Mar 28, 2024  
Graduate Catalog 2009-10 
    
Graduate Catalog 2009-10 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Doctor of Philosophy in Interdisciplinary Health Sciences


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Nickola W. Nelson,PhD., Director
2584 CHHS Building
Telephone: (269) 387-7990
Fax: (269) 387-8912

The Doctor of Philosophy in Interdisciplinary Health Sciences (IHS) is designed to prepare Health and Human Service professionals for careers in research, teaching, and leadership. Several national commissions, including the Pew Health Professions Commission and the National Commission on Allied Health, have challenged higher educational institutions to respond to fundamental changes in health and related systems by designing more flexible curricula, removing disciplinary boundaries, and increasing research.  The College of Health and Human Services has met this challenge by developing a three-strand curriculum, which incorporates an interdisciplinary core curriculum, strong research preparation, and the use of innovative pedagogy. In order to meet the needs of working professionals, the courses are delivered through a hybrid of e-learning modalities and intensive on-campus weekend and summer sessions. Students enter the program as a cohort once every two years (in even years) and can complete the didactic sequence in two years. Comprehensive examinations and dissertation research can be completed in an additional two to three years. 

Admission requirements

Students are admitted to the program as a cohort every two years, in even numbered years, based on a competitive written application and face-to face interview process. Applicants to the program are expected to meet, as a minimum, the entrance requirements of the Graduate College and document:

  1. Two years of professional experience in the health and human service field.
  2. Master’s degree with a minimum graduate grade point average of 3.25/4.00.
  3. Completion of the Graduate Record Examination.
  4. Completion of at least one graduate level course in statistical methods, with a minimum of a grade B within the last 10 years (can be completed after acceptance and prior to first enrollment).
  5. Computer competency in databases, word-processing, spreadsheets, and Internet use.

Application must be made both to the Office of Admissions—Graduate Admissions and to the IHS program within the College of Health and Human Services. The application form is available at the program’s website www.wmich.edu/hhs/IHS/index.htm. It asks for information about the student’s academic and clinical background and an essay outlining career and research goals. Letters of recommendation from three academic or professional sources also are required. Finalists participate in on-campus interviews. Approximately 12 applicants are invited to enroll with each cohort, including no more that three from any one discipline.

Program Requirements


Required courses are presented in sequential order, so that the didactic portion of the curriculum can be completed in two years. Students are required to:

1. Attend a week-long, on-campus Orientation session.


This session is in the Summer II session of the student’s year of admission, during which they are familiarized with program expectations and the University’s resources and complete their first course.

2. Complete, with a 3.25 grade point average, a total of 63 semester hours of credit as follows:


  1. Interdisciplinary core (12 hours)
  2. Research and statistics module (16 hours)
  3. Research practicum (6 hours)
  4. Pedagogy module (8 hours)
  5. Disciplinary cognate (9 hours). The student designs the cognate to meet his/her own learning objectives, with advisor input and approval by the Academic Affairs Committee. Cognate courses may be taken at other accredited graduate institutions.
  6. Dissertation research (12 hours)

3. Successfully complete a 4-part Comprehensive Examination.


Comprehensive examinations are performance-based and include the submission of (1) a research paper for publications, (2) policy analysis (with oral defense), (3) competitive grant proposal, and (4) teaching portfolio describing development and delivery of an university level course.

4. Residency


Maintain residency by registering for coursework at Western Michigan University during at least two sessions per year.

5. Successfully complete a doctoral dissertation


The dissertation entails completion, written documentation, and oral defense of a research project approved by the student’s dissertation committee. Students may elect to use the traditional five-chapter format or prepare 3 stand alone journal articles, presented as the dissertation, with additional introductory and conclusion chapters.

Financial Assistance


The College of Health and Human Services offers financial support through half-time doctoral research associateships for a limited number of students during their academic coursework. Contact the program director for details.

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