Discover how a Bachelor’s degree in Community Health can support your calling to serve others.
A Bachelor’s degree in Community Health expands your knowledge of health-related fields and prepares you to serve diverse populations. You’ll have the opportunity to tailor your coursework by choosing from concentrations in Gerontology, Human Services, Public Health, Women’s Health and Healthcare Business. A traditional option for those with no transfer credit and a post-associate degree option for those with their associate’s degree are available. Dual degree options are available in Nursing, Health Information Technology, Physical Therapist Assistant and Radiography.
The Bachelor's degree in Community Health, Community-Based track is designed for three primary audiences:
The interdisciplinary curriculum of the Community Health program includes courses that address vulnerable populations, health literacy and patient advocacy, legal and ethical implications, environmental and cultural influences on health, trauma informed care, and grant writing. As you move deeper within the program, you will select from the following concentrations to increase your knowledge base:
In the final two semesters of the program, you will integrate classroom material with hands-on experience at an agency or organization of your choice. This 90-hour fieldwork component allows you to work in and observe all aspects of the agency, develop advanced skills, apply concepts from your classes, and gain practical experience in your chosen concentration. You will develop a project that incorporates your course work and fieldwork experiences in the Capstone course taken your final semester.
The Community Health program is also ideal for students who have obtained or are in the process of obtaining an associate’s degree at Clarkson College. The major benefit of this dual degree option is that it allows students to apply their credit hours earned in their associate’s degree program toward their Bachelor’s degree in Community Health. Students enrolled in the Dual Degree program select one of the above concentrations as their focus (see curriculum plan for details). This route enables students to complete the bachelor’s degree in as few as three to four additional semesters.
Dual Degree Options:
Students choose one course from each of the following Core groups (9 semester hours): Intercultural Communication (ICC) Humanities (HUM) Ethics, Empathy, and Advocacy (EEA)
Courses | Semester Hours |
---|---|
◊ IC Core (ICC Core) - Intercultural Communication | 3 |
HU Core (HUM Core) - Humanities | 3 |
EA Core (EEA Core) - Ethics, Empathy, and Advocacy | 3 |
Total Semester Hours | 9 |
*GEN 101 only required for New Student Experience or Conditional Acceptance
Additional General Courses
(18 semester hours)
(18 semester hours)
(18 semester hours)
(18 semester hours)
(18 semester hours)
Courses | Semester Hours |
---|---|
HM 218 (HIM 218) - Data Analysis and Visualization | 3 |
BU 375 (BUS 375) - Concepts of Leadership | 2 |
BU 357 (BUS 357) - Healthcare Accounting and Financial Management | 4 |
BU 262 (BUS 262) - Business Communication and Marketing | 3 |
Total Semester Hours | 12 |
Students choose two of the following electives:
(4 semester hours)
Courses | Semester Hours |
---|---|
◊ CHL 400 - Community Health Fieldwork (concentration related) | 2 |
CHL 401 - Community Health Capstone (concentration related) | 2 |
Total Semester Hours | 4 |
Estimated rates for the 2023-24 academic year. Rates are subject to change. Find out more information about costs, tuition, and fees.
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