must be able to:

  • move in a timely manner to various classrooms and locations required for class/clinical experiences and maintain self properly in a classroom situation for extended periods of time.
  • participate successfully in a structured manipulative movement or in an exploratory learning activity involving handling objects of various size, weight, and height.

Intellectual

Students must have the intellectual ability to exercise sound judgment and to complete all task and responsibilities in a timely and professional manner.

Students must be able to:

  • measure, calculate, reason, analyze, hypothesize, and synthesize ideas into final deliverables. It is also essential that students are able to absorb and process information from faculty, peers, patients/clients, supervisors, and/or from the scientific literature, as components of problem solving and critical thinking.
  • acquire information from experiences and demonstrations conveyed through coursework, lecture, group seminar, small group activities, field trips, laboratories, clinical experiences, internships, and other. These may include, but are not limited to laboratory dissection and demonstrations, microbial cultures, microscopic images of microorganisms and tissues in normal and pathologic states.
  • use a computer effectively.
  • collect and understand information from a variety of sources such as, computer information systems (including email, databases, literature searches and data retrieval), written documents (including graphs/figures, tables, journal articles), films, slides, videos, and other electronic media.
  • follow universal precautions against contamination and cross-contamination with infectious agents, toxins, chemicals, and/or other physical or biological hazards.
  • work in a manner that is safe for themselves and others, and respond appropriately to emergencies and urgent situations.
  • receive, process, and comprehend information displayed in print, lecture, and audio-visual formats, follow instructions, adhere to safety precautions and recognize potentially dangerous situations and how to minimize risk to self and others.
  • maintain privacy and confidentiality of peers, faculty, staff, and clients.

Behavioral and Social Attributes

Students must demonstrate maturity, respect, and tolerance required for collaborative teamwork and other professional and socio-cultural interactions.

Students must be able to:

  • develop mature, sensitive, non-judgmental, non-prejudiced and effective relationships with faculty, supervisors, peers, patients/clients, and other professionals in the academic community.
  • accept and give constructive feedback.
  • maintain and exhibit professional behavior at all times. They must demonstrate honesty, integrity, ethics, responsibility, accountability, compassion and respect for others. This includes respect for others’ rights and property.
  • understand and comply with ethical standards for the conduct of research.
  • demonstrate emotional stability to function effectively under stress and to adapt to changing environments.

BS In Health Science Degree Audit

B.S. in Health Science

University Core Requirements

Academic Foundations (8 credits)

[Dept]

1105

Broad, Enduring Interest

4CR

 

BIO

1205

Nature of Work in the Sciences

2CR

 

LAS

1305

Wellness

2CR

 

 

Communications (12 credits)

WRI

1001 or

1002

Comp. & Rhet. I or Comp. & Rhet. II

4CR

 

WRI

2200

Intensive Research Writing I

2CR

 

WRI

2210

Intensive Research Writing II

2CR

 

COM

2001

Public Speaking

4CR

 

 

 

 

 

 

STEM Engagement (8 credits)

*MTH

2151

Calculus

X

Major Requirement

*BIO

1301

General Biology I

X

Major Requirement

*BIO

1101

General Biology I Lab

X

Major Requirement

 

Culture & Society (12 credits)

BIO

4300

Bioethics (Social & Comm. Resp.)

X

Major Requirement

 

 

Global Culture

4CR

 

 

 

Creative Expression & Self

4CR

 

 

Major Related Requirements (24 Credits)

CHM

1302

General Chemistry I*

3CR

 

CHM

1102

General Chemistry I-Lab*

1CR

 

CHM

1303

General Chemistry II*

3CR

 

CHM

1103

General Chemistry II-Lab*

1CR

 

MTH

1501

Statistics I

4CR

 

MTH

1502

Statistics II

4CR

 

MTH

2151

Calculus*

4CR

 

PHY

2300

Physics I*

4CR

 

PHY

2100

Physics I-Lab*

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Major Requirements (68 CR)

BIO

1303

Human Nutrition & Performance

3CR

 

BIO

1103

Human Nutrition & Perf. Lab

1CR

 

BIO

1301

General Biology I*

3CR

 

BIO

1101

General Biology I Lab*

1CR

 

BIO

1302

General Biology II

3CR

 

BIO

1102

General Biology II Lab

1CR

 

BIO

2302

Anatomy & Physiology I*

3CR

 

BIO

2102

Anatomy & Physiology I-Lab*

1CR

 

BIO

2303

Anatomy & Physiology II*

3CR

 

BIO

2103

Anatomy & Physiology II-Lab*

1CR

 

BIO

2300

Medical Terminology

2CR

 

BIO

4300

Bioethics (CU Value IV)

4CR

 

HSC

2000

Intro to Health Sciences

2CR

 

HSC

2400

Integrative Health Coaching

2CR

 

HSC

3306

Kinesiology*

3CR

 

HSC

3106

Kinesiology-Lab*

1CR

 

HSC

3440

Health Promotion Strategies

2CR

 

PSY

1000

Introduction to Psychology*

4CR

 

PSY

2020

Lifespan Develop. Psychology

4CR

 

PUB

2000

The History of Public Health*

3CR

 

PUB

3000

Epidemiology

3CR

 

PUB

3010

Health Services

3CR

 

INT

4000

Internship

3CR

 

 

 

 

 

 

Electives: Select 12 credits for the following:

INT

3000

Internship

4CR

 

PHY

2301

Physics II

3CR

 

PHY

2101

Physics II-Lab

1CR

 

PSY

3024

Abnormal Psychology

4CR

 

PUB

3320

Health Economics

3CR

 

SOC

1025

Introduction to Sociology

4CR

 

These electives are based on prerequisites for graduate programs. Physical Therapy programs require Physics II with lab. Occupational Therapy programs require Abnormal Psychology and Introduction to Sociology.

 

Also recommended (not required):

EST

2015

Intro Eq. Assist Activ. & Ther.

2CR

 

Total number of credits: 120

Notes:

  1. To earn a Bachelor degree, all graduates must successfully complete a minimum of 120 credit hours, major dependent.
  2. Minimum of 30 credits must be taken at Centenary University.
  3. All graduates must have a minimum cumulative grade point average of 2.0 or above.
  4. All graduates mu st have a minimum of 2.0 GPA in their major(s).
  5. Courses that are special topic listed in the title, typically ending with a 99, are repeatable. Courses are counted multiple times and do not replace grades of the previous special topic course.
  6. Credits can only be shared between the core and the major or core and minor requirements. Shared credits within the core requirements is not allowed.
  7. * Must earn C- or better in all major and major-related courses.
  8. ± Select electives based on pursuit in physical therapy or occupational therapy.

BS-Health-Science-Recommended-Four-Year-Sequence

Centenary University
B.S. in Health Science
Recommended Four Year Sequence
2023-2024

YEAR 1 (Fall)

Course #

Title

Credits

Completed

BIO 1205

Nature of Work in the Sciences

2

 

BIO 1301/1101

General Biology I and Lab

3/1

 

WRI 1001/1002

Composition & Rhetoric (By self-placement)

4

 

BIO 1303/1103

Human Nutrition & Performance and Lab

3/1

 

Core

Wellness (CU Value I)

2

 

YEAR 1 (Spring)

Course #

Title

Credits

Completed

BIO 1302/1102

General Biology II and Lab (BIO 1301 ≥C)

4

 

BIO 2300

Medical Terminology

2

 

MTH 2151

Calculus**

4

 

Core

Broad, Enduring Interest (CU Value I)

4

 

YEAR 2 (FALL)

BIO 2302/2102

Anatomy & Physiology I and Lab (BIO 1301 ≥C)

3/1

 

CHM 1302/1102

General Chemistry I and Lab (placement test, MTH 1600)

3/1

 

MTH 1501

Statistics I

4

 

SOC 1025

Introduction to Sociology

4

 

YEAR 2 (Spring)

BIO 2303/2103

Anatomy & Physiology I and Lab (BIO 2302 ≥C)

3/1

 

CHM 1303/1103

General Chemistry II and Lab (placement test, MTH166)

3/1

 

MTH 1502

Statistics II

4

 

PSY 1000

Introduction to Psychology

4

 

YEAR 3 (FALL)

HSC 2000

Introduction to Health Sciences

2

 

PHY 2300/2100

Physics I and Lab

3/1

 

PSY 2020

Lifespan Developmental Psychology

4

 

WRI 2200

Intensive Research Writing I

2

 

Elective

Elective

4

 

 

 

 

 

YEAR 3 (Spring)

BIO 4300

Bioethics (CU Value IV)

4

 

PUB 2000

The History of Public Health

3

 

PSY 3024

Abnormal Psychology

4

 

WRI 2210

Intensive Research Writing II

2

 

YEAR 4 (Fall)

HSC 2400

Integrative Health Coaching (HSC 2000)

2

 

HSC 3440

Health Promotion Strategies

2

 

HSC 3306/3106

Kinesiology and Lab

3/1

 

COM 2001

Public Speaking (CU Value II)

4

 

Core

Creative Expression and Self (CU Value IV)

4

 

YEAR 4 (Spring)

Core

Global Culture (CU Value IV)

4

 

PUB 3000

Epidemiology (MTH 1502)

4

 

PUB 3010

Health Services (PUB 2000)

3

 

INT 4000

Internship

4

 

 

Total Credits

120

 

** Chemistry/math placement test must be taken prior to entry in course