Table of Contents

Introduction

The information provided in this handbook is designed to provide students with the necessary information to plan for the public health internship experience.

Description

The public health internship is a planned, approved, supervised and evaluated field experience in a professional agency involved in the delivery of public health related services. The internship is designed to integrate theory and practice in an applied setting under supervision. Students have significant contact with the agency and its personnel, and that most of the internship work is conducted on site.  Internships conducted solely under faculty supervision, such as research or laboratory work, are not acceptable for PHP 422.

The public health internship settings are generalist in nature and provide students opportunity to develop skills in one if not more roles essential to public health practice with individuals, groups, organizations, and communities. Student internship work is planned within the limits imposed by a given site’s mission, structure, and the modes of intervention that characterize its service delivery. Internships have been developed at sites within Central New York; however, not all are always available as agency resources to support the student intern vary each semester.

Placements Outside of the Syracuse Area

The public health major recognizes the value of potential internship placement opportunities outside of the Syracuse area to provide opportunities not available in Central New York or for students who wish to complete the internship closer to home. To qualify for PHP 422 internship placement outside of the Syracuse area, a student must:

  1. Complete a request process to complete an out-of-area placement.
  2. The student submits a one-page document to the internship coordinator that provides evidence in academic or co-curricular activities of the capacity to:
  3. The request is then discussed among the internship staff, faculty advisor, and other faculty as needed. Approval to seek an outside of Syracuse internship placement is awarded or denied based on the following:

*Note: This contract process may take 3-4 months to complete. Placements must be finalized by May 1 (summer internship), December 10th (spring internship), or August 10th (fall internship). 

*Note: Letters of agreement may be used in cases when a student has been accepted into a formal internship program, and in some other cases where the agency agrees to take on liability for hosting the student. In cases of paid internship opportunities, offer letters may suffice.  

Academic Credit

PHP 422 Senior Capstone Internship carries two (2) to nine (9) academic credits based on concentration:  2 credits (90 hours) for Addiction Studies, 3 credits (135 hours) for Health Care Management and Health & Society, and 9 credits (400 hours) for Community Health Education.  The internship is completed over one (1) 15-week semester or one (1) combined summer session.

Preparing for PHP 422 Senior Capstone Internship

These steps explain the internship planning process:

Pre-planning: During Fall of Junior year, student enroll in PHP 375, a zero-credit pre-planning course needed to access PHP 422 planning tasks. The student will be notified via email when to begin the PHP 422 planning process.
 
Step 1:
  Prepare or update a resume that is grammatically correct and free of spelling errors. Consider making an appointment on Handshake to see Career Services staff who offer assistance with resume creation. 

Step 2:  Register for Tevera. To access Tevera, visit the "PHP 375" Blackboard Course and click the link labeled "Tevera". This will bring you to our internship tracking system. Please use your SU email to register for the site.

Step 3:  Complete the PHP 422 Internship Application on Tevera and upload your academic transcript. Do not upload your resume yet.

Step 4:  Make an appointment to meet with your advisor to discuss eligibility for PHP 422, your resume, your interests, and your plans post-graduation. 

Step 5:  Upload your advisor approved resume to Tevera. Additionally, make any corrections needed on the PHP 422 application and resubmit (if necessary).

Step 6:  Once you have met with your advisor, have uploaded your advisor approved resume, and completed any revisions to the application as necessary, your advisor must sign your application using the Tevera system.

Step 7:  You will be contacted by Megan Snow (Internship Coordinator) via email when it is time to make an appointment to discuss potential internship sites. All internship placements go through the Internship Coordinators, and only the Internship Coordinators can approve a placement. Students are asked to not contact sites themselves without prior approval from an internship coordinator.

Preferred semester of completion (noted on application):

Students whose anticipated graduate date is the same as the semester of PHP 422 completion are guaranteed registration in the course, provided the student completes the planning tasks as required.

Registration will be cancelled if:
a) The student has not met with an internship coordinator to secure a placement. Individual meetings with an internship coordinator are held in March and April  for summer and fall internships. Individual meetings for Spring internships will occur in September and October.
b) The placement site does not have a finalized contract or Letter of Agreement with Syracuse University by these dates:
Summer PHP 422 – May 1st, Fall PHP 422– August 1st, Spring PHP 422 – December 15th

Internship Outcomes

At the completion of the public health internship, the student will demonstrate competency in entry-level public health generalist skills:

As demonstrated in the practice setting:

  1. Demonstrate professional workplace behavior.
  2. Communicate in oral and written formats appropriate to professional and academic settings.
  3. Interact with individuals, groups, and/or communities across diverse settings.
  4. Participate as a member of a professional workplace team.

As demonstrated by the capstone paper:

  1. Use conceptual frameworks, theory, and scientific evidence to shape public health practice.
  2. Evaluate and synthesize public health and other scientific information to improve population level health.
  3. Think critically about public health problems.

Selection of Internship Placement Settings

In selecting organizations as potential settings for internship placement, the Public Health Program looks for evidence of commitment to a learning environment for public health practice. The following represents some of the criteria utilized in the selection process:

  1. The acceptance of professional education for public health as part of the philosophy and practice of the organization by the board of directors, the executive, and the organization staff members.
  2. The degree of congruence between the organization’s policies and procedures and the philosophy and objectives of the public health program.
  3. The extent to which an organization fosters a climate conducive to student learning.
  4. The availability of qualified site supervisors.
  5. The willingness of the organization administration to release the site supervisor from other responsibilities to function as site supervisor to plan the student’s program, prepare for and hold supervisory conferences, and generally to supervise the student’s progress.
  6. The willingness of the organization to accept the student as a learner whose assignment must be geared to learning needs rather than the scheduling demands and workload of the organization.
  7. Student assignments must be flexible enough to maximize learning, neither too superficial nor too repetitive.
  8. The availability of adequate physical space and provision of adequate support services, office supplies, etc.
  9. The organization’s agreement to treat all information, including evaluations of students, as confidential.
  10. The organization’s willingness to allow the student to use the internship experience and other appropriate material, with confidentiality protected, in classroom discussions and assignments, including the capstone presentation.
  11. The organization’s willingness to allow the student to take part in staff meetings, in-service staff training, interagency conferences and such other education opportunities as might arise.

Employed Placement Policy

If a student wishes to request a placement in an agency in which he/she will be simultaneously employed, the following minimal conditions must be met:

Students who wish to secure an employed placement meet with the internship placement coordinator to discuss their learning interest and goals. The constraints of an employed placement are reviewed and other options available to the student are discussed. Once it is determined that an employed placement is the best option for the student, the faculty advisor and internship placement coordinator make final decisions regarding employed placements.

Roles and Responsibilities

Agency Role

The agency’s role is to help students develop public health skills. Progressive increases in tasks and student involvement should occur as the student’s workplace skill proficiency and knowledge of the agency increases. Tasks for students may involve data collection, writing informational brochures, program planning and program development, implementation assistance, evaluation of conferences or programs, and direct contact with community clients. The agency must  have the capacity to provide meaningful work in which a student can be productive by applying skills or learning new ones, and by providing supervision and guidance consistent with a student’s needs and progress. Public health interns are productive assets, capable of assuming responsibility and fulfilling tasks. The internship experience also provides the agency an opportunity to observe the student as a prospective employee.

All public health interns design and implement a capstone project that demonstrates a contribution to the placement agency and public health. The agency must have the capability to support this requirement. The agency site supervisor, along with the internship placement coordinator, will assist in guiding the process.

It is further understood that the organization serving as the internship placement site will:

Site Supervisor's Responsibilities

Prior to the beginning of the internship:

During the internship:

Intern Responsibilities

Prior to the beginning of the internship:

During the internship:

Faculty Advisor Role

Internship Placement Coordinator Role

Internship Planning Timeline

February

Orientation meeting for Summer, Fall, and following Spring internships.

March

Meeting with academic advisor. Internship application, resume, and transcript submitted to Tevera.

April

Confirmation of eligibility for Summer and Fall registrants. Follow-up meeting with internship placement coordinator scheduled for all Summer and Fall internship students. Agency interviews completed.

May (Summer), August (Fall), December (Spring)

Internship placements confirmed.

September to October

Follow-up meeting with internship placement coordinator scheduled for all Spring internship students. Agency interviews completed.