2017-2018 Academic Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Department of Nutrition
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Return to: College of Graduate and Undergraduate Studies
Mission Statement
The mission of the Department of Nutrition is to educate evidenced based, advanced level graduates, who retain the critical analysis and scientific knowledge abilities necessary to be vitalistic transformational leaders and practitioners sought in the field dietetics and nutrition. Graduates of this program will be prepared to support a mission of diversity within multiple global community, research and clinical settings, understanding that nutrition and dietetics is a dynamic and vital part of health and well-being.
Introduction
The Department of Nutrition was established under the auspices of the College of Undergraduate Studies initially to provide a nutrition degree as a complement to the Doctor of Chiropractic Program. In December 1993, the Didactic Program in Nutrition and Dietetics (DP) received approval by the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (Council on Education Division of Education Accreditation/Approval). In 2005, the Didactic Program in Dietetics was granted initial accreditation by the Accreditation Council for Education in Nutrition and Dietetics (ACEND) of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (AND).
In 1998, the nutrition curricula, the Didactic Program in Nutrition and Dietetics in particular, underwent a major revision to realign itself with the Accreditation Council for Education in Nutrition and Dietetics (ACEND) Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (AND) revised standards and objectives.
The degree originally called the Bachelor of Science in Nutrition for Chiropractic Science was renamed to Bachelor of Science in Nutrition.
In addition, the Nutrition Department expanded its curricula further to provide a Dietetic Internship Program. In October 2001, the Commission on Accreditation/Approval for Dietetics Education of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, a specialized accrediting body recognized by the Commission on Recognition of Post Secondary Accreditation and the United States Department of Education, granted developmental accreditation for the Dietetic Internship Program. In 2005, the Dietetic Internship Program was granted initial accreditation by the Accreditation Council for Education in Nutrition and Dietetics (ACEND) of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (AND).
Educators in the Department of Nutrition
The Department of Nutrition boasts a breadth and depth of faculty with over 80 years of combined experience in the areas of functional, community, education, research, clinical, culinary arts, and leadership and a better than 15:1 student faculty ratio. When the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) visited the University in 2001, they wrote:
“…strengths of the program include a dedicated faculty who have expended a tremendous effort to plan new and innovative programs in the field of dietetics and nutrition…Students were enthusiastic about the quality of education that they receive at Life University…The practitioner background of each faculty is clearly a strength of the program. These same faculty advise the undergraduate students, which provides for timely progress through the program.”
Facilities
In early 2010, the Department of Nutrition was relocated to a newly remolded area in the Center for Undergraduate Studies building. With approximately 3,465 square feet, this extraordinary, state of the art department includes seven offices, a reception area, work room, food experimental/kitchen lab with six stations, two computer stations and a large cooking demonstration lab. Additionally, the department has other physical facilities sufficient to meet the program objectives to include space for Dietetic students, the nutrition research clinic, rooms for the assessment and nutrition tutoring labs, nutrition tutoring lab and a nutrition office in the Center for Health and Optimum Performance (C-HOP).
Technical Standards for Nutrition and Dietetics Students
Life University complies with Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended and the ADAA 2008. These laws provide a framework for qualified individuals with documented disabilities to request reasonable accommodations needed to participate in a program. Reasonable accommodations are defined as adjustments or modifications that enable a qualified individual with a documented disability to participate as fully as possible in an educational program. An adjustment or modification must be reasonable and may not be provided if it would alter essential academic or technical requirements or result in undue financial or administrative burdens.
Qualified candidates with documented disabilities who wish to request accommodations under the American with Disabilities Act or the Rehabilitation Act must follow the University’s procedure for requesting an accommodation. This procedure requires the submission to the Student Success Center of a written request for accommodations, along with supporting documentation from a licensed professional demonstrating the existing of a disability, the functional limitations resulting from the disability, and the need for specific accommodations. Documentation must meet specific Guidelines, which are set forth in the Student Handbook.
Technical Standards Procedures
While inviting and encouraging voluntary self-identification by students with disabilities, Life University has always related to its students as responsible adults with the independent right to make such life decisions. One of those responsibilities is to work with the Student Success Center in requesting reasonable accommodations, academic adjustments and/or auxiliary aids and services pursuant to the procedures set forth in this catalog.
Any Undergraduate candidates who self-identify their disability during any of the four stages:
- Prior to applying for admission,
- During the application process,
- After acceptance but before attending classes,
- While currently attending classes,
Will be referred to the Director of the Student Success Center (SSC).
The Director of the SSC will work in concert with the Disability Advisory Committee (DAC) whenever a question arises as to an individual’s ability to meet the requirements and technical standards of the specific program to which the student is applying, or in which the student is enrolled. The DAC has been established to adjudicate this process in a timely manner. The Director of the SSC ensures compliance with policy.
Technical Standards for a B.S. Degree in Nutrition or Dietetics
The study of nutrition and dietetics involves the integration and application of principles from a broad area of study including food science, nutrition, management, communication, biological, physiological, behavioral and social sciences. Therefore, individuals receiving a B.S. Degree in Nutrition or Dietetics must meet all academic and clinical course requirements. To matriculate, students seeking a B.S. Degree in Nutrition or Dietetics must have the following abilities and skills in order to meet the full requirements of the program’s curriculum:
Sensory/Observation: A student must have sufficient sensory capacity to observe and participate in demonstrations and experiments in the basic and applied sciences including, but not limited to, demonstrations on human cadavers, animals, microbiologic cultures and microscopic studies of microorganisms and tissues in normal and pathologic states. A student must be able to utilize all assessment parameters in order to assess the nutritional status of the clients and implement a nutritional care plan to achieve optimal nutritional status (i.e., obtaining the client’s history, performing physical assessments, anthropometric measurements and analysis of laboratory data). In addition, a student must have sufficient vision to observe physical changes such as in skin and eye color or changes in other areas of the body.
Communication: A student must be able to communicate effectively with patients and their family members, in order to elicit information, describe changes in affect, mood, activity and posture and to perceive nonverbal communications. A student must be able to communicate effectively and sensitively with patients. Communication includes not only speech, but also reading and writing. The student must be able to communicate effectively and efficiently in oral and written form. A student must have verbal and written communication skills sufficient to conduct patient interviews and record clinical histories, communicate results of diagnostic findings, and make assessments and plans known to patients, their family members and members of the healthcare team.
A graduate student is expected to analyze, conceptualize and summarize complex relationships as ascertained from patient records, research studies and other written reports and be able to communicate that information effectively.
Motor/Strength/Coordination: A student must have sufficient dexterity and motor function to elicit information from clients by palpation, auscultation, percussion and to perform diagnostic procedures including, but not limited to obtaining the client’s history, performing physical assessments, anthropometric measurements and analysis of laboratory data.
Conceptual, Integrative and Quantitative Abilities: A student must have sufficient conceptual, integrative and quantitative abilities. These abilities include but are not limited to measurement, calculations, reasoning, analysis and synthesis. Additionally, a student must be able to understand the spatial relationships of the nutritional status, nutrient intake and any special conditions. Problem solving in group, individual and collaborative settings requires all of these intellectual abilities. Testing and evaluation of these abilities in the Department of Nutrition employ examinations as an essential component of the curriculum. Successful completion of these examinations is required of all candidates as a condition for continued progress through the curriculum. Examples of these assessments include but are not limited to essay, oral and/or extended multiple choice tests, compositions, oral presentations and lab practicals designed to assess a variety of cognitive and non-cognitive skills in a simulated or supervised clinical settings. All written or word processed information must be in a comprehensible format.
A student must be able to critically analyze, synthesize and evaluate/interpret psychosocial research and be able to utilize available data to conduct evidence based studies in the field of nutrition and dietetics.
Behavioral and Social Attributes: A student must possess the emotional health required for utilization of his/her intellectual abilities. Students must be able to exercise good judgment in the prompt completion of all academic and clinical responsibilities. Students must be able to develop mature, sensitive, ethical and effective relationships. Stressors may include but are not limited to environmental, chemical, physical or psychological. Students must also be able to adapt to change, display poise and flexibility in the face of uncertainties and stressful situations, and to independently demonstrate empathy, integrity, compassion, motivation, and commitment commensurate with the habits and mannerisms of professional training to become a nutritionist or dietitian. Students must portray attributes of professionalism that include but are not limited to honesty, caring, respect, trustworthiness, competence and responsibility to and for their colleagues and patients.
Admitted Students
Upon application to the College of Undergraduate Studies, all candidates are subject to the Technical Standards Policy as presented in this Catalog. During application, all candidates mist sign a certifying statement as represented below for placement in their permanent record.
“I hereby certify that I have read, and understand the Technical Standards Policy as listed in the Life University Catalog and am able to perform the essential and fundamental functions and tasks of the Nutrition or Dietetics Bachelor’s degree program with or without a reasonable accommodation.”
Bachelor of Science Degrees
Admission, Transfer and Financial Information
- All newly accepted nutrition students must come to the Department of Nutrition for orientation and advisement.
- Transfer students to the Dietetics program will need a minimum cumulative GPA of 3.0 or above to apply to the program. Nutrition classes to be transferred to the DPD program must be from an institution approved by the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (AND) and must be a grade of “B” or better. Transfer students to the other nutrition programs will need a GPA of 2.5 or above to apply to the program.
- Transfer of any nutrition or science course that has been previously taken that is comparable or equivalent to a course offered by Life University, with a grade of “B” or better, may be accepted. However, since the following courses are the foundation for various aspects of the curriculum, they must have been taken within the last seven (7) years:
*Exception: Time limitation for CHM 112 and BIO 201 can be waived if the student has been working in a healthcare field.
All nutrition courses transferred to the nutrition core area IV or other nutrition requirements area VIA must be approved by the department head, except for NTR 240 medical terminology.
- In order to qualify for financial aid, a full-time undergraduate student must enroll in a minimum of twelve (12) and maximum of twenty (20) credit hours per quarter. A part-time undergraduate student carries between six (6) and eleven (11) credit hours per quarter.
- If a student is obtaining a dual degree in conjunction with the Doctor of Chiropractic (DC) program, to qualify for financial aid, the full-time student must enroll in a minimum of twenty-one (21) and a maximum of twenty-five (25) credit hours per quarter in the DC program. A part-time DC student must take between eleven (11) and twenty (20) credit hours per quarter. Students who take a full course load in the DC program may take up to six (6) credit hours of nutrition courses per quarter. Any DC student taking a part-time DC course load of 6-13 credit hours may take 15-8 (respectively) credit hours in the Department of Nutrition (not to exceed 21 credit hours).
Bachelor of Science Degrees Course Requirements
Degrees Requirements
All students receiving any of the Bachelor’s of Science in Nutrition or Dietetics must complete a total of 188 credit hours of instruction.
Additional Completion Requirements
- NTR 210 - Nutrition Seminar & Future Trends (0 cr.) is a requirement for graduation for all nutrition degrees (there is no charge for this class). Students will need to obtain credit for 12 sessions and give a presentation. All Nutrition students must attend two mandatory 2-hour sessions that cover the following topics:
- Fall of each year: (for Dietetic Majors only, but Nutrition majors may attend)
- Applying to internships and computer matching
- Managing your professional development
- Participation in AND, GAND and lobbying
- Dietetics only career opportunities
- AND Code of Ethics
- Spring of each year: (required for all Nutrition Majors)
- Career opportunities for non-RDs
- Resume writing and interviewing skills
- Ethical issues
- Accrediting agencies
Nutrition Majors attending both sessions will receive eight credits toward seminar and will still need to attend four more regularly scheduled sessions during the quarter and give a presentation. Regularly scheduled sessions will be offered three times per quarter.
There will be no make-ups allowed for the mandatory sessions scheduled in the Spring and Fall Quarters. Students must make plans to attend. If students miss a mandatory session, or come late or leave early, students must wait until it is offered the following year to make up the requirement. Attendance will be taken at the end of each session.
- Satisfactory completion of all required courses (nutrition and non-nutrition) with a minimum overall GPA of 2.5 or above is required for a B.S. in Nutrition.
- All courses from areas IV-VI must be completed with a grade of “B” or better.
- Satisfactory completion of all required courses (nutrition and non-nutrition), with a minimum overall cumulative GPA of 3.0 or above is required for a B.S. in Dietetics .
- If, upon completion, the student’s GPA falls below a 3.0, the student becomes ineligible to graduate from the DPD program. If the student has a GPA below 3.0, he or she can be awarded a Bachelor of Science in Nutrition instead.
- A minimum GPA of 3.0 or above is required for the verification statement that accompanies the application to Dietetic Internship Programs, however, nearly 80 percent of those accepted into internships have an average GPA above 3.0.
- To receive a Bachelor of Science degree in Nutrition from Life University, a student must earn a minimum of the last 47 credits in residence at Life University, 30 of which are to be in Nutrition, all field experiences must be taken through Life University. Residency is defined as being enrolled (matriculated) as an on-campus student, as a distance learner or via independent study, and has earned the minimum requirements as outlined above.
- The DC student who chooses to enter the DPD program must strictly adhere to the DPD program requirements including a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or above.
- A recommendation for graduation and completion of an exit interview with the Nutrition Department Faculty.
- File a petition to graduate.
- Administrative and student reviews of records
- Registrar Office – Complete a formal academic records review
- Financial Aid Office – Exit interviews with a Counselor
- Student Accounting – “Perkins” Exit interview and rectify account balance
- Confirm CLP 090, FYE 101 and FYE 103 completion status requirements.
Assistant Dean: Denise Pickett-Bernard PhD, RDN, LDN
The Department of Nutrition at Life University offers the accredited post-baccalaureate Dietetic Internship program and the Master of Science in Clinical Nutrition degree. Students in the Master’s program take 52 credit hours in advanced course work in nutrition, which requires them to analyze concepts of evidence-based practice and research, develop skills in counseling and behavior management, evaluate nutrition issues and community policy, define and assess management and leadership styles, and compare and contrast the quality of research studies. Opportunities for application of classroom theory and discussion are available each quarter.
Students in the Nutrition graduate program have access to state of the art classrooms, nutrition assessment laboratories, an exceptional teaching kitchen with a culinary demonstration amphitheater as well as growing clinical research facilities. The City of Atlanta also offers a plethora of clinical, community and research opportunities, including being home to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Mission of the Department of Nutrition
The mission of the Department of Nutrition is to educate evidenced based, advanced level graduates, who retain the critical analysis and scientific knowledge abilities necessary to be vitalistic transformational leaders and practitioners sought in the field dietetics and nutrition. Graduates of this program will be prepared to support a mission of diversity within multiple global community, research and clinical settings, understanding that nutrition and dietetics is a dynamic and vital part of health and well-being.
Department Objectives
The Department of Nutrition has set the following objectives:
- To employ licensed professionals and experienced researchers, who will conduct the classroom experience with high standards and expectations of students.
- To follow an evidenced based curriculum, stimulating critical thinking and analysis skills as well as writing proficiencies, while appreciating the diverse and dynamic nature of nutrition in improving health and wellbeing.
- To provide multiple opportunities for scholarly discourse, research apprenticeships and research projects to ensure their evidenced based research and practice abilities and career opportunities.
- To encourage students within the classroom and beyond to engage in scholarly inquiry and investigation, culminating with a scholarly research study and/or project.
- To give students the opportunity to integrate research into practice through principles of evidence-based research, practice and translational research.
Technical Standards for Master of Science in Clinical Nutrition Students
Upon application to the Master of Science in Clinical Nutrition graduate program, all candidates are subject to the Nutrition Technical Standards policy as presented below in the Graduate Catalog. During application, all candidates must sign a certifying statement as represented below for placement in their permanent record.
“I hereby certify that I have read, and understand the Nutrition Department’s Technical Standards Minimum Essential Skills as listed in the Life University Graduate Catalog and am able to perform the essential and fundamental functions and tasks of the Master of Science in Clinical Nutrition degree program with or without a reasonable accommodation.”
The study of nutrition and dietetics involves the integration and application of principles from a broad area of study including food science, nutrition, management, behavioral, communication, biological, physiological and social sciences. Therefore, individuals receiving a Master’s degree in Clinical Nutrition must complete all academic and clinical course requirements. Students must demonstrate certain minimum essential skills, including but not limited to those listed in the following box, in order to gain admission and to meet the full requirements of the program’s curriculum.
Technical Standards Minimum Essential Skills —Department of Nutrition
Sensory/Observation:
- A student must have sufficient sensory capacity to observe and participate in demonstrations and experiments in the basic and applied sciences including, but not limited to, demonstrations on human cadavers, animals, microbiologic cultures, and microscopic studies of microorganisms and tissues in normal and pathologic states.
- A student must be able to utilize all assessment parameters in order to assess the nutritional status of the clients and implement a nutritional care plan to achieve optimal nutritional status (i.e., obtaining the client’s history, performing physical assessments, anthropometric measurements and analysis of laboratory data).
- In addition, a student must have sufficient vision to observe physical changes such as in skin and eye color or changes in other areas of the body.
Communication:
- A student must be able to communicate effectively with patients and their family members, in order to elicit information, describe changes in affect, mood, activity, and posture and to perceive nonverbal communications.
- A student must be able to communicate effectively and sensitively with patients. Communication includes not only speech, but also reading and writing. The student must be able to communicate effectively and efficiently in oral and written form.
- A student must have verbal and written communication skills sufficient to conduct patient interviews and record clinical histories, communicate results of diagnostic findings, and make assessments and plans known to patients, their family members, and members of the health care team.
- A graduate student is expected to analyze, conceptualize and summarize complex relationships as ascertained from patient records, research studies and other written reports and be able to communicate that information effectively.
Motor/Strength/Coordination:
- A student must have sufficient dexterity and motor function to elicit information from clients by palpation, auscultation, percussion and to perform diagnostic procedures including, but not limited to obtaining the client’s history, performing physical assessments, anthropometric measurements and analysis of laboratory data.
Intellectual/Conceptual/Integrative/Quantitative Abilities:
- A student must have sufficient conceptual, integrative and quantitative abilities. These abilities include but are not limited to measurement, calculations, reasoning, analysis and synthesis.
- Additionally, a student must be able to understand the spatial relationships of the nutritional status, nutrient intake and any special conditions.
- Problem solving in group, individual and collaborative settings requires all of these intellectual abilities. Testing and evaluation of these abilities in the Department of Nutrition employ examinations as an essential component of the curriculum. Successful completion of these examinations is required of all candidates as a condition for continued progress through the curriculum. Examples of these assessments include but are not limited to essay, oral and/or extended multiple choice tests, compositions, oral presentations, and lab practicums designed to assess a variety of cognitive and non-cognitive skills in a simulated or supervised clinical settings.
- All written or word-processed information must be in a comprehensible format.
- A student must be able to critically analyze, synthesize and evaluate/interpret psychosocial research and be able to utilize available data to conduct evidence based studies in the field of nutrition and dietetics.
Behavioral and Social Attributes:
- A student must possess the emotional health required for utilization of his/her intellectual abilities.
- Students must be able to exercise good judgment in the prompt completion of all academic and clinical responsibilities.
- Students must be able to develop mature, sensitive, ethical and effective relationships. Stressors may include but are not limited to environmental, chemical, physical or psychological.
- Students must also be able to adapt to change, display poise and flexibility in the face of uncertainties and stressful situations, and to independently demonstrate empathy, integrity, compassion, motivation and commitment commensurate with the habits and mannerisms of professional training to become a nutritionist or dietitian.
- Students must portray attributes of professionalism that include but are not limited to honesty, caring, respect, trustworthiness, competence and responsibility to and for their colleagues and patients.
Life University complies with Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADAA) of 1990, as amended and the ADAA 2008. These laws provide a framework for qualified individuals with documented disabilities to request reasonable accommodations needed to participate in a program.
Reasonable accommodations are defined as adjustments or modifications that enable a qualified individual with a documented disability to participate as fully as possible in an educational program. An adjustment or modification must be reasonable and may not be provided if it would alter essential academic or technical requirements or result in undue financial or administrative burdens.
Qualified candidates with documented disabilities who wish to request accommodations under the American with Disabilities Act or the Rehabilitation Act must follow the University’s procedure for requesting an accommodation. This procedure requires the submission to the Student Success Center of a written request for accommodations, along with supporting documentation from a licensed professional demonstrating the existence of a disability, the functional limitations resulting from the disability, and the need for specific accommodations. Documentation must meet specific Guidelines, which are set forth in the Student Handbook.
Technical Standards Procedures
While inviting and encouraging voluntary self-identification by students with disabilities, the University has always related to its students as responsible adults with the independent right to make such life decisions. One of those responsibilities is to work with the Student Success Center (SSC) in requesting reasonable accommodations, academic adjustments and/or auxiliary aids and services pursuant to the procedures set forth in this catalog.
Any Undergraduate, Master’s-level or Chiropractic candidates who self-identify their disability during any of the four stages:
- prior to applying for admission,
- during the application process,
- after acceptance, but before attending classes, and
- while currently attending classes
will be referred to the Director of the Student Success Center.
The Director of the SSC will work in concert with the Disability Advisory Committee (DAC) whenever a question arises as to an individual’s ability to meet the requirements and technical standards of the specific program to which the student is applying, or in which the student is enrolled. The DAC has been established to adjudicate this process in a timely manner. The Director of the Student Success Center ensures compliance with policy.
ProgramsBachelor of ScienceMaster of ScienceNon-Degree
Return to: College of Graduate and Undergraduate Studies
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