All students entering the Master of Science in Health Sciences program are required to have previously earned a bachelor’s degree and have an overall GPA of 3.0 or higher.
Required Courses
In addition, the following courses serve as admission prerequisites for the Master of Science in Health Sciences. All prospective students must have completed these courses prior to admission with a grade of C or better.
- Nutrition (BSC 12100 or EXS 24000)
- Basic Statistics (MTH 14100)
- Human Anatomy & Physiology I (BSC 22700)
- Human Anatomy & Physiology II (BSC 22800)
- Exercise Physiology (EXS 31500)
- Exercise Physiology Lab (EXS 31600)
Transfer Credits
For students needing certain prerequisites, the following courses have already been approved for transfer for the indicated course. All other courses requested for transfer approval need to be approved by the program director before admission can be granted.
Contact Info
Dr. Scott Richmond
Associate Professor, Exercise Science
		
						
							Kinesiology						
													
								
									
								
							
							
															
															
															
															
															
															
												
									
						
							Mathematics, Computer Science, and Information Technology						
													
								
									
								
							
							
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
												
									
									
						
							Social and Behavioral Sciences						
													
								
									
								
							
							
															
															
															
															
															
															
															
												
									
									
									
									
									
									
				
						Contact Info
Dr. Scott Richmond
Associate Professor, Exercise Science
		
 
										









