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University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences May 6, 2023Response to Criterion Four
4.0 FACULTY, STAFF AND STUDENTS
4.1 Faculty Qualifications. The school shall have a clearly defined faculty which, by virtue of its distribution, multidisciplinary nature, educational preparation, practice experience and research and instructional competence, is able to fully support the school’s mission, goals and objectives.Since our last self-study report submission in 2007, 16 additional faculty members have been hired and ten have left the school.1 As of August 1, 2012 the school has 40 full-time faculty2 (39.64 FTE) and one part-time faculty member (0.70 FTE) in its five academic departments. A total of 17 14 faculty are tenured, six nine are in tenure-track positions, and 18 18 in term-track positions (Table 4.1.1). At this time, the faculty is adequate in number to serve the student body at its current size and is well equipped in terms of multidisciplinary background, level of educational preparation, excellence in teaching, high level of research productivity and strong background of professional practice experiences. Continued growth is expected in areas with development of new degree programs, especially the undergraduate public health program. The target set in 2009 was to achieve a total of at least 45 full-time faculty members by 2013.
The specific SPHIS documented guidelines for faculty promotion and tenure are noted in Section 1.3.c and include the “Policy for Promotion, Appointment and Tenure and for Periodic Career Review” and its appendices, available at https://sharepoint.louisville.edu/sites/sphis/ppgf/pubs/PAT%20Policy.pdf.
Faculty appointments and ranks are defined and outlined by the University of Louisville Redbook, available at http://www.louisville.edu/provost/redbook/, as well as the SPHIS Promotion, Appointment and TenurePAT document, , available at https://sharepoint.louisville.edu/sites/sphis/ppgf/pubs/PAT%20Policy.pdf, and are summarized below:
Faculty RankFaculty ranks are professor, associate professor, assistant professor, instructor and visiting scholar.
Type of AppointmentsFull-time Appointments
Requirements for appointment to a full-time faculty position in the school include, as a minimum, advanced terminal, usually doctoral, degree (MD, PhD, DrPH, DSc, EdD or equivalent). The appointee shall sign a contract, approved by the Board of Trustees, stipulating that the appointment is made subject to the regulations, policies and provisions of employment at the University including participation in the SPHIS Professional Practice Plan.
Temporary Appointments
Temporary appointments to the various academic ranks, which include lecturers and visiting faculty, are those made for specifically limited time periods less than one year for special purposes. In no case shall temporary appointments or renewals result in the acquisition of tenure.
Term Faculty Appointments
All non-tenurable, full-time faculty that are not temporary are term. Term Faculty is a full-time faculty appointment without tenure for a stipulated contract period not to exceed three years. Such appointments are not probationary appointments and no such appointments, continuation or renewal thereof results in acquisition of tenure or implied renewal for subsequent terms.
Probationary Appointments (Tenure Track)
Probationary appointments are appointments of full-time faculty members without tenure provided; 1 Of the ten faculty members who have left the school: one retired; one enrolled in medical school; two returned to countries of origin, one for family reasons and the other to become head of a new division at a prominent medical school; two changed academic focus and accepted faculty positions in other units at the University of Louisville; one accepted a research scientist position with a pharmaceutical company in another state; one established a private health equity consulting firm in another state; and the remaining two accepted faculty and/or administrative positions at universities in other states.2 The university considers faculty employees of greater than 0.80 FTE to be full-time.
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University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences May 6, 2023Response to Criterion Four
however, no probationary appointment to the University shall extend beyond the period when tenure would normally be granted.
Tenured Appointments
Tenure is the right of certain full-time faculty personnel who hold academic rank to continuous full-time employment without reduction in academic rank until retirement or dismissal.
Part-time Appointments
Part-time faculty are appointed by contract to teach specified courses or to engage in specified instruction, research or service less than full time for a designated period. No such appointment, continuation, or renewal thereof shall result in acquisition of tenure or implied renewal for subsequent periods. Part-time faculty shall hold rank according to education and experience.
Emeritus Appointment
This appointment may be conferred upon retired faculty if requested by the department faculty and dean and approved by the President and Board of Trustees
Gratis Appointment
This appointment is given to individuals who do not have a primary appointment at another teaching institution and meet the educational requirements and whose contribution supports the mission of the school. Requirements for this appointment include, as a minimum, an advanced, usually doctoral, degree (MD, PhD, DrPH, DSc, EdD or equivalent) unless it can be well-documented that master’s level training is a standard in a given discipline for faculty appointment at other research-intensive institutions.
Associate Appointment
This appointment is given to faculty whose primary appointment is with another school or department and whose contributions to the school are sustained and important to the mission of the school.
Adjunct Appointment
This appointment is given to individuals whose primary appointment is with another teaching institution, who meets the educational requirements for an appointment and whose contribution supports the mission of the school.
Joint Appointment
This appointment is given to faculty whose appointment is split between two departments or units within the university and whose salary support may be shared by these entities.
4.1.a. A table showing primary faculty who support the degree programs offered by the school. It should present data effective at the beginning of the academic year in which the self-study is submitted to CEPH and should be updated at the beginning of the site visit. This information must be presented in table format, organized by department, specialty area or other organizational unit as appropriate to the school and must include at least the following: a) name, b) title/academic rank, c) FTE or % time, d) tenure status or classification*, e) gender, f) race, g) graduate degrees earned, h) discipline in which degrees were earned, i) institutions from which degrees were earned, j) current instructional areas and k) current research interests. See CEPH Data Template 4.1.1.Please see following pages for Tables 4.1.1 through 4.1.5.
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University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences May 6, 2023Response to Criterion Four
Table 4.1.1: Primary Faculty who Support Degree Offerings of the School or Program: Bioinformatics and Biostatistics (BB)Name Title/
Acad. Rank
Tenure Status
FTE
Gen
der
Eth
nici
ty3
Gra
duat
e D
egre
es
Ear
ned
Institution Discipline Teaching Areas Research Interest
Brock, Guy Assoc. Prof
Tenure Track
1.00 M W MSPhD
University of New Mexico Statistics BiostatisticsBioinformaticsSurvival AnalysisCategorical Data
AnalysisStatistical Computing
Statistical bioinformatics / genomics, statistical genetics, survival analysis, statistical computing
Datta, Somnath Prof Tenured 1.00 M A PhD Michigan State University Biostatistics MathematicalStatistics
High dimensional data, clustered data, survival & multistate data, nonparametrics, empirical bayes, dental data, machine learning
Datta, Susmita Prof Tenured 1.00 F A PhD University of Georgia Statistics BiostatisticsBioinformatics
Data mining, statistical bioinformatics, proteomics, theoretical population biology, infectious disease modeling, cancer biomarker detection, birth defects research & survival analysis
Goldsmith, Jane Assoc Prof
Term Track
0.82 F W PhDMS
Case Western Reserve University
Mathematics & Statistics
Biostatistics Clinical trials, information theory, statistical power, nonlinear regression
Kim, Seong Ho Asst Prof Term Track
1.00 M A MSPhD
Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology
Applied Statistics BioinformaticsBiostatistics
Bioinformatics, metabolomics, comparative genomics, pharmacokineitcs & pharmacodynamics, cancer diagnostics, graphical models
Kong, Maiying Assoc Prof
Tenure Track
1.00 F A PhD Indiana University (Bloomington)
Mathematical Statistics
Biostatistics Statistical methods on dose-response study, combination drug study, preclinical experimental designs, & longitudinal studies
Kulasekera, Karunarathna
Chair & Prof
Tenured 1.0 M A PhD University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Statistics
Lorenz, Douglas Asst Prof Tenure Track
1.00 M W MAMSPH
PhD
University of Louisville Biostatistics (MSPH);
Mathematics (MA, PhD)
Biostatistics Survival analysis, nonparametric methods, statistical consulting, statistical computing, clustered data, analysis of next generation sequencing data
Myers, John Assoc Prof
Tenure Track
1.00 M W PhDMSPH
University of LouisvilleUniversity of Louisville
Cost-EffectivenessNon-Parametric
StatisticsBiostatisticsPublic Health
Quantitative Methods
Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
Decision Science
Quantitative methods, cost-effectiveness analysis & decision science
Parrish, Rudolph Prof Tenured 1.00 M W PhD University of Georgia Statistics Biostatistics Clinical trials, statistical methodology, genomic biomarkers, complex disease
3
Ethnicity: A, Asian, Asian ancestry; H, Hispanic, Hispanic ancestry; B, black, black ancestry; and W, white, white ancestry
Page 3
University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences May 6, 2023Response to Criterion Four
Name Title/ Acad. Rank
Tenure Status
FTE
Gen
der
Eth
nici
ty
Gra
duat
e D
egre
es
Ear
ned
Institution Discipline Teaching Areas Research Interest
Rai, Shesh N. Prof Tenured 1.00 M A PhD University of Waterloo (Canada)
Statistics Statistical Methods in Clinical Trials
Clinical trial design & analysis, pre-clinical study design & analysis, survival analysis, Longitudinal Data analysis, bioinformatics, quantitative risk assessment, sample surveys.
Wu, Dongfeng Assoc Prof
Tenure Track
1.00 F A MSPhD
University of California (Santa Barbara)
Statistics Biostatistics Cancer screening probability modeling & statistical inference, wavelet regression, Bayesian inference, smoothing spline, statistical decision theory, time series
Table 4.1.2: Primary Faculty who Support Degree Offerings of the School or Program: Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences (EOHS)Name Title/ Acad.
RankTenure Status
FTE
Gen
der
Eth
nici
ty
Gra
duat
e D
egre
es
Ear
ned
Institution Discipline Teaching Areas Research Interest
Hoyle, Gary Prof Tenured 1.00 M W PhD Duke University Biochemistry Environmental Health
Pulmonary Toxicology
Pulmonary toxicology
Jacobs, Robert Prof Term Track
1.00 M W PhDMS
University of North Carolina School of Public Health
Baylor University
Environmental Sciences & Engineering
Limnology
Environmental Health
Indoor Air Quality; Exposure Assessment, Risk Analysis
Neal, Rachel Asst Prof Tenure Track
1.00 F W PhD University of Missouri-Rolla (Missouri University of Science and Technology as of 2009)
Chemistry Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences
Maternal/child health, birth defects, environmental toxicology
Ramos, Irma Asst Prof Term Track
1.00 F WH
MD University of Puerto Rico School Medicine & Nordestana
Puerto Rico Health Science Center
MedicinePediatrics
Environmental Health
Epigenetics, fetal basis of environmentally induced pediatric disease, community medicine, community-based research, global environmental & occupational health, children’s health
Tollerud, David Chair & Prof
Tenured 1.00 M W MSMD
MPH
Stanford UniversityMayo Medical SchoolHarvard School of Public Health
Mechanical Engineering
MedicineEpidemiology
Environmental & Occupational Health
Effects of environmental pollution on asthma, diabetes & other health problems particularly among children, nanoparticles, stem-cell transplants, strategies to prevent work-related injury & illness
Zhang, Qunwei Assoc Prof Tenured 1.00 M A PhDMPH
MD
Fukui University (Japan)Zhejiang University (China)Fujian Medical University (China)
Environmental Health
Public HealthMedicine
Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences
Nanotoxicology & pulmonary toxicology, metals toxicology, genotoxicology & carcinogenesis, free radicals & pulmonary disease, diabetes & environment, wound healing
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University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences May 6, 2023Response to Criterion Four
Table 4.1.3: Primary Faculty who Support Degree Offerings of the School or Program: Epidemiology and Population HealthName Title/ Acad.
RankTenure Status
FTE
Gen
der
Eth
nici
ty
Gra
duat
e D
egre
es
Ear
ned
Institution Discipline Teaching Areas Research Interest
Baumgartner, Kathy B.
Assoc Dean for Faculty Affairs & Prof
Tenured 1.00 F W PhDMS
MA
University of Texas School of Public Health,
Southern Illinois University
EpidemiologyAnthropology
Epidemiology Cancer epidemiology (breast, cervical, lung cancer), respiratory disease, women’s health, epidemiologic methods
Baumgartner, Richard
Chair & Prof
Tenured 1.00 M W PhDMA
University of Texas School of Public Health
Southern Illinois University
EpidemiologyAnthropology
Epidemiology Chronic disease epidemiology (obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular, cancer)
Devasia, Rose Asst Prof Term Track
0.70 F A MDMPH
University of Louisville Vanderbilt University
Medicine, Infectious Diseases
Epidemiology Drug-resistant tuberculosis, community-acquired pneumonia, antibiotic resistance
Groves, Frank Asst Prof Tenure Track
1.00 M W MDMPH
Louisiana State UniversityJohns Hopkins University
MedicineEpidemiology
Epidemiology Analytic epidemiology of cancer, especially hematopoietic & lymphoproliferative malignancies; Descriptive epidemiology of neonatal jaundice; birth weight & cancer.
Hornung, Carlton Prof Tenured 1.00 M W MAPhD
MPH
Syracuse Univ.Syracuse Univ.Johns Hopkins Sch. Of Hygiene and Public Health
SociologySociologyEpidemiology
Clinical Epidemiology Methods Clinical Trials
Cardiovascular Disease
Cardiovascular Disease—Heart Failure, Risk Factors, Diagnosis and Treatment.
Kerber, Richard Assoc Prof Tenured 1.00 M W MAPhD
Northwestern University Anthropology Epidemiology Genetic, genomic, & molecular epidemiology, advanced methods, aging, cancer
Muldoon, Susan Assoc Dean for Student Affairs & Asst Prof
Term Track
1.00 F W PhDMPH
University of Pittsburgh University of Illinois at Chicago
EpidemiologyHealth Resources Management
Epidemiology Clinical epidemiology, women’s health, end of life issues
O’Brien, Liz Asst Prof Term Track
1.00 F W MAPhD
Northwestern University Anthropology Epidemiology Population genetics, aging, cancer
Taylor, Kira Asst Prof Tenure Track
1.00 F W PhDMS
MA
Emory University Stanford University
Wake Forest University
Epidemiology, Biology, Science Education
Epidemiology Genetic epidemiology of cardiovascular disease & reproductive characteristics
Yang, Dongyan Instr. Term Track
1.00 F A MDMS
Tianjin Medical UniversityUniversity of Alabama at Birmingham
MedicineBiostatistics
Epidemiology Cancer epidemiology, cardiovascular disease, clinical trials
Zierold, Kristina Asst Prof Tenure Track
1.00 F W MSPhD
Vanderbilt UniversityUniversity of Illinois School of Public Health (Chicago)
Chemical Engineering
Epidemiology Environmental/ Occupational Health
Epidemiology Environmental/occupational epidemiology, injury epidemiology, community-based research, children’s health, exposure assessment methods, mixed-methods research
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University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences May 6, 2023Response to Criterion Four
Table 4.1.4: Primary Faculty who Support Degree Offerings of the School or Program: Health Management and Systems Sciences (HMSS)Name Title/ Acad.
RankTenure Status
FTE
Gen
der
Eth
nici
ty
Gra
duat
e D
egre
es
Ear
ned
Institution Discipline Teaching Areas Research Interest
Austin, Ray Asst Prof Term Track
1.00 M W PhDMA
Virginia Tech Center for Public Administration & Policy
West Virginia University
Public Administration & Public Affairs
Sociology -Medical
Health Management
Heath Policy
Health policy, health reform, electronic health information exchange
Esterhay, Robert Chair & Assoc Prof
Term Track Rolling
1.00 M W MD Case Western Reserve University
Medicine Health Management & Systems Sciences
Health information infrastructure for individual health, health care, & population health; people, organizational, & social issues in health informatics; network science applications in health; complex adaptive networks in health; health transaction cost economics; systems dynamics in health
Nesbitt, LaQuandra
Asst Prof Term Track
1.00 F B MDMPH
Wayne State UniversityHarvard School of Public Health
MedicineHealth Care Management & Policy
Public Health Practice
Health disparities, health equity
Olson-Allen, Susan
Asst Prof Term Track
1.00 F W PhDMA
University of LouisvilleGeorge Washington University
Urban & Public Affairs
Security Policy Studies
Health Management
Public health & the built environment
Steiner, Robert William Prasaad
Prof Term Track
0.82 M W MDMPH
PhD
University of LouisvilleUniversity of North Carolina
MedicineEpidemiologyEpidemiology
Health management & systems sciences
Health services & outcomes research methods
Measurement issues in health status assessment & quality of life assessment, healthy communities approach for improving community health status through policy development, evaluation of impact of health policy on population health.
Wainscott, Barry Asst Prof Term Track
1.00 M W MDMPH
University of LouisvilleUniversity of California (Berkeley)
MedicineEpidemiology
Management Health Management, Communicable Disease, Population Health Intervention Effectiveness
Table 4.1.5: Primary Faculty who Support Degree Offerings of the School or Program: Health Promotion and Behavioral Sciences (HPBS)Name Title/ Acad.
RankTenure Status
FTE
Gen
der
Eth
nici
ty
Gra
duat
e D
egre
es
Ear
ned
Institution Discipline Teaching Areas Research Interest
Clover, Richard Dean and Prof
Tenured 1.00 M W MD University of Oklahoma Family Medicine Immunization Update
Infectious Disease Epidemiology
Harris, Muriel Assoc Prof Term Track
1.00 F B MPHPhD
University of South Carolina
Health Promotion & Behavioral Science
Health Promotion & Behavioral Science
Program evaluation, community based participatory research, community health development, women’s health, Tuberculosis, HIV, obesity, health disparities
Page 6
University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences May 6, 2023Response to Criterion Four
Name Title/ Acad. Rank
Tenure Status
FTE
Gen
der
Eth
nici
ty
Gra
duat
e D
egre
es
Ear
ned
Institution Discipline Teaching Areas Research Interest
LaJoie, A. Scott Assoc Prof Term Track
1.00 M W PhDMSPH
MA
University of LouisvilleWestern Kentucky University
Cognitive Psychology
Decision Science & Biostatistics
Health Promotion / Behavioral Science
Disaster mental health, health-related decision making, risk communication, quality of life assessment
McKinney, Paul Assoc Dean for Rsrch & Prof
Tenured 1.00 M W MD University of Texas Internal Medicine Evaluation of Health Care Literature
Bioterrorism; epidemiology of infectious diseases
Walton, Peter Assoc Dean for Acad. Affairs & Asst Prof
Term Track
1.00 W MD University of Pennsylvania Medicine Introductory Public Health
Health equity, evolutionary biology & public health, health behavior
Wilson, Richard Chair & Prof
Term Track Rolling
1.00 M W DHScMPH
Loma Linda University School of Public Health
Public health Health Education & Promotion
Program & policy evaluation
Name Title/ Acad. Rank
Dept.4
Tenure Status
FTE
Gen
der
Eth
nici
ty5
Gra
duat
e D
egre
es
Ear
ned
Institution Discipline Teaching Areas Research Interest
Austin, Ray Asst Prof
HMSS
Term Track
1.00 M W PhDMA
Virginia Tech Center for Public Administration & Policy
West Virginia University
Public Administration & Public Affairs
Sociology -Medical
Health Management
Heath Policy
Health policy, health reform, electronic health information exchange
Baumgartner, Kathy B.
Assoc Dean for Faculty Affairs & Prof
EPH
Tenured 1.00 F W PhDMSMA
University of Texas School of Public Health,
Southern Illinois University
EpidemiologyAnthropology
Epidemiology Cancer epidemiology (breast, cervical, lung cancer), respiratory disease, women’s health, epidemiologic methods
Baumgartner, Richard
Chair & Prof
EPH
Tenured 1.00 M W PhDMA
University of Texas School of Public Health
Southern Illinois University
EpidemiologyAnthropology
Epidemiology Chronic disease epidemiology (obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular, cancer)
4 BB, Bioinformatics and Biostatistics; HMSS, Health Management and Systems Sciences; EOHS, Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences; HPBS, Health Promotion and Behavioral Sciences; and EPH, Epidemiology and Population Health5 Ethnicity: A, Asian, Asian ancestry; H, Hispanic, Hispanic ancestry; B, black, black ancestry; and W, white, white ancestry
Page 7
University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences May 6, 2023Response to Criterion Four
Name Title/ Acad. Rank
Tenure Status
FTE
Gen
der
Eth
nici
ty
Gra
duat
e D
egre
es
Ear
ned
Institution Discipline Teaching Areas Research Interest
Brock, Guy Assoc. Prof
BB
Tenure Track
1.00 M W MSPhD
University of New Mexico Statistics BiostatisticsBioinformaticsSurvival
AnalysisCategorical
Data AnalysisStatistical
Computing
Statistical bioinformatics / genomics, statistical genetics, survival analysis, statistical computing
Clover, Richard Dean and Prof
HPBS
Tenured 1.00 M W MD University of Oklahoma Family Medicine Immunization Update
Infectious Disease Epidemiology
Datta, Somnath Prof BB
Tenured 1.00 M A PhD Michigan State University Biostatistics MathematicalStatistics
High dimensional data, clustered data, survival & multistate data, nonparametrics, empirical bayes, dental data, machine learning
Datta, Susmita Prof BB
Tenured 1.00 F A PhD University of Georgia Statistics BiostatisticsBioinformatics
Data mining, statistical bioinformatics, proteomics, theoretical population biology, infectious disease modeling, cancer biomarker detection, birth defects research & survival analysis
Devasia, Rose Asst Prof
EPH
Term Track
0.70 F A MDMPH
University of Louisville Vanderbilt University
Medicine, Infectious Diseases
Epidemiology Drug-resistant tuberculosis, community-acquired pneumonia, antibiotic resistance
Esterhay, Robert
Chair & Assoc Prof
HMSS
Term Track Rolling
1.00 M W MD Case Western Reserve University
Medicine Health Management & Systems Sciences
Health information infrastructure for individual health, health care, & population health; people, organizational, & social issues in health informatics; network science applications in health; complex adaptive networks in health; health transaction cost economics; systems dynamics in health
Goldsmith, Jane
Assoc Prof
BB
Term Track
0.82 F W PhDMS
Case Western Reserve University
Mathematics & Statistics
Biostatistics Clinical trials, information theory, statistical power, nonlinear regression
Groves, Frank Asst Prof
EPH
Tenure Track
1.00 M W MDMPH
Louisiana State UniversityJohns Hopkins University
MedicineEpidemiology
Epidemiology Analytic epidemiology of cancer, especially hematopoietic & lymphoproliferative malignancies; Descriptive epidemiology of neonatal jaundice; birth weight & cancer.
Harris, Muriel Assoc Prof
HPBS
Term Track
1.00 F B MPHPhD
University of South Carolina
Health Promotion & Behavioral Science
Health Promotion & Behavioral Science
Program evaluation, community based participatory research, community health development, women’s health, Tuberculosis, HIV, obesity, health disparities
Page 8
University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences May 6, 2023Response to Criterion Four
Name Title/ Acad. Rank
Tenure Status
FTE
Gen
der
Eth
nici
ty
Gra
duat
e D
egre
es
Ear
ned
Institution Discipline Teaching Areas Research Interest
Hornung, Carlton A.
Prof EPH
Tenured 1.00 M W MAPhDMPH
Syracuse Univ.Syracuse Univ.Johns Hopkins Sch. Of
Hygiene and Public Health
SociologySociologyEpidemiology
Clinical Epidemiology Methods Clinical Trials
Cardiovascular Disease
Cardiovascular Disease—Heart Failure, Risk Factors, Diagnosis and Treatment.
Hoyle, Gary Prof EOH
Tenured 1.00 M W PhD Duke University Biochemistry Environmental Health
Pulmonary Toxicology
Pulmonary toxicology
Jacobs, Robert Prof EOH
Term Track
1.00 M W PhDMS
University of North Carolina School of Public Health
Baylor University
Environmental Sciences & Engineering
Limnology
Environmental Health
Indoor Air Quality; Exposure Assessment, Risk Analysis
Kerber, Richard Assoc Prof
EPH
Tenured 1.00 M W MAPhD
Northwestern University Anthropology Epidemiology Genetic, genomic, & molecular epidemiology, advanced methods, aging, cancer
Kim, Seong Ho Asst Prof
BB
Term 1.00 M A MSPhD
Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology
Applied Statistics BioinformaticsBiostatistics
Bioinformatics, metabolomics, comparative genomics, pharmacokineitcs & pharmacodynamics, cancer diagnostics, graphical models
Kong, Maiying Assoc Prof
BB
Tenure Track
1.00 F A PhD Indiana University (Bloomington)
Mathematical Statistics
Biostatistics Statistical methods on dose-response study, combination drug study, preclinical experimental designs, & longitudinal studies
Kulasekera, Karunarathna
Chair & Prof
BB
1.0 M A PhD University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Statistics
LaJoie, A. Scott Assoc Prof
HPBS
Term Track
1.00 M W PhDMSPHMA
University of LouisvilleWestern Kentucky
University
Cognitive Psychology
Decision Science & Biostatistics
Health Promotion / Behavioral Science
Disaster mental health, health-related decision making, risk communication, quality of life assessment
Lorenz, Douglas
Asst Prof
BB
Tenure Track
1.00 M W MAMSPHPhD
University of Louisville Biostatistics (MSPH);
Mathematics (MA, PhD)
Biostatistics Survival analysis, nonparametric methods, statistical consulting, statistical computing, clustered data, analysis of next generation sequencing data
McKinney, Paul Assoc Dean for Rsrch & Prof
HPBS
Tenured 1.00 M W MD University of Texas Internal Medicine Evaluation of Health Care Literature
Bioterrorism; epidemiology of infectious diseases
Page 9
University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences May 6, 2023Response to Criterion Four
Name Title/ Acad. Rank
Tenure Status
FTE
Gen
der
Eth
nici
ty
Gra
duat
e D
egre
es
Ear
ned
Institution Discipline Teaching Areas Research Interest
Muldoon, Susan
Assoc Dean for Student Affairs & Asst Prof
EPH
Term Track
1.00 F W PhDMPH
University of Pittsburgh University of Illinois at Chicago
EpidemiologyHealth Resources
Management
Epidemiology Clinical epidemiology, women’s health, end of life issues
Myers, John Assoc Prof
BB
Tenure Track
1.00 M W PhDMSPH
University of LouisvilleUniversity of Louisville
Cost-Effectiveness
Non-Parametric Statistics
BiostatisticsPublic Health
Quantitative Methods
Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
Decision Science
Quantitative methods, cost-effectiveness analysis & decision science
Neal, Rachel Asst Prof
EOH
Tenure Track
1.00 F W PhD University of Missouri-Rolla (Missouri University of Science and Technology as of 2009)
Chemistry Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences
Maternal/child health, birth defects, environmental toxicology
Nesbitt, LaQuandra
Asst Prof
HMSS
Term Track
1.00 F B MDMPH
Wayne State UniversityHarvard School of Public
Health
MedicineHealth Care
Management & Policy
Public Health Practice
Health disparities, health equity
O’Brien, Liz Asst Prof
EPH
Term Track
1.00 F W MAPhD
Northwestern University Anthropology Epidemiology Population genetics, aging, cancer
Olson-Allen, Susan
Asst Prof
HMSS
Term Track
1.00 F W PhDMA
University of LouisvilleGeorge Washington
University
Urban & Public Affairs
Security Policy Studies
Health Management
Public health & the built environment
Parrish, Rudolph
Prof BB
Tenured 1.00 M W PhD University of Georgia Statistics Biostatistics Clinical trials, statistical methodology, genomic biomarkers, complex disease
Rai, Shesh N. Prof BB
Tenured 1.00 M A PhD University of Waterloo (Canada)
Statistics Statistical Methods in Clinical Trials
Clinical trial design & analysis, pre-clinical study design & analysis, survival analysis, Longitudinal Data analysis, bioinformatics, quantitative risk assessment, sample surveys.
Ramos, Irma Asst Prof
EOH
Term Track
1.00 F WH
MD University of Puerto Rico School Medicine & Nordestana
Puerto Rico Health Science Center
MedicinePediatrics
Environmental Health
Epigenetics, fetal basis of environmentally induced pediatric disease, community medicine, community-based research, global environmental & occupational health, children’s health
Page 10
University of Louisville School of Public Health and Information Sciences May 6, 2023Response to Criterion Four
Name Title/ Acad. Rank
Tenure Status
FTE
Gen
der
Eth
nici
ty
Gra
duat
e D
egre
es
Ear
ned
Institution Discipline Teaching Areas Research Interest
Steiner, Robert William Prasaad
Prof HMSS
Term Track
0.82 M W MDMPHPhD
University of LouisvilleUniversity of North
Carolina
MedicineEpidemiologyEpidemiology
Health management & systems sciences
Health services & outcomes research methods
Measurement issues in health status assessment & quality of life assessment, healthy communities approach for improving community health status through policy development, evaluation of impact of health policy on population health.
Taylor, Kira Asst Prof
EPH
Tenure Track
1.00 F W PhDMSMA
Emory University Stanford University
Wake Forest University
Epidemiology, Biology, Science Education
Epidemiology Genetic epidemiology of cardiovascular disease & reproductive characteristics
Tollerud, David Chair & Prof
EOH
Tenured 1.00 M W MSMDMPH
Stanford UniversityMayo Medical SchoolHarvard School of Public
Health
Mechanical Engineering
MedicineEpidemiology
Environmental & Occupational Health
Effects of environmental pollution on asthma, diabetes & other health problems particularly among children, nanoparticles, stem-cell transplants, strategies to prevent work-related injury & illness
Wainscott, Barry
Asst Prof
HMSS
Term Track
1.00 M W MDMPH
University of LouisvilleUniversity of California
(Berkeley)
MedicineEpidemiology
Management Health Management, Communicable Disease, Population Health Intervention Effectiveness
Walton, Peter Assoc Dean for Acad. Affairs & Asst Prof
HPBS
Term Track
1.00 W MD University of Pennsylvania
Medicine Introductory Public Health
Health equity, evolutionary biology & public health, health behavior
Wilson, Richard Chair & Prof
HPBS
Term Track Rolling
1.00 M W DHScMPH
Loma Linda University School of Public Health
Public health Health Education & Promotion
Program & policy evaluation
Wu, Dongfeng Assoc Prof
BB
Tenure Track
1.00 F A MSPhD
University of California (Santa Barbara)
Statistics Biostatistics Cancer screening probability modeling & statistical inference, wavelet regression, Bayesian inference, smoothing spline, statistical decision theory, time series
Yang, Dongyan Instr. EPH
Term Track
1.00 F A MDMS
Tianjin Medical UniversityUniversity of Alabama at
Birmingham
MedicineBiostatistics
Epidemiology Cancer epidemiology, cardiovascular disease, clinical trials
Zhang, Qunwei Assoc Prof
EOH
Tenured 1.00 M A PhDMPHMD
Fukui University (Japan)Zhejiang University
(China)Fujian Medical University
(China)
Environmental Health
Public HealthMedicine
Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences
Nanotoxicology & pulmonary toxicology, metals toxicology, genotoxicology & carcinogenesis, free radicals & pulmonary disease, diabetes & environment, wound healing
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Name Title/ Acad. Rank
Tenure Status
FTE
Gen
der
Eth
nici
ty
Gra
duat
e D
egre
es
Ear
ned
Institution Discipline Teaching Areas Research Interest
Zierold, Kristina Asst Prof
EPH
Tenure Track
1.00 F W MSPhD
Vanderbilt UniversityUniversity of Illinois
School of Public Health (Chicago)
Chemical Engineering
Epidemiology Environmental/ Occupational Health
Epidemiology Environmental/occupational epidemiology, injury epidemiology, community-based research, children’s health, exposure assessment methods, mixed-methods research
Please see following page for Table 4.1.26.
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BS/BA in Public HealthTable 4.1.2 6 lists the projected enrollment and faculty FTE requirements for the BS/BA in Public Health, which is scheduled to begin Fall 2013. Projections for enrollment are based on the following assumptions:
1. (1) The program will start with a modest number of students (20) who begin taking public health courses in their junior year after taking two years of general education courses; (2) The program will double in size for the next two years, with 40 and 80 entering students, respectively;
(3) The rate of increase will begin to slow, with a 60% increase in the fourth year and a 40% increase in the fifth year.
[1.] The program will start with a modest number of students (20) who begin taking public health courses in their junior year after taking two years of general education courses;
2. The program will double in size for the next two years, with 40 and 80 entering students, respectively;3. The rate of increase will begin to slow, with a 60% increase in the fourth year and a 40% increase in
the fifth year.
These numbers are consistent with enrollment in undergraduate programs in public health in other large public universities such as the University of South Florida and East Tennessee State University.
Projections for faculty FTE are based on the following assumptions:
1. (1) A maximum student: teacher ratio of 30 for the program;
(2) A 3- hour lecture course represents 8% annual effort for a full-time faculty member; (3) Seminars and lab sections will enroll up to 25 students per section; [1.] (4) Lecture courses will enroll up to 100 students per section.A maximum student: teacher ratio of 30
for the program;2. A 3- hour lecture course represents 8% annual effort for a full-time faculty member;3. Seminars and lab sections will enroll up to 25 students per section;4. Lecture courses will enroll up to 100 students per section.
Table 4.1.26: Projected enrollment and faculty FTE requirements for undergraduate degree program in public health
Year 1
(2013-14)
Year 2
(2014-15)
Year 3
(2015-16)
Year 4
(2016-17)
Year 5(2017-18)
Students in junior year 20 40 80 130 180Students in senior year 0 20 40 80 130Total number of students in program
20 60 120 210 310
Projected Faculty FTEb 2.02 2.17 2.69 3.20 4.41
For additional information, please see section two of the undergraduate curriculum, available at [URL].
4.1.b. If the school uses other faculty (adjunct, part-time, secondary appointments, etc.), summary data on their qualifications should be provided in table format, organized by department, specialty area or other organizational unit as appropriate to the school and must include at least the following: a) name, b) title/academic rank, c) title and current employment, d) FTE or % time allocated to the school, e) gender, f) race, g) highest degree earned (optional: schools may also
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list all graduate degrees earned to more accurately reflect faculty expertise), h) disciplines in which listed degrees were earned and i) contributions to the school. See CEPH Data Template 4.1.2.There are eight voluntary faculty who are involved in teaching and mentoring of students (Table 4.1.27). Voluntary faculty appointments are non-tenurable and may be at one of four levels in a Department: Adjunct Instructor; Adjunct Assistant Professor; Adjunct Associate Professor; and Adjunct Professor. The process for appointment as a voluntary faculty member is provided in Appendix B of the “Policy for Promotion, Appointment and Tenure and for Periodic Career Review.”
Please see the following page for Table 4.1.37.
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Table 4.1.37: Other Faculty Used to Support Teaching Programs (associate, adjunct or gratis)
Dept. Name Rank Title & Current Employer FTE Gender Race Graduate Degrees Earned
Discipline Teaching Area(s)
HMSS Andersen, Shelia Assistant Professor
Consultant, Louisville Metro Department of Public Health and Wellness
NA F W MA, JD Sociology, Law Health Informatics
EOHS Bhatnagar, Aruni Professor Professor of Medicine and Distinguished University Scholar, UofL
NA M A MS, PhD Biochemistry, Chemistry
No teaching responsibilities currently
HPBS Buchar, Joan Assistant Professor
Program Officer, Foundation for Healthy Kentucky
NA F W MS, PhD Health Sciences, Public Health
Community Organization & Health Policy Advocacy
EOHS Davis, Deborah Professor Professor, School of Medicine, UofL NA F W MS, PhD Nursing Dissertation Research Methods
HMSS Heinbokel, John Assistant Professor
Consultant, CIESD, LLP NA M W AB, PhD Biology, Oceanography
Systems Thinking & Dynamic Modeling
EPH Kanotra, Saojini Assistant Professor
Director/Epidemiologist III Chronic Disease Prevention Branch, Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System Program, Kentucky Department for Public Health
NA F A MS, PhD MPH
Microbiology, Epidemiology
No teaching responsibilities currently
HMSS Potash, David Assistant Professor
Chief Medical Officer, Data Advantage Corp.
NA M W MD, MBA Medicine, Business Administration
Health Systems
HMSS Potash, Jeffrey Assistant Professor
Consultant, CIESD, LLP NA M W MA, PhD History, Social Science
Systems Thinking & Dynamic Modeling
HPBS Roy, Diane Assistant Professor
Consultant NA F W MA, PhD Sociology No teaching responsibilities currently
HPBS Smeltzer, Phillip Assistant Professor
OptumHealth NA M W MS, PhD Physical Education & Hlth Comm.; Health Sciences
No teaching responsibilities currently
HMSS Taylor, James Assistant Professor
Chief Executive Officer, University of Louisville Hospital
NA M W MBA, MHA, Dman
Finance/Marketing, Healthcare Admin, Organizational Change
Health Organizations
HMSS Thornewill, Judah Assistant Professor
Chief Executive Officer, GroupPlus LLC NA M W BA, PhD Literature; Interdisciplinary Studies
Intro to Health Systems, and Network Leadership
Please see the following page for Section 4.1.c.
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4.1.c. Description of the manner in which the faculty complement integrates perspectives from the field of practice, including information on appointment tracks for practitioners, if used by the school. Faculty with significant practice experience outside of that which is typically associated with an academic career should also be identified.SPHIS faculty members interact with a wide variety of organizations, from local governments to international not-for-profit groups. These relationships facilitate the incorporation of public health viewpoints into educational curricula, the practicum activities of students, community-related research projects, clinic-based research projects and the service mission of the school. These activities are important components of the appointment, promotion, tenure and annual faculty review processes of the school.
The current core faculty provide a wealth of experience from public health activities. In addition to the core faculty, adjunct faculty members who serve in public health departments at the state and local level bring the immediacy of practice concerns to full-time faculty and students alike.
Examples of such activities on the part of all faculty members are noted in the brief summaries below. A full listing of all faculty narratives will be included in the electronic resource file for the final self-studyare available at [URL].
Ray Austin, PhD, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Health Management and Systems Sciences. He served as Director of Planning and Program Development for the Southern West Virginia Regional Health Council, Inc., a regional health care program that integrated primary care service delivery and public health programs. He worked with county health departments, the state health department and federal government health-related agencies in the development and operation of primary care health facilities and public health programs. He serves on the Business Development and Finance Committee of the Kentucky Health Information Exchange Coordinating Council, which assists with the development of efforts related to collecting and sharing of health-related electronic data.
Kathy B. Baumgartner, PhD, MS, MA, is Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs and Professor, Department of Epidemiology & Population Health. She has been principal investigator and co-investigator of several population-based epidemiologic studies on breast cancer, cervical cancer and pulmonary disease over the past 20 years. This experience has permitted her to involve many students in public health research activities and to incorporate real-life study examples into the classroom. She is a primary contributor to the chapter on breast cancer in the upcoming Surgeon General’s report to update the health consequences of smoking and exposure to secondhand smoke.
Richard N. Baumgartner, PhD, FACE, is Professor and Chair, Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, member of the Board of Directors of the American College of Epidemiology, the National Council of Epidemiology Chairs, the Society for Epidemiologic Research, and a participant in the CDC program “Building Epidemiologic Capacity in Kentucky” (BECKY). He is a former charter member of the NIH Cardiovascular and Sleep Epidemiology Study Section. These associations allow him to integrate diverse perspectives on public health priorities and to ensure that the department’s research, teaching and service missions are nationally aligned and competitive with best practices in epidemiology. He is a primary contributor to the chapter on breast cancer in the upcoming Surgeon General’s report on cigarette smoking and secondhand smoke exposure.
Rose Devasia, MD, MPH, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Population Health. She worked in the Tennessee Department of Health, gaining field experience for two years as part of the EIS program at CDC. Her expertise in infectious diseases and outbreak investigations have helped her teach Infectious Diseases Epidemiology, Field Epidemiology and Emerging Issues in Epidemiology to graduate students. Her past research interest in drug-resistant tuberculosis enabled her to discuss the pressing issue of antibiotic resistance with students. She is currently pursuing funding for a grant dealing with infectious diseases resulting in infertility.
Robert Esterhay, MD, is an Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Health Management and Systems Sciences. His activities draw from the field of health information sciences and information and communication technologies. He has been at the informatics crossroads of individual health, health care and population health for over 35 years. He helped write the Kentucky eHealth Bill in 2005. Dr. Esterhay served as Co-Chair of the Kentucky eHealth Board and the Kentucky Healthcare Infrastructure
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Authority. He is currently a member of the Population Health Committee for the Kentucky Health Information Exchange (HIE) Coordinating Council. He helped develop the Louisville HIE organization. Dr. Esterhay previously served as a commissioned officer in the US Public Health Service.
Muriel J. Harris, PhD, is an Associate Professor in the Department of Health Promotion and Behavioral Sciences. She teaches the Critical Thinking and Program Evaluation and the Advanced Evaluation classes, for which all students are required to complete public health program evaluation field projects. Students work in teams or individually and must answer an evaluation question provided by the community based organization or government agency. They work in close collaboration with the stakeholder who provides information about the program and access to resources to enable students to complete the assignment. The requirements of the courses may include, but are not limited to designing tools for evaluation and conducting assessments to determine program needs, the suitability of evaluation or program outcomes resulting in real world experiences for the students, and support in evaluating their programs for the organizations.
Robert Jacobs, PhD, is Professor, Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, and Director of the SPHIS MPH Program. Dr. Jacobs is past Chair of the Committee on Organic Dust of the International Commission for Occupational Health (ICOH) of the International Labor Organization (ILO) and has collaborated on international health projects in Sweden, Moldova, and Nigeria. In 2010-11, Dr. Jacobs completed a Fulbright Fellowship with the West China School of Public Health at Sichuan University in Chengdu, China. Dr. Jacobs is currently a member of the Environmental Health Committee of the Louisville Metro Department of Public Health and Wellness and a member of the ASPH Environmental and Occupational Health Council.
LaQuandra S. Nesbitt, MD, MPH is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Health Management and Systems Sciences. As a public health official currently serving as the Health Director for Louisville Metro Government, she is an active public health practitioner. This allows for students and faculty to continuously engage with someone actively engaged in the field and allows for synergies between public health research and practice.
Irma N. Ramos, MD, is an Assistant Professor in the Department for Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Dr. Ramos is a physician-scientist with formal training in international medicine and pediatrics. Her areas of interest include environmental children’s health, global environmental health education, community medicine, and community-based research. She has provided executive leadership for several nationally recognized community outreach and education programs and is an internationally recognized leader in lay health worker education and training. She serves as community liaison for the National Children’s Study Center for Jefferson County, KY. Her current research projects are focused on the fetal basis of environmentally induced pediatric disease; community-based research with disadvantaged populations, environmental health literacy and epigenetics of environmental disease.
David J. Tollerud, MD, is Professor and Chair of the Department for Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences. He has incorporated elements of public health practice into his faculty activities primarily through teaching and mentoring. Dr. Tollerud tries to include as much “real world” personal examples of how concepts are applied in the realm of practice. While he is a full-time faculty member, he has been involved over the years in a number of consulting activities and committee work that have involved the application of environmental health principles in practice. In mentoring graduate students, he always tries to relate what they are doing or learning to future applications in a setting relevant to their professional aspirations.
Barry Wainscott, MD, MPH, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Health Management and Systems Sciences. He served as manager and chief physician with the Communicable Disease Branch of the Kentucky Department for Public Health from 2000 through 2005. His prior public health experiences include deputy director, medical director, and primary care director for the Jefferson County Health Department in Louisville; director of preventive medical services for the Santa Barbara County health agency in California; and physician health officer developing a district health department with regional programs serving a number of counties in north central Kentucky. His community health experience also includes the role of physician in preventive medicine with UofL Student Health Services. His teaching draws on this experience. Interests include communicable disease control, disease prevention and management, and health system efficiency and effectiveness.
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Richard W. Wilson, DHSc, is Professor and Chair of the Department of Health Promotion and Behavioral Sciences. For many years and up to the present, he has served as a consultant and evaluator for a variety of public health agencies: local health departments, state health departments, federal agencies, and many private nonprofit health organizations. While he has contributed his expertise in each case, he’s also gained a lot of real world experience, which he can bring to the classroom for MPH and doctoral students in public health. Because of his hands-on involvement, he is better able to prepare students for the world of practice.
Kristina M. Zierold, PhD, MS is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Population Health. She is an environmental and occupational epidemiologist who predominately focuses on applying epidemiology and environmental health concepts to community-based problems. Current examples of community projects that she is involved with in Louisville include: (1) a federally funded study working with racially diverse high-school students and teachers to study and promote workplace safety among teenagers; and, (2) a university funded project working with residents of multiple neighborhoods who are exposed to coal ash to assess exposure and health outcomes in children and adults.
Additionally, the school’s faculty members have served as members on a variety of state and local boards and advisory committees. A full listing will be included in the electronic resource file for the final self-studymay be found at [URL].
4.1.d. Identification of measurable objectives by which the school assesses the qualifications of its faculty complement, along with data regarding the performance of the school against those measures for each of the last three years.The school uses the following outcome measures to assess the qualifications of its faculty complement.
Table 4.1.48: Outcome Measures for Qualifications of Faculty Complement
Outcome Measure Target 2009-10 2010-11 2011-122.1.a Increasing the number of grants and
contracts awarded annually to 30 in 2013.
30 19 >21
2.1.c Increasing the number of faculty on funded research to 30 in 2013.
30 2528 27>26 26
2.2.c Maintaining the total number of publications in refereed journals at 25 in 2013.
25 5846 68>25 85
2.2.d Maintaining the number of refereed presentations and/or papers sponsored by national or international organizations at 25 in 2013.
25 112>12 105>9 55
Number of faculty holding a terminal degree. 100% 100% 100% 100%
Additional measures of faculty qualifications are provided by the following outcome measures for which specific targets have not been established.:
Leadership on national boards, study sections, editorial boards and advisory committees. Since 2007, faculty have had representation on a number of important groups, including the following:
Provision of expert peer reviews for manuscripts submitted to professional journals. Course Evaluations by Students. Students complete evaluations of all courses and instructors at the
conclusion of each semester. These evaluations are provided to each faculty member and departmental chair and contribute to improving the quality of instruction.
University and national awards for excellence. While there is no expectation for individual faculty to achieve these awards, each department seeks periodic recognition of its faculty through special awards for performance excellence.
Number of service or consulting engagements.
4.1.
e. Assessment of the extent to which this criterion is met and an analysis of the school’s
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strengths, weaknesses and plans relating to this criterion.This criterion is met. The SPHIS has a well-qualified faculty with a critical mass in each department to support the mission of the school, and has established criteria to measure these qualifications. The background and experience of the faculty provides the necessary combination of breadth and depth in the public health arena, with contributions in their respective fields at the national, state and local levels. Faculty members have established criteria to measure the necessary qualifications.
Strengths Despite the university freeze on hiring, permission has been granted to hire new faculty in key areas
to support the mission of the school. Faculty members bring a wide array of experience at the state, local, and national levels of public
health to bear on their activities.
WeaknessNone identified.
Plan SPHIS will endeavor to maintain the high standard of professional qualifications among all newly
hired faculty members.
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4.2 Faculty Policies and Procedures. The school shall have well-defined policies and procedures to recruit, appoint and promote qualified faculty, to evaluate competence and performance of faculty, and to support the professional development and advancement of faculty.4.2.a. A faculty handbook or other written document that outlines faculty rules and regulations.The Redbook, available at http://www.louisville.edu/provost/redbook/, is provided and maintained by the Office of the University Provost as a service to the University community. The Redbook, which is the basic governance document of the University, covers the organization and operation of the Board of Trustees and Board of Overseers; the organization and operation of the University Administration; the organization and governance of the academic programs; faculty personnel policies; staff organization and personnel policies; the student governance and student affairs administration. Although schools may have their internal policies, the policies must be consistent with the Redbook, as it is the controlling document. The school has four unique documents that are consistent with and expand upon the Redbook with the purpose of further defining school policies.
1. The SPHIS unit document, “Policy for Promotion, Appointment and Tenure and for Periodic Career Review” presents the criteria and procedures employed within the school for the evaluation of promotion, appointment and tenure requests and for periodic career reviews. This document applies to all SPHIS departments; however, each department may prepare supplementary written guidelines that specify additional requirements and procedures for these personnel actions so long as they do not disrupt due process nor set performance requirements lower than those established in the University Redbook or in the specific SPHIS criteria (Appendix A: Achievement (Proficiency and Excellence) in Teaching, Research and Service - Scholarship for Tenure). The content of the unit document applies to all faculty members. The policies regarding voluntary faculty are provided in a separate document (Appendix B: Appointment, Promotion, Retention, and Recognition of Voluntary Faculty). This document is available at https://sharepoint.louisville.edu/sites/sphis/ppgf/pubs/PAT%20Policy.pdf.
2. The school’s Bylaws and Rules are the official statement of the organizational structure and the rules of governance and procedures of the Faculty. This document is available at https://sharepoint.louisville.edu/sites/sphis/ppgf/pubs/Bylaws.pdf.
3. The school’s Professional Practice Plan is essential to maintaining a faculty of excellence in teaching, research and service and to providing appropriate control of faculty professional time in order to ensure fulfillment of academic responsibilities. The objectives of the Professional Practice Plan are to: define the role and scope of professional practice activities of the faculty; strengthen relationships between the faculty and the public health community; provide the faculty remuneration commensurate with their academic and professional qualifications and activities; encourage an appropriate degree of faculty involvement in public health service; and provide additional financial support for the school. This document is available at https://sharepoint.louisville.edu/sites/sphis/ppgf/pubs/Practice%20Plan.pdf.
4. The school’s Policies for Annual Reviews and Performance Based Salary Increase define: the development of the written faculty work plan in the form of an annual work assignment letter, the need for recording yearly progress toward promotion or satisfactory periodic peer review and the process for awarding salary increases. This document is available at https://sharepoint.louisville.edu/sites/sphis/ppgf/pubs/Annual%20Rev+Perf-Based%20Salary%20Incr.pdf.
4.2.b. Description of provisions for faculty development, including identification of support for faculty categories other than regular full-time appointments.The SPHIS recognizes the vital importance of ongoing development of skills both among full-time and part-time faculty members. Development opportunities are available to all faculty regardless of rank and FTE. To this end, the school provides funding support for critical faculty activities, including, but not limited to membership in professional organizations, travel for presentations at major meetings, continuing education coursework and skill development workshops through its departments to all faculty members. Funding for these activities is provided in part through Research Incentive Funds established for departments and individual faculty members through the university’s Office of the Executive Vice
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President for Research and Innovation.
The Schools on the Health Sciences Center campus through the Delphi-HSC Steering Committee offer at least two workshops each year focused on teaching and learning. Since [insert date] the following workshops have been offered.
Spring 2012 HSC Technology Panel Conversation
August 9, 2012: “What's Holding You Back? A Conversation about Integrating Instructional Technology into Health Sciences Courses.” Dr. Scott LaJoie, Health Promotion and Behavioral Sciences, was a panelist for this workshop.
The university has sponsored a “Celebration of Teaching and Learning” each February since 2004, dedicating one full day to the enhancement and recognition of teaching excellence among its faculty. All SPHIS faculty are encouraged to attend these events sponsored by the University’s Delphi Center for Teaching and Learning. Past workshops have included:
2012: Envisioning Teaching and Learning in the Digital Age 2011: From College to Career: Developing Generation NeXt 2010: Engaging Teaching, Engaging Learning 2008: Student Engagement: It’s Happening Here 2007: Fostering Critical Thinking
Periodically, skill development workshops are provided in the use of: Microsoft Office products, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Access; Adobe Acrobat; Reference Manager and EndNote; Ovid and PubMed for searching the Medline database; Lectora software for the enhancement of PowerPoint presentations; and Blackboard for creation of web-enhanced or web-based coursework. These workshops are also open to university staff.
NIH grant-writing workshops are presented at least once per year under the auspices of the Research!Louisville week of scientific activities. Additional workshops are offered each year targeting other specific programs, including NASA and the Small Business Innovation Research/Small Business Technology Transfer programs. Faculty members have attended development workshops offered by other educational institutions and the federal government. These include:
NIH Regional Seminars on Program Funding and Grants Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) - Medicare claims data and the Medical
Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS)
Part-Time FacultyThe University Provost, in conjunction with the Delphi Center for Teaching and Learning, sponsors the Part-Time Faculty Institute (PTFI), an annual development series that slows part-time faculty to enhance their teaching skills, meet with colleagues, and earn a transcript verifying their participation and a stipend of $300 for those who attend at least five out of six core presentations. The theme for 2012 was “Best Practices in the Learning-centered Classroom” More information on the PTFI may be found at https://louisville.edu/delphi/faculty-instructional-development/programs/part-time-faculty-institute/part-time-faculty-institute.html.
In 2012, the Delphi Center also facilitated the Part-time Faculty Learning Community (PT-FLC), which supplemented the PTFI with meaningful, ongoing discussion, dialogue, and activities. PT-FLC participants were expected to attend five of six additional monthly meetings, complete readings and other activities by assigned deadlines, and produce two deliverables—one individual, one collaborative—as follows: (1) submit at least one artifact (an assignment, classroom or online activity) exemplifying best practices to be made available on the Delphi Center’s Part-time Faculty webpage, and (2) Work collaboratively with an FLC colleague to conduct a peer classroom observation and offer feedback vis-à-vis best practices in learning-centered teaching (training will be provided to all participants of the FLC). Participants who completed the PT-FLC received and additional $700 stipend, a certificate of completion, and a copy of MaryEllen Weimer’s Learning-Centered Teaching: Five Key Changes to Practice. More information on the
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PT-FLC may be found at https://louisville.edu/delphi/faculty-instructional-development/programs/part-time-faculty-learning-community.html.
Faculty MentoringCurrently, the chair of each department serves as the primary mentor to junior faculty given that the ratio of faculty of advanced rank to entry-level rank is low. The chair meets with the faculty on a one-to-one basis to discuss faculty development, promotion and tenure issues, and progress towards goals at least twice per year. The chair and Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs are actively involved in reviewing and assisting faculty who are eligible for promotion and/or tenure. Although there is no formal mentoring program, as part of the ongoing faculty development workshop series, two workshops are planned for the fall of 2012 to address mentoring and the possible initiation of a formal “train the mentor” program in conjunction with the Delphi Center and the Office of the Provost.
Since August 2010, the associate dean for faculty affairs, in collaboration with a group of faculty, including the associate dean for academic affairs, one department chair, and one assistant professor have worked with Dr. Marie Kendall Brown, the Assistant Director of the UofL Delphi Center for Teaching and Learning and liaison for Faculty Development, to development a series of teaching and learning workshops at the SPHIS. One year into the design and development of these workshops, two junior faculty members were invited to join this committee (September 2011). The goal of this committee is threefold: to facilitate and provide a series of teaching and learning workshops by both external and internal faculty, specifically designed to address areas of interest and concern for all programs offered at the school; to provide a series of workshops that are increasingly driven by requests from the faculty; and to foster greater interaction and collaboration among faculty in the design and presentation of courses. As of July 31, 2012 a total of 14 workshops have been presented covering a variety of topics, including development of rubrics for group work, use of instructional technology, critical thinking, design and refinement of syllabi, and strategies to enhance teaching effectiveness (see section Table 4.2.1 for a listing of all workshops). Approximately 80% of the faculty has attended at least one workshop. Other areas of concern are planned for design and development in the upcoming year, including workshops focused on media training, faculty mentoring, and research. The latter two areas will be incorporated beginning in fall of 2012 and winter of 2013, respectively. One workshop on interaction with the media was presented on July 20, 2012; additional workshops will be scheduled to provide one-on-one role-playing with interested faculty.
Table 4.2.1: SPHIS Teaching & Learning Workshops
Date Presenter Title10/15/10 Sharron Kerrick, PhD Developing Rubrics for Assessing Group Work11/19/10 Cathy Bays, PhD Promoting Active Learning: Keys to Effective Classroom
Assessment03/25/11 Andrew L. Wright, PhD Using the Latest Instructional Tools04/29/11 Edna Ross, PhD Promoting Active Learning in Lecture Classes: Strategies & Tips
from the Trenches06/03/11 Linda Leake
and Richard Wilson, DHSc
Practical Applications of Instructional Technology in the Classroom
06/24/11 Patricia Payette, PhD What’s So Critical About Critical Thinking? Strategies for Fostering Disciplinary Thinking in your Course
07/22/11 Patricia Payette, PhD Refining your Syllabus Focus Core Course Concepts Student Learning
08/25/11 Keith B. Lyle, PhD Why Students Forget Most of What They're Taught...And What You Can Do About It
09/30/11 SPHIS Faculty From Theory to Practice: Reflections on Implementing Evidence-Based Teaching Strategies, Part 1
11/04/11 Cathy Bays, PhD Tools for Assessing Critical Thinking12/02/11 Marie Kendall Brown,
PhDStrategies for Enhancing Your Teaching Effectiveness
02/03/12 Patricia Payette, PhD Designing a Learning-Centered Syllabus
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Date Presenter Title03/16/12 SPHIS Faculty From Theory to Practice: Part 206/29/12 Pete Walton, MD Critical Thinking: The Biological Basis of How We Do It, Learn It,
and Teach It09/21/12 Rich Lewine, PhD Negotiating the Difficult Faculty-Student Relationship10/19/12 Jennie E. Burnet, PhD Teaching and Assessing Student Writing (Without Losing Your
Mind)
4.2.c. Description of formal procedures for evaluating faculty competence and performance.The formal process to evaluate faculty competence and performance begins with the department chairs. Annually, each chair reviews the full range of information regarding faculty performance in research, teaching and service, using criteria as described above, with the assignment of duties document as the standard of measurement. Ratings and recommendations for salary adjustment under the school’s performance-based salary increase policy are reviewed with each faculty member and forwarded through the associate dean responsible for faculty affairs to the dean. Evaluation forms become a permanent part of each faculty member’s file.
The Promotion, Appointment and Tenure (PAT) Committee reviews the performance of tenured faculty no less than every five years as part of the Periodic Career Review process. Additionally, formal review of tenure track faculty at the assistant professor level occurs during or after year 3 of the appointment cycle, in order to apprise faculty members of their progress toward achievement of promotion and tenure. As part of this activity, all activities in research, teaching and service are closely assessed under the guidelines stipulated by the Redbook. Faculty members are provided feedback through their chairs at the conclusion of the formal review process.
4.2.d. Description of the processes used for student course evaluation and evaluation of instructional effectiveness.The university has transitioned to an online course evaluation system. Starting Fall 2011 students can access their online evaluations via Blackboard and through mobile devices (including iPads). The benefits realized by using an online system include the following.
Online course evaluations allow students the opportunity to provide thoughtful feedback regarding their experiences in the classroom while ensuring their comments remain confidential.
Students have the option to "save and continue". This allows students to edit their responses before final submission.
Faculty members receive feedback from their students within a week to ten days following the end of the course.
UofL will realize an annual savings of over $100,000 by using the online course evaluation system over the current methods of evaluation.
Online course evaluations support UofL's environmentally friendly (i.e. "green") initiative.
The Office of Institutional Research and Planning (IRP) is working with the Office of Communications and Marketing to develop a marketing campaign that promotes student participation in online course evaluations. Moreover, the campaign will focus on the new ways technology is being used to make filling out course evaluations even more convenient.
In addition to the standard student evaluations described above, Dr. Richard Wilson, Chair of the Department Health Promotion and Behavioral visits at least one class session of every course taught by his faculty, to observe instructional methods, classroom management, and to draw conclusions about student engagement in classroom learning activities. Dr. Wilson gives each faculty member feedback on the standardized student evaluations, as well as his observations from class visits. He tries to identify an individual's teaching strengths while helping him or her to realize areas where they can improve. Dr. Wilson also links areas needing improvement with work assignments for professional development through Delphi workshops and other self-improvement opportunities.
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4.2.e. Assessment of the extent to which this criterion is met and an analysis of the school’s strengths, weaknesses and plans relating to this criterion.This criterion is met. Faculty development is strongly supported and complemented with evaluation of performance, competence and teaching abilities. Community service activities are given appropriate emphasis in the promotion and tenure process.
Strengths Funding for faculty development activities is derived in part by the return of indirect costs from grants
to the school. The university also provides substantial support for development of full- and part-time faculty.
Weakness There is need to focus greater attention on how minority faculty are mentored and guided through the
promotion and tenure promotion process to ensure their retention in the school.
Plan The associate dean for faculty affairs has initiated a greatly enhanced faculty mentorship process. SPHIS will seek innovative ways to evaluate faculty effectiveness in teaching.
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4.3 Student Recruitment and Admissions. The school shall have student recruitment and admissions policies and procedures designed to locate and select qualified individuals capable of taking advantage of the school’s various learning activities, which will enable each of them to develop competence for a career in public health.4.3.a. Description of the school’s recruitment policies and procedures. If these differ by degree (eg, bachelors vs. graduate degrees), a description should be provided for each.The school’s recruitment policy and strategies are as follows:
SPHIS is committed to recruiting an academically talented and diverse student population. Applicants for masters’ and doctoral degree programs are recruited from local, regional, state, national and international individuals who hold at a minimum a baccalaureate degree. Having students learn from each other is an important part of SPHIS’ educational mission. Therefore recruitment seeks a diverse student population that encompasses a wide range of characteristics, including social and economic backgrounds, races and ethnicities, special talents and personal achievement.
There is a centralized recruitment plan for school-wide programs (the Bachelor in Public Health, Bachelor/MPH, and MPH degree programs). Recruiting of master’s and doctoral level students is managed by the individual programs with administrative support provided by Student Services under the direction of the Associate Dean for Student Affairs. The policies/procedures followed by each program are discussed below
Goal:
A 15% increase Increase in the number of incoming MPH students through 2013 by 15%. Enroll 25 students in the Bachelors in Public Health program by Fall 20122013 Enroll 15 students in the BS/MPH program by Spring 2013
Recruitment StrategiesTable 4.3.1: Bachelor in Public Health: Community Outreach
Initiatives Resources Needed/Personnel involved
Timeline
Recruit community college students and other transfer students. A sizeable number of underrepresented and low-income students are enrolled at community colleges. Forming partnerships with these institutions is a strategy for recruiting under-represented students.
Personnel / Muldoon Ongoing, begin no later than 2/15/12.
Table 4.3.2: Bachelor in Public Health: High School Outreach
Initiative Resources needed Timeline
Collaborate with pre-college programs, high schools, and Magnet schools to identify prospective recruits
Personnel / Muldoon Ongoing, beginning immediately
Hold informational event in spring ’12 and fall ’12 semesters
$500 / Taylor
Advertise in UofL’s daily publication “The Cardinal”
$1000 / Taylor
Send promotional mailings to high schools
$200 / Taylor
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Initiative Resources needed Timeline
Offer 3-day summer programs (“camps”) that expose high school students to public health. Students will attend lectures, take public health oriented field trips, conduct experiments, and learn about the college entrance requirements, application, and financial aid.
$1000- Personnel, facilities and refreshments / Zeirold
Summer 2012 or 2013
Table 4.3.3: BS/MPH and MPH Programs
Initiative Resources needed TimelineRecruit at 1 graduate school fair and/or conferences
$1500-Personnel and table costs / Muldoon and Student Services
Variable
Establish relationships with faculty at other institutions to facilitate referral of potential graduate students
Personnel / email to avoid postage / Muldoon
Immediate
Collaborate with UofL departments of Biology, Chemistry, Psychology, Social Work, Math, and Communications to introduce public health career options to their students
Personnel / Muldoon Spring 2012
Host information sessions at the Career Development Center for prospective graduate students
Personnel / mileage / parking / Muldoon and volunteer students
Quarterly or by semester
Collaborate w/ Mordean Taylor-Archer in obtaining contact information on black undergrad students in the U.S
Personnel time / Muldoon Early spring semester ‘12
Collaborate w/ Mordean Taylor-Archer in obtaining contact information on Porter Scholars
Personnel time / Muldoon Early spring semester ‘12
Encourage underrepresented undergraduate students (presentations to university-sponsored clubs that include underrepresented students) to pursue graduate education
$500 RefreshmentsPersonnel / mileage / parking / Muldoon
March
Senior lettersInclude RSVP meet with students in library
$1000 postage absorbed by MPH program / Refreshments / Jacobs, Thomas
NPHW 12-1 April 2-8
Develop a list of schools with enrollment numbers in 7 contiguous states without MPH program (e.g., Murray, Morehead, Transylvania, Georgetown) that are 60-90 miles from a school of public health
Personnel / Student Services
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Initiative Resources needed TimelinePlace ads in school newspapers for schools above
$$$ depending on number of ads absorbed by MPH program / Student Services
Contact Bellarmine about career/educational fair
Personnel/cost of booth absorbed by MPH program / Student Services
KPHA conference Personnel and booth cost absorbed by MPH program / Thomas, Lewis, Muldoon
March
Table 4.3.4: All Programs
Initiative Resources Needed TimelineAPHA Conference Personnel/Funds (approximately
$1500/person paid by departmental funds) – / Muldoon, Wilson
November 2012
New recruitment video featuring students, approximately 3 minutes long
Personnel/ Video equipment/ Time spent editing – equipment donated by Scott LaJoie / LaJoie
March 2012
Update website Personnel /Cost of redesigning website “skin” programmed by Plone / Schreck, Banta
By end of spring semester ’12
4.3.b. Statement of admissions policies and procedures. If these differ by degree (eg, bachelors vs. graduate degrees), a description should be provided for each.Bachelor in Public HealthStudents applying for admission to the program are expected to come from four main sources: entering freshmen; transfer students from other accredited institutions; students switching majors, including students with no declared major; and applicants in the public health workforce with at least three years of experience.
As a result, the program has three admission standards for minimum GPA:
Without post-secondary GPA: not applicable With post-secondary GPA: 2.0 In public health workforce (3+ years): none
Students in the program must maintain a minimum 2.0 GPA in coursework not in the major and a minimum 3.0 GPA in coursework in the major. To graduate, Program students must have a minimum 2.0 GPA in coursework not in the major and a minimum 3.0 GPA in coursework in the major.
MPHThe ideal candidate for admission to the MPH program has received the equivalent of a bachelors degree or higher, has education or training in one or more health-related fields, has worked or studied in a public health-related situation, can comprehend and communicate effectively in English, has the recommendations of at least three persons in a health-related or advanced education field, has performed satisfactorily in one or more standardized test, and is very interested in pursuing a career in public health or a related field.
The requirements for admission to the MPH program are:
Bachelors degree from an accredited institution or its equivalent; Recommended minimum GPA of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale; and, If candidate’s primary language is not English, one of the following:
o Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) exam with a minimum score of 250 (after conversion for test type);
o Passing the exit examination for the advanced level of the Intensive English as a Second Language Program at the University of Louisville; or,
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o Degree from an accredited U.S. institution (requires provisional admission with evaluation of English language competency and potential requirement to pass the exit examination for the advanced level of the Intensive English as a Second Language Program at the University of Louisville).
An application is considered once all of the following requirements have been received:
Graduate application and payment of application fee. Three letters of recommendation written within the last twelve months. Official transcripts of all degrees. Resume or curriculum vitae. One-page personal statement written by the application that is a clear, substantive description of his
or her goals in public health, noting any professional or research experience. Official score from any of the following standardized tests: GRE, MCAT, DAT, GMAT, or LSAT. International applicants: Foreign credential evaluation of all degrees from non-U.S. institutions.
Please contact the MPH program prior to completing this requirement.
Dual Bachelor-MPH DegreeAdmission criteria for the undergraduate component of the bachelor-MPH program are:
Undergraduate student in good standing in the University of Louisville. Completion of at least 45 credit hours of undergraduate studies. However, an admitted student may
not enroll in any core MPH course until completion of 60 credit hours of undergraduate studies. GPA of 3.25 or higher for unconditional admission and 3.0 to 3.2499 for conditional admission. Permission of the director of the undergraduate program (“major field”) in which the student is or
becomes enrolled.
The major field is not required to be related to the health sciences.
Application The application requirements for the undergraduate component are:is a
Ccompleted program application.
The application includes name, contact information, and grant of permission for the school to access the applicant’s university records.
To continue in the undergraduate component, a student must:
Maintain student status in the university. Earn a B- or higher in each of the five required public health courses; if conditionally admitted, earn a
B or higher in the first required public health course taken.
Criteria for admission to the MPH component are:
Bachelor degree from the University of Louisville. Unconditional admission: undergraduate GPA of 3.25 or higher and grade average of 3.0 in the five
required public health courses with no grade below B-. Conditional admission: undergraduate GPA of 3.0 to 3.2499 and no grade below B- in the five
required public health courses.
Application requirements for the MPH component are: a
C completed graduate application and $50 application fee
MS/BDSThe MS program is available to students who have completed an undergraduate degree in biostatistics, statistics, decision science, or a related discipline and competency in college-level calculus and statistics, as evidenced by transcripts from postsecondary institutions attended by the applicant.
The following are additionally required for admission:
Graduate application (see www.graduate.louisville.edu) submitted to the School of Interdisciplinary and Graduate Studies (SIGS).
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Non-refundable application fee. At least two letters of recommendation written within past twelve months (can be submitted with form
at http://graduate.louisville.edu). Submission of GRE Quantitative section score to SIGS (no minimum score required). All postsecondary transcripts (may require foreign credential evaluation if not from accredited U.S.
institution). Statement of goals submitted to the department office (must include desired academic and degree
program).
MS/EpiStudents with a prior baccalaureate or more advanced degree in an appropriate field of study, from a regionally accredited university or college are eligible for the MS program in epidemiology. Previous coursework in mathematics and/or statistics and biological or health sciences (for example, biology, biochemistry, anatomy, physiology, microbiology) is strongly recommended. Applicants who are judged to not have sufficient prior coursework or experience in these areas may be required to take additional coursework.
The following are additionally required for admission:
Undergraduate GPA at least 3.0 on 4.0 scale. Official GRE scores taken within the past five years. Score greater than the 50th percentile on each of
the quantitative and verbal sections is recommended. If applicable, Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score in at least 60th percentile.
MSc/CISApplicants should have a minimum of 3.0 on a 4.0 scale and, in most cases, should have completed a professional doctoral degree (e.g., DMD, D.O., MD) or academic degree from an accredited institution or its equivalent. Other applicants with research experience may be considered (e.g., research coordinator).
Application requirements are submitted to the Graduate School Office of Admissions and include:
Formal application; Curriculum vitae; Personal statement, a one-page essay that discusses the student’s background and his or her long-
term goals in clinical research; Application fee; A minimum of two letters of recommendation; Official transcripts of all college work; and, Official scores on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) General Test (if applicant does not have
a doctoral degree).
PhD in BiostatisticsThe PhD program is available to students who are entering from the MS program or to students entering with a master’s degree in biostatistics, statistics, decision science, or a related discipline.
The following are additionally required for admission:
Graduate application (see www.graduate.louisville.edu); PhD in Biostatistics Page 4 of 8 Non-refundable application fee; At least two letters of recommendation written within past twelve months, which may be submitted
with the form available at http://graduate.louisville.edu/app/grad-rec.pdf; Submission of GRE Quantitative section score to graduate admissions (no minimum score required); All postsecondary transcripts (may require foreign credential evaluation if not from an accredited U.S.
institution); and, Statement of goals submitted to the department office, including the desired emphasis, if any.
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PhD/PHSApplicants for the PhD degree must submit an application along with:
• transcripts from all post-secondary educational institutions; • official report of GRE scores; • personal statement indicating area of research interest; • two letters of recommendation; and, • curriculum vitae or resume.
4.3.c. Examples of recruitment materials and other publications and advertising that describe, at a minimum, academic calendars, grading and the academic offerings of the school. If a school does not have a printed bulletin/catalog, it must provide a printed web page that indicates the degree requirements as the official representation of the school. In addition, references to website addresses may be included.The 2011-12 SPHIS Catalog is available at https://sharepoint.louisville.edu/sites/sphis/do/aa/catalog/pubcat/SPHIS%20Catalog.pdf.
For examples of recruitment materials and other publications and advertising, please see our website at http://louisville.edu/sphis/prospective-students/.
4.3.d. Quantitative information on the number of applicants, acceptances and enrollment, by concentration, for each degree, for each of the last three years. Data must be presented in table format. See CEPH Data Template 4.3.1.Please see the following table.
Table 4.3.5 Quantitative Information on Applicants, Acceptances, and Enrollments, 2009 to 2012
Program Status 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12Biostats MS Applied 17 16 12
Accepted 11 8 6Enrolled 10 2 4
Biostats PhD Applied 9 12 20Accepted 5 9 10Enrolled 2 3 5
CREST MSc Applied 12 18 9Accepted 9 15 9Enrolled 9 13 9
MPH Applied 118 138 126Accepted 50 62 52Enrolled 34 39 30
Epi MS Applied 8 10 7Accepted 1 8 2Enrolled 0 7 2
Epi PhD Applied 11 12 5Accepted 9 6 2Enrolled 5 5 0
Env PhD Applied 6 3 4Accepted 2 0 2Enrolled 2 0 0
Health Mgmt PhD Applied 11 8 11Accepted 2 2 6Enrolled 1 2 5
Health Promotion PhD Applied 6 6 10Accepted 2 0 6Enrolled 2 0 4
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4.3.e. Quantitative information on the number of students enrolled in each specialty area identified in the instructional matrix, including headcounts of full- and part-time students and a full-time-equivalent conversion, by concentration, for each degree, for each of the last three years. Non-degree students, such as those enrolled in continuing education or certificate programs, should not be included. Explain any important trends or patterns, including a persistent absence of students in any degree or specialization. Data must be presented in table format. See CEPH Data Template 4.3.2.Please see the following table.
Table 4.3.6: Student Enrollment Data from 2009 to 2012
Program 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12FT PT HC FTE FT PT HC FTE FT PT HC FTE
Biostats MS 14 14 28 18.2 11 14 25 15.2 4 10 14 7.0Biostats PhD 25 7 32 27.1 22 4 26 23.2 16 5 21 17.5CREST MSc 3 56 59 19.8 6 52 58 21.6 5 35 40 15.5MPH 115 62 177 133.
6113 65 178 132.5 55 53 108 70.9
Epi MS 1 1 2 1.3 9 3 12 9.9 4 5 9 5.5Epi PhD 17 11 28 20.3 28 10 38 31.0 15 10 25 18.0Env PhD 7 6 13 8.8 9 3 12 9.9 6 2 8 6.6Health Mgmt PhD
8 12 20 11.6 6 15 21 10.5 13 8 21 15.4
Health Promotion PhD
8 21 29 14.3 13 20 33 19.0 8 10 18 11.0
4.3.f. Identification of measurable objectives by which the school may evaluate its success in enrolling a qualified student body, along with data regarding the performance of the school against those measures for each of the last three years.Assessment of the programs in the school will utilize the following measures and targets pertaining to its success in enrolling a qualified student body. The measures and targets apply to each class of students enrolled in each program and for the school overall.
Pre-admission standardized test scores – average of 70th percentile or higher. Please see Table 4.3.7 below.
Admission rate of 70% or less (number of admissions / number of applications). Please see Table 4.3.8 below.
Enrollment rate of 70% or more (number of enrollees / number of acceptances). Please see Table 4.3.9 below.
Graduation rate of 80% or more. Please see Section 1.X.X for additional information on graduation rates.
Table 4.3.7: Pre-admission Standardized Test (GRE) Scores for Each of the Last Three Years
Component Target Fall 2010 Fall 2011 Fall 2012Verbal 70th percentile 633.24 634.55 590.34Quantitative 70th percentile 467.61 454.09 450.20
Table 4.3.8: Admission Rate by Program, 2010-11 to Present2011-126 (estimated)
Degree Program Target 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12MPH 70% 42.4% 44.9% 41.3%Masters 70% 56.8% 70.5% 60.7%Doctoral 70% 46.5% 41.5% 52.0%Average 70% 46.0% 49.3% 46.6%6 Student enrollment is based on fall numbers.
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Table 4.3.9: Enrollment Rate by Program, 2010-11 to 2011-12Present7 (estimated)
Degree Program Target 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12MPH 70% 68.0% 62.9% 57.7%Masters 70% 90.5% 71.0% 88.2%Doctoral 70% 60.0% 58.8% 53.8%Average 70% 71.4% 64.5% 62.1%
4.3.g. Assessment of the extent to which this criterion is met and an analysis of the school’s strengths, weaknesses and plans relating to this criterion.This criterion is met. Admissions policies and procedures have been formulated for all programs. Measures of success in enrolling a qualified student body have been adopted and are being tracked actively.
Strengths The associate dean for student affairs is involved in early recruitment activities, such as discussions
of public health careers at area high schools. An undergraduate major in public health has been created to promote interest in the field and
stimulate recruitment into graduate public health degree programs.
WeaknessesNone identified.
Plan Faculty will continue efforts begun over Summer 2012 to assist teachers and students at Fort Knox
High School in Advanced Placement courses related to public health disciplines, including Environmental Science, Statistics and Calculus. Efforts to extend this effort into Jefferson County (Louisville Metro) High Schools will be explored over the next 12 months.
7 Student enrollment is based on fall numbers.
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4.4 Advising and Career Counseling. There shall be available a clearly explained and accessible academic advising system for students, as well as readily available career and placement advice.4.4.a. Description of the school’s advising services for students in all degree programs, including sample materials such as student handbooks. Include an explanation of how faculty are selected for and oriented to their advising responsibilities.Student handbooks for all degree programs are available at [URL]. be included in the electronic resource file for the final self-study
Bachelors and Bachelors-MPH ProgramsAdvising for the BS and Bachelors/MPH programs will take place on the Belknap campus. A staff member will be identified to hold regular office hours to assist students. In addition, the Associate Dean for Student Affairs will continue to meet annually with the other Arts and Sciences academic advisors to provide them up-to-date information about our programs. Staff and faculty from the Office of Health Promotion on the Belknap campus have also agreed to act as advisors to students in the undergraduate program in public health. Career counseling will be provided by a team of staff and faculty from SPHIS who will hold regular office hours in our office at Ekstrom Library on the Belknap campus.
MPH ProgramYear One
The MPH Program Director serves as the primary student advisor with assistance from the MPH program advisory committee as needed.
After students have identified a concentration or are admitted to the independent track curriculum, students are assigned an academic advisor from the concentration department. For the independent track curriculum, the MPH program works with the student and department chairs to identify an appropriate academic advisor. The responsibilities of the faculty academic advisor is to provide the student academic guidance during the second year of the MPH program.
The faculty program advisor is the faculty member within SPHIS that leads the student’s practicum experience. The faculty mentor is charged with the responsibility of understanding all requirements. The faculty mentor serves as a section director for the P.E. (PHPH-679) and is responsible for assigning and reporting the grade the student receives for the course. The faculty mentor may serve as the student’s academic mentor during the second year of the MPH program.
Practicum Mentoring Team
A team of a minimum of two faculty members from each department will serve on the practicum mentoring team. This team will be responsible for al of the practicum students in a given academic year. Students will be assigned to a member of the practicum mentoring team and that faculty member, in consultations with the practicum mentoring team, will be charged with the responsibility of ensuring, as far as possible, that the student satisfies all of the requirements of the practicum in a timely manner. The faculty mentor serves as a section director for the P.E. (PHPH-679) for each assigned student and is responsible for assigning and reporting the grade the student receives for the course.
MS and PhD programsIndividual departments maintain responsibility for identifying and assigning mentors for MS and PhD students. Each incoming MS and PhD student is assigned an academic advisor who serves as the student's primary mentor during the time that the student is doing coursework in their program, advising in course selection and related academic matters. Once a thesis/dissertation advisor is selected, s/he will normally assume the role of academic advisor for the remainder of the student's program. The respective programs attempt to assign advisors to students with similar backgrounds and interests. A student may
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petition to change academic advisors at any time by request to the Associate Dean for Academic Affairs.
4.4.b. Description of the school’s career counseling services for students in all degree programs. Include an explanation of efforts to tailor services to specific needs in the school’s student population.The university’s Career Development Center (CDC), located on the main campus, coordinates efforts of students, alumni, employers, faculty, staff and parents in managing career development, recruitment efforts, and nurturing the career planning of students.
Specifically, the purpose of the CDC is to help UofL students and alumni:
Develop self-knowledge related to career choice and work performance by identifying, assessing, and understanding their competencies, interests, values, and personal characteristics.
Obtain educational and occupational information to aid career and educational planning and to develop an understanding of the world of work.
Select personally suitable academic programs and experiential opportunities that optimize future educational employment options.
Gain experience through student activities, community service, student employment, research projects, cooperative education, internships and other opportunities.
Take responsibility for developing career decisions, graduate/professional school plans, employment plans and/or job search competencies.
Prepare for finding suitable employment by developing job-search skills, effective candidate presentation skills and an understanding of the fit between their competencies and both occupational and job requirements.
Link with alumni, employers, professional organizations and other who will provide opportunities to develop professional interests and competencies, integrate academic learning with work and explore future career possibilities.
Seek a desired employment opportunity or entry into an appropriate educational graduate or professional program.
Prepare to manage their careers after graduation.
There is a CDC liaison specifically assigned to SPHIS, Becky Clarke, who has an office on the Health Science campus, giving students easy access for consultation. Ms. Clarke offers a variety of services and programs for SPHIS students, including conducting mock interviews, resume writing, etc. Recent or upcoming programs include a “Taste of Success” event held at the school. Career development coaches were available in the evening after classes at a one-stop center for providing valuable tips and information to student, either with their resumes or with mini-mock interviews. To meet another of the students’ stated needs, an Etiquette Dinner allowed the students to participate in a full four-course meal and learn the ins-and-outs of dining etiquette. The CDC and the school have heavily promoted a Virtual Public Health Career Fair. Sponsored by the Association of Schools of Public Health, this fair virtually connects public health graduates and employers (including the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Association, and the National Board of Public Health Examiners).
4.4.c. Information about student satisfaction with advising and career counseling services.In 2009 and 2011, the university’s Office of Institutional Research and Planning has administered surveys to active SPHIS students. Response rates are predictably low (averaging at around 40% participation rate) due to student dispersion and competing time demands. With the 2011 graduating class, surveys included questions on availability, knowledge, and satisfaction with academic and career advising. On a scale from 1-5, where 1-5 referred to being “extremely poor”, “below average”, “average”, “above average” and “excellent,” respectively, scores were generally positive for advising items; 72-82% of the students rated academic advising services as “above average” or “excellent”, and 44-72% of the students rating career advising services as “above average or “excellent”.
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Table 4.4.1: Responses to Active Student Survey
Survey Item Response18 29 310 411 512
How satisfied were you with the Career Development Center resources and workshops?
9.4% 16.7% 8.3% 50.0% 25.0%
The quality of the helpfulness of the staff (including advisors, coop/career placement, students services was:
0.0% 5.1% 12.8% 15.4% 66.7%
The availability of academic advisors was: 0.0% 5.9% 23.5% 20.6% 50.0%The knowledge of academic requirements by
academic advisors was:0.0% 2.9% 25.7% 25.7% 45.7%
The helpfulness of career counseling was: 0.0% 8.6% 20.0% 25.7% 45.7%I would rate my agreement with respect to the SPHIS
faculty regarding accessibility of the faculty for academic advising was:
0.0% 5.3% 10.5% 42.1% 42.1%
I would rate my agreement that faculty provide effective academic advising as:
0.0% 8.1% 10.8% 43.2% 37.8%
4.4.d. Description of the procedures by which students may communicate their concerns to school officials, including information about how these procedures are publicized and about the aggregate number of complaints and/or student grievances submitted for each of the last three years.Over the last three years, there have been three types of mechanisms for communication of student concerns. The first is Town Hall Meetings, used in the MPH program to disseminate information pertinent to that degree and to answer any questions and concerns the student may have. Separate meetings are held for first and second year students. The second mechanism is “Dinner with the Deans” held each semester. This event was created to increase visibility of the Dean’s office for the students and to allow them to question the Deans with any issue about which they have concerns. The third mechanism is the role of the Associate Dean for Student Affairs, who serves as a student advocate.
In addition, an informal process has developed such that students regularly consult with the Assistant Director of Student Services with respect to concerns. Examples of student concerns include,
Inadequate space for student studying and group work; Lack of a refrigerator; Lack of private space for lactating students.
As a result of these specific examples, respectively, space has been designated for student studying and group work; the decision was made not to place a general-use refrigerator in the SPHIS building for hygienic reasons; and a space has been designated for lactating students’ use.
Since 2006, there has been one grievance filed by a student. That grievance was heard by the school’s grievance committee and the decision was found to be not in favor with the student. The student did not appeal, and is graduating in spring 2011.
In addition, the university maintains an Office of the Student Advocate., http://louisville.edu/studentadvocate/. Dr. Prafula Sheth, EdD, the Student Advocate, reports directly to the provost and has a thorough knowledge of university systems, policies and procedures. Dr. Sheth offers students information on support services and functions available at no cost. She helps students understand academic policies and processes as they affect their academic and personal futures. She 8 “Very dissatisfied” / “Extremely poor” / “Strongly disagree”9 “Dissatisfied” / “Below average” / “Disagree”10 “Neutral” / “Average” / “Neutral”11 “Satisfied” / “Average” / “Agree”12 “Very satisfied” / “Above average” / “Strongly agree”
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advises on a confidential basis. Services are extended to all students, from freshman to graduate, doctoral students and professional degree students, at both Belknap Campus and the Health Sciences Center.
4.4.The university’s Ombuds Office, http://louisville.edu/ombuds/, provides informal, impartial, and confidential dispute resolution services for staff and faculty. Personnel from this office assist people with interpersonal misunderstandings or disputes as well as those with concerns about academic or administrative issues. They attempt to help individuals resolve their concerns fairly and, if possible, informally. The Ombuds Office operates independently as a supplement to existing administrative or formal grievance procedures and has no formal decision-making authority. They do not act as advocates for either side in a dispute. Perhaps most importantly, they operate confidentially, which means we do not acknowledge who has--or has not--used the Ombuds Office without the permission of the individual involved. Ombuds Office personnel report administratively to the provost.
e. Assessment of the extent to which this criterion is met and an analysis of the school’s strengths, weaknesses and plans relating to this criterion.This criterion is met. Universityuniversity-based career development services include career counseling, full-time job placement and co-op/internship placement. Feedback has been received regarding student academic advising and counseling.
Strength A revised and substantially enhanced advising/career counseling process has been established and
is in place for all students.
Weakness Opportunities for students to express their concerns to faculty need to be enhanced. .
Plans The Office of Student Affairs will review the new mechanisms proposed above for presenting student
concerns. The associate dean for student affairs will review the academic advising services each semester and
enhance as necessary in response to feedback from students and faculty.
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