;

Global and Community Health B.S.

Information and Policies

Introduction

The goal of the Global and Community Health (GCH) B.S. program is to serve the needs of students who aspire to a wide range of careers in healthcare. Students in this program will learn about the biological bases of health and disease and how social, political, economic, and environmental factors interact with the biology to create patterns of disease in communities and societies. Students must complete either of two concentrations in this major. The biomedical concentration is intended for students who are intent on gaining rigorous preparation for professional training in direct patient care (e.g., medical, dentistry, pharmacy school). The public and community health concentration, while still compatible with many professional school programs, is designed for students who wish to receive a broader education that will prepare them to understand both the biological and social determinants of health.

Students in both concentrations take a course in the foundations in global and community health along with introductory courses in biology, general chemistry, organic chemistry, calculus and statistics. In the upper division, all students take courses in biochemistry, epidemiology and environmental health. Students in the biomedical concentration also take advanced courses in genetics, molecular and cell biology, human physiology, and five quarters of Spanish, culminating in a course in medical Spanish. Students in the public and community health concentration take an introductory physiology course, an advanced course in community health, and elective courses in the biological and social contexts of health. Students in both concentrations also take courses in global and community health communication and complete a capstone course in which they participate in interdisciplinary teams to analyze a contemporary problem in global and community health.

Medical and professional school admissions requirements vary; students should verify that their coursework will satisfy the admissions requirements of the programs to which they plan to apply. Check our Health Careers webpage for more information on how you can academically prepare for a career in health care and/or public health. Additional information is available at the UCSC Career Center.

Academic Advising for the Program

Students should take full advantage of academic advising and should keep in frequent contact with the advisers to stay informed about late announcements of courses, changes in scheduling, and opportunities for special study. Transfer students should also consult the Transfer Information and Policy Section. GCH BS advising is managed  by the Molecular, Cell and Developmental Biology Department.  For additional advice and information:

GCH B.S. advising
Social Sciences 1, Suite #117
gchBSadvising@ucsc.edu

Program Learning Outcomes

Students who successfully complete the global and community health B.S. major will be able to:

  • describe the biological and environmental contexts of health;
  • describe the social, economic, and cultural contexts of global and community health;
  • describe the institutional and policy contexts of global and community health;
  • apply methods and skills for biological and population analyses to problems in global and community health; and,
  • demonstrate an interdisciplinary understanding of global and community health in practice.

Getting Started in the Major: Frosh

Prerequisites

This major is highly course-intensive and/or sequential; students who intend to pursue this major must begin taking classes for the major in their first quarter at UC Santa Cruz. Students should take Foundations for Global and Community Health (GCH 1) as soon as possible. Due to the demanding nature of the major, students must begin their science coursework as early as possible. MATH 11A or MATH 19A; CHEM 3A, CHEM 3B and CHEM 3C or CHEM 4A and CHEM 4B; CHEM 8A; and, BIOL 20A, BIOE 20B, and BIOL 20L must be completed before the sixth quarter in order for students to qualify for admission to MCD biology-sponsored majors, the biology B.S., global and community health B.S., molecular, cell and developmental biology B.S., and neuroscience B.S. majors. For an overview of prerequisites and getting started in the major, please visit our GCH B.S. advising site.

An online mathematics placement examination is required to enroll in a math course. Biological science majors are expected to take this examination and are encouraged to work in the learning modules until they place into calculus. For more information see the mathematics placement website.

Students intending to major in the global and community health B.S., biomedical concentration should take the Spanish placement examination, offered by the language program, to determine the level at which they should begin the Spanish sequence.

Transfer Information and Policy

Transfer and Admission Screening Policy

The global and community health program encourages applications from transfer students. The global and community health B.S. major has a major qualification policy that limits access to the program to students who have successfully completed a subset of foundational coursework. Transfer students are held to similar criteria when being assessed for admission to UC Santa Cruz as an MCD-sponsored major. See qualifying for the major as a transfer applicant for more information.

To be considered for admission as a proposed global and community health B.S. major, transfer students must complete the following courses or their equivalents prior to transfer, by the end of the spring term for students planning to enter in the fall with grades of C or higher in each course.

CHEM 8AOrganic Chemistry

5

BIOL 20ACell and Molecular Biology

5

BIOL 20LExperimental Biology Laboratory

2

BIOE 20BDevelopment and Physiology

5

Plus, one of the following series of chemistry courses:
Either these courses

CHEM 1AGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 1BGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 1CGeneral Chemistry

5

or these courses

CHEM 3AGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 3BGeneral Chemistry

3

CHEM 3CGeneral Chemistry

3

or these courses

CHEM 4AAdvanced General Chemistry: Molecular Structure and Reactivity

5

CHEM 4BAdvanced General Chemistry: Molecular Structure and Reactivity

5

Plus, one of the following calculus courses:
MATH 11ACalculus with Applications

5

MATH 19ACalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

BIOL 20L is not required for students who have completed BIOL 20A and BIOE 20B from California community colleges.

In addition, the following courses are recommended prior to transfer to ensure timely graduation.
One of the following courses
MATH 11BCalculus with Applications

5

MATH 19BCalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

Plus the following courses
STAT 7Statistical Methods for the Biological, Environmental, and Health Sciences

5

STAT 7LStatistical Methods for the Biological, Environmental, and Health Sciences Laboratory

2

CHEM 8BOrganic Chemistry

5

CHEM 8LOrganic Chemistry Laboratory

2

Please see our site on preparing to transfer as an MCD major for more complete information.

Prospective students are encouraged to prioritize required and recommended major preparation, and may additionally complete courses that articulate to UC Santa Cruz general education requirements as time allows.

Students who are proposed in a different major and have advanced standing when they enter UCSC require permission from the department to change into the major. Admission to the major is not guaranteed.

Getting Started in the Major: Transfer Students

Transfer students who have met the major qualification requirements are encouraged to declare the major during their first quarter at UC Santa Cruz. Transfer students should complete the required course, Foundations of Global and Community Health (GCH 1) as soon as possible. In addition, students in the biomedical concentration should complete biochemistry (BIOL 100), genetics (BIOL 105), and molecular biology (BIOL 101) by the end of their first year at UCSC since they are prerequisites for the majority of other required courses. Transfer students in the biomedical concentration should also take the Spanish placement exam upon arrival. We encourage transfer students to complete the required Spanish courses (including SPAN 5M) before the fall of their second year.

Major Qualification Policy and Declaration Process

Major Qualification

To qualify for the global and community health B.S. major, students must pass the following courses:

CHEM 8AOrganic Chemistry

5

BIOL 20ACell and Molecular Biology

5

BIOL 20LExperimental Biology Laboratory

2

BIOE 20BDevelopment and Physiology

5

Plus, one of the following series of chemistry courses:
Either these courses

CHEM 1AGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 1BGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 1CGeneral Chemistry

5

or these courses

CHEM 3AGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 3BGeneral Chemistry

3

CHEM 3CGeneral Chemistry

3

or these courses

CHEM 4AAdvanced General Chemistry: Molecular Structure and Reactivity

5

CHEM 4BAdvanced General Chemistry: Molecular Structure and Reactivity

5

Students must also pass one of the following courses:
Either this course

MATH 11ACalculus with Applications

5

or this course

MATH 19ACalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

All qualification courses must be completed prior to the major declaration deadline. Students with two or more grades of NP, C-, D+, D, D-, or F in the policy courses are not qualified to declare.  

When assessing qualification:

  • All courses must be taken for a letter grade, see Letter Grade Policy below.
  • Students with AP credit for MATH 11A or MATH 19A, BIOL 20A, BIOE 20B, and/or CHEM 3A, need only pass the remaining qualification policy courses.
  • Every student who satisfies the major qualification requirements and who petitions to declare the major by the campus major declaration deadline (i.e., before enrolling in their third year or the equivalent) will be admitted to the major. Students who satisfy the major admission requirements, but who petition to declare the major after the campus major declaration deadline will be considered on a case-by-case basis for admission to the major; admission is not guaranteed.

Appeal Process

Students who are not eligible to declare the major may submit an appeal to the global and community health B.S. faculty advisor. The department will notify the student and their college of the outcome of the appeal within 15 working days of the quarterly appeal deadline.

See our appeal process for more information.

How to Declare a Major

Students should submit a petition to declare by completing the online declaration petition as soon as they complete the major qualification courses or reach their declaration deadline quarter, whichever comes first.

Students petitioning when the campus declaration deadline is imminent (i.e., in their sixth quarter, for students admitted as frosh), will either be approved, denied, or provided with conditions (e.g., completion of some courses with certain grades) that will be resolved within at most one more enrolled quarter, even if they have not completed major qualification courses.

Each major/minor advising office has a process for declaring. To initiate the process to declare, please complete the online declaration petition located on the GCH website. For assistance, please contact GCH BS advising at gchBSadvising@ucsc.edu.

Letter Grade Policy

All courses that are taken to satisfy any major requirement must be taken for a letter grade.

Course Substitution Policy

At least half of the upper-division courses required for the major must be taken at UC Santa Cruz, not as transfer credits from another institution. If a student plans to transfer to UCSC from another institution, the student is advised to contact GCH B.S. Advising at UCSC before enrolling in upper-division courses at the student’s institution or any institution other than UCSC. This advising will help students understand the limitation of transferring upper-division courses from other institutions to UCSC. For more information on transferring courses to UCSC, please consult the undergraduate website.

Once matriculated, a student must receive permission from the department to satisfy the BIOL 20A, BIOL 100, BIOL 105, BIOL 101, or BIOL 110 requirements with courses taken at other institutions. Students who wish to receive credit toward the major for these or other courses taken either at UCSC or at another institution should contact GCH B.S. advising.

Double Majors and Major/Minor Combinations Policy

Students interested in pursuing multiple majors within the biological sciences may NOT declare the following combination of majors:

  • Biology (B.A., B.S., or minor) AND any other biological sciences major
  • Any combination of the following: Global and Community Health (B.A., or B.S.), Human Biology, Molecular, Cell and Developmental Biology, Neuroscience, or Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Should a student choose to double major, they must qualify for and complete the Disciplinary Communication and comprehensive requirements for each of the majors.

Study Abroad

The UC Education Abroad Program (EAP) offers qualified students unique opportunities to broaden their educational horizons. We encourage interested students to participate. Many programs are in English-speaking countries or use English for advanced courses. Many programs offer small classes, extensive laboratories, and/or field research experience.

Students interested in study abroad need to get an early start on their basic science requirements, including chemistry, mathematics, and introductory biology and must declare their major prior to applying to go abroad. Students interested in studying abroad should visit the EAP office as soon as possible to begin planning. They should also seek advice about their EAP plan for major courses at UC Santa Cruz from GCH B.S. Advising and receive their approval.

Honors

Honors in the majors are awarded to graduating students whose academic performance demonstrates excellence at a grade point average (GPA) of 3.5 or above. Highest honors are awarded to those students whose performance demonstrates the highest level of excellence and results in a GPA of 3.8 or above.

Medical and Professional School Admission

Medical and professional school admissions requirements vary; students should verify that their coursework will satisfy the admissions requirements of the programs to which they plan to apply.

Biomedical Concentration

Course Requirements

Lower-Division Courses

All of the following courses:
BIOL 20ACell and Molecular Biology

5

BIOE 20BDevelopment and Physiology

5

BIOL 20LExperimental Biology Laboratory

2

CHEM 8AOrganic Chemistry

5

CHEM 8LOrganic Chemistry Laboratory

2

CHEM 8BOrganic Chemistry

5

CHEM 8MOrganic Chemistry Laboratory

2

PHYS 6AIntroductory Physics I

5

PHYS 6BIntroductory Physics II

5

PHYS 6CIntroductory Physics III

5

PHYS 6LIntroductory Physics I Laboratory

1

GCH 1Foundations for Global and Community Health

5

STAT 7Statistical Methods for the Biological, Environmental, and Health Sciences

5

STAT 7LStatistical Methods for the Biological, Environmental, and Health Sciences Laboratory

2

BIOL 20L is waived for junior transfer students who completed their introductory biology courses at a California community college.

Note: CHEM 109 is also recommended for pre-med students.

Plus one of the following series of courses:
Either these courses

CHEM 1AGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 1BGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 1CGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 1NGeneral Chemistry Laboratory

2

or these courses

CHEM 3AGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 3BGeneral Chemistry

3

CHEM 3BLGeneral Chemistry Lab

2

CHEM 3CGeneral Chemistry

3

CHEM 3CLGeneral Chemistry Lab

2

CHEM 4AAdvanced General Chemistry: Molecular Structure and Reactivity

5

CHEM 4ALAdvanced General Chemistry Lab

2

CHEM 4BAdvanced General Chemistry: Molecular Structure and Reactivity

5

CHEM 4BLAdvanced General Chemistry Lab

2

Plus one of the following options:
Either these courses

MATH 11ACalculus with Applications

5

MATH 11BCalculus with Applications

5

or these courses

MATH 19ACalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

MATH 19BCalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

Language Requirement

SPAN 1-SPAN 4 or the equivalent and one quarter of Spanish for health-care workers (SPAN 5M).

SPAN 1First-Year Spanish

5

SPAN 2First-Year Spanish

5

SPAN 3First-Year Spanish

5

SPAN 4Second-Year Spanish

5

SPAN 5MMedical Spanish

5

Upper-Division Courses

All of the following courses:
BIOL 100Biochemistry

5

BIOL 101Molecular Biology

5

BIOL 105Genetics

5

BIOL 110Cell Biology

5

BIOL 113Principles of Epidemiology

5

BIOL 130Human Physiology

5

BIOL 130LHuman Physiology Laboratory

2

GCH 190Global and Community Health Task Force

5

GCH 195Global and Community Health Communication

2

METX 115Environmental Health Science

5

Internship Requirement:
BIOL 189Health Sciences Internship

3

Students must participate in a community health-care service activity approved by the health sciences internship coordinator. Credit may be earned over multiple quarters.

Disciplinary Communication (DC) Requirement

Students of every major must satisfy that major's upper-division disciplinary communication (DC) requirement. The DC requirement in global and community health B.S. degree is satisfied by completing the following courses:

GCH 190Global and Community Health Task Force

5

GCH 195Global and Community Health Communication

2

Comprehensive Requirement

All majors have a comprehensive requirement. For the global and community health B.S., this requirement can be satisfied by receiving a passing grade in the Health Sciences Internship, BIOL 189.

Planners

The tables below are for informational purposes and do not reflect all university, general education, and credit requirements. See Undergraduate Graduation Requirements for more information.

Sample Global and Community health B.S., Biomedical Concentration, First-Year Student Four-Year Planner

Additional first-year student sample planners

  Fall Winter Spring Summer 
Entering       College 1A
      Summer Edge (optional)
       
 1st (frosh) CHEM 3A CHEM 3B & CHEM 3BL CHEM 3C & CHEM 3CL  
MATH 11A MATH 11B BIOL 20A  
  WRIT 1/WRIT 1E (if needed)    
2nd (soph) BIOE 20B

BIOL 20L

BIOL 100  
GCH 1 CHEM 8B & CHEM 8M STAT 7 & STAT 7L  
CHEM 8A & CHEM 8L   METX 115  
WRIT 2*      
3rd (junior) BIOL 105 BIOL 101 BIOL 110  
SPAN 1 PHYS 6B SPAN 3  
PHYS 6A & PHYS 6L SPAN 2 BIOL 113  
4th (senior) BIOL 130 & BIOL 130L GCH 195

BIOL 189

 
SPAN 4 SPAN 5M GCH 190  
PHYS 6C      

* WRIT 2 should be taken in or before spring quarter of the second year.

The following general education requirements will be fulfilled by the major requirements listed in the above planner: MF, SI, SR, CC and PR general education requirements. In addition to the GE requirements satisfied by the above courses, a student will also need to complete courses satisfying the ER, IM, TA and PE general education requirements.

Sample Global and Community Health B.S., Biomedical Concentration, Transfer Two-Year Planner

Additional transfer student sample planners

  Fall Winter Spring Summer
Entering       College 1A
      Summer Edge (optional)
       
3rd (junior) BIOL 105 BIOL 100 BIOL 101  
GCH 1 PHYS 6B

METX115

 
PHYS 6A & PHYS 6L

SPAN 1

STAT 7 & STAT 7L

SPAN 2

PHYS 6C

 
4th (senior) BIOL 110 BIOL 130 & BIOL 130L SPAN 5M  
  SPAN 4 BIOL 189  
SPAN 3 GCH 190

GCH 195

BIOL 113

 

This planner assumes that a student has completed all UC Transfer Pathway courses:

  • General biology with lab: BIOL 20A, BIOE 20B, BIOL 20L
  • General chemistry with lab (one-year sequence) CHEM 3A, CHEM 3B & CHEM 3BL and CHEM 3C & CHEM 3CL
  • Calculus for STEM majors (one-year sequence) MATH 11A and MATH 11B
  • Organic chemistry (full sequence with lab) CHEM 8A & CHEM 8L and CHEM 8B & CHEM 8M

Initial Spanish course placement is based on the Spanish placement exam. Students who lack prior experience with the Spanish language should consider taking Spanish courses prior to transferring to UCSC.

Public and Community Health Concentration

Course Requirements

Lower-Division Courses

Core Courses
BIOL 20ACell and Molecular Biology

5

BIOE 20BDevelopment and Physiology

5

BIOL 20LExperimental Biology Laboratory

2

CHEM 8AOrganic Chemistry

5

CHEM 8BOrganic Chemistry

5

CHEM 8LOrganic Chemistry Laboratory

2

CHEM 8MOrganic Chemistry Laboratory

2

METX 41Physiology of Disease

5

GCH 1Foundations for Global and Community Health

5

STAT 7Statistical Methods for the Biological, Environmental, and Health Sciences

5

STAT 7LStatistical Methods for the Biological, Environmental, and Health Sciences Laboratory

2

Plus one of the following options:
Either these courses

MATH 11ACalculus with Applications

5

MATH 11BCalculus with Applications

5

or these courses

MATH 19ACalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

MATH 19BCalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

BIOL 20L is waived for junior transfer students who completed their introductory biology courses at a California community college.

Note: CHEM 109 is also recommended for pre-med students.

Plus one of the following series of courses:
Either these courses

CHEM 1AGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 1BGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 1CGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 1NGeneral Chemistry Laboratory

2

or these courses

CHEM 3AGeneral Chemistry

5

CHEM 3BGeneral Chemistry

3

CHEM 3BLGeneral Chemistry Lab

2

CHEM 3CGeneral Chemistry

3

CHEM 3CLGeneral Chemistry Lab

2

or these courses

CHEM 4AAdvanced General Chemistry: Molecular Structure and Reactivity

5

CHEM 4ALAdvanced General Chemistry Lab

2

CHEM 4BAdvanced General Chemistry: Molecular Structure and Reactivity

5

CHEM 4BLAdvanced General Chemistry Lab

2

Lower-Division Breadth Requirement (Choose One)
ANTH 2Introduction to Cultural Anthropology

5

BIOL 80AFemale Physiology and Gynecology

5

BIOL 80JBiology of Emerging and Pandemic Diseases

5

BIOL 88Studies in Medicine: Its Art, History, Science, and Philosophy

5

CLNI 60Water Justice: Global Insights for a Critical Resource

5

CMMU 10Introduction to Community Activism

5

CSE 80AUniversal Access: Disability, Technology, and Society

5

ENVS 25Environmental Politics, Economics and Justice

5

ENVS 80FIntroduction to Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems

5

FMST 10Feminisms of/and the Global South

5

FMST 30Feminism and Science

5

FMST 31Disability Studies

5

FMST 41Trans Gender Bodies

5

HIS 81Science in the Colonial World

5

JRLC 30
/CLNI 30
(H)ACER Undergraduate Community Internship

2

LALS 55AIDS Across the Americas

5

LIT 80KTopics in Medical Humanities

5

POLI 17U.S. and the World Economy

5

POLI 20American Politics

5

POLI 61Politics of Social Policy

5

PSYC 1Introduction to Psychology

5

SOCY 1Introduction to Sociology

5

SOCY 10Issues and Problems in American Society

5

SOCY 15World Society

5

SPAN 3First-Year Spanish

5

SPAN 4Second-Year Spanish

5

SPAN 5MMedical Spanish

5

SAS2V Feeding the World (UCD)

VME 57VGlobal Pop Health & Env (UCD)

Upper-Division Courses

All of the following courses:
BIOL 100Biochemistry

5

BIOL 113Principles of Epidemiology

5

CMMU 165Community Analysis for Global Health

5

GCH 190Global and Community Health Task Force

5

GCH 195Global and Community Health Communication

2

METX 115Environmental Health Science

5

Internship Requirement:
BIOL 189Health Sciences Internship

3

Students must participate in a community health-care service activity approved by the health sciences internship coordinator. Credit may be earned over multiple quarters.

STEM Elective (Choose One):

BIOE 118Plants and Society: the Biology of Food, Shelter, and Medicine

5

BIOL 101Molecular Biology

5

BIOL 105Genetics

5

BIOL 117Global Health and Neglected Diseases

5

CHEM 109Intermediate Organic Chemistry and Applications to Biology

3

CHEM 169Chemistry and Biology of Drug Design and Discovery

5

CHEM 171Chemical Biology

5

METX 100Introduction to Microbiology

5

METX 102Cell and Molecular Toxicology

5

METX 133Medical Microbiology

5

METX 135Functional Anatomy

5

METX 135LFunctional Anatomy Lab

3

Enrollment in METX 135 requires concurrent enrollment in METX 135L.

Non-STEM Electives (Choose two):
ANTH 110EAnthropology of Global Environmental Change

5

ANTH 110FEvolution of Human Diet

5

ANTH 110TMotherhood in American Culture

5

ANTH 110YFeeding California

5

ANTH 111Human Ecology

5

ANTH 112Life Cycles

5

ANTH 129Beyond Borders: Other Globalizations and Histories of Interconnection

5

ANTH 134Medical Anthropology: An Introduction

5

ANTH 136The Biology of Everyday Life

5

ANTH 144Anthropology of Poverty and Welfare

5

ANTH 146Anthropology and the Environment

5

ANTH 148
/FMST 148
Gender and Global Development

5

ANTH 160Reproductive and Population Politics

5

ANTH 161The Anthropology of Food

5

ANTH 161SAnthropology of Food, Abroad

5

ANTH 162Anthropology of Displaced Persons

5

BIOL 188A Life in Medicine

3

CMMU 156Politics of Food and Health

5

CMMU 160Public Health

5

CMMU 161Gender Health and Justice

5

CMMU 162Community Gardens and Social Change

5

CMMU 163Health Care Inequalities

5

CMMU 164Health Justice in Conflict

5

DANM 136Mapmaking for Environmental Activism

5

FMST 124Technology, Science, and Race Across the Americas

5

FMST 125Race, Sex, and Technology

5

HIS 101DWorld History of Science

5

HIS 101FGlobal Environmental History

5

HIS 139CQueer Pasts: A Radical Telling of LGBTQ History in the United States

5

HIS 151History of Science, Medicine, and Technology from Antiquity to the Enlightenment

5

HIS 151AMedicine and the Body in the Colonial World

5

HIS 151BDrugs in World History

5

HIS 177ASlaves, Soldiers, and Scientists: History of the Tropics

5

LALS 175Migration, Gender, and Health

5

LALS 194XExtractivism and Socio-Environmental Conflicts in the Americas

5

LGST 108Gender, Sexuality, and Law

5

LGST 135Native Peoples Law

5

LGST 137International Environmental Law and Policy

5

LGST 173
/POLI 173
Disability, Law, & Politics

5

POLI 102Doing Research

5

POLI 120B
/LGST 120B
Society and Democracy in American Political Development

5

POLI 120C
/LGST 120C
State and Capitalism in American Political Development

5

POLI 121
/LGST 121
Racism & Justice in America

5

POLI 160B
/LGST 160B
International Law

5

POLI 166Politics of Migration

5

POLI 175
/LGST 175
Human Rights

5

POLI 182
/LGST 182
The Power to Punish

5

POLI 186
/LGST 186
Global Health Politics

5

POLI 187Decolonial Global Health: A View from the Middle East and Africa

5

POLI 189Pandemics, Politics, and Global and Community Health

5

SOCY 121Sociology of Health and Medicine

5

SOCY 121GGenomics and Society

5

SOCY 127PSociology of Drugs, Botanicals and Pharmaceuticals

5

SOCY 128C
/LGST 128C
Social History of Democracy, Anarchism, and Indigenism

5

SOCY 128I
/LGST 128I
Race and Law

5

SOCY 128J
/LGST 128J
The World Jury on Trial

5

SOCY 128M
/LGST 128M
International Law and Global Justice

5

SOCY 132Sociology of Science and Technology

5

SOCY 135Healing Justice

5

SOCY 153Sociology of Emotions

5

Students may petition for substitution of elective courses.

Disciplinary Communication (DC) Requirement

Students of every major must satisfy that major's upper-division disciplinary communication (DC) requirement. The DC requirement in the global and community health B.S. degree is satisfied by completing the following courses:

GCH 190Global and Community Health Task Force

5

GCH 195Global and Community Health Communication

2

Comprehensive Requirement

All majors have a comprehensive requirement. For the global and community health B.S., this requirement can be satisfied by receiving a passing grade in the Health Sciences Internship, BIOL 189.

Planners

The tables below are for informational purposes and do not reflect all university, general education, and credit requirements. See Undergraduate Graduation Requirements for more information.

Sample Global and Community Health B.S., Public and Community Health Concentration, First-Year Student, Four-Year Planner

Additional first-year student sample planners

  Fall Winter Spring Summer 
Entering       College 1A
      Summer Edge (optional)
       
 1st (frosh) CHEM 3A CHEM 3B & CHEM 3BL CHEM 3C & CHEM 3CL  
MATH 11A MATH 11B BIOL 20A  
College 1 WRIT 1/WRIT 1E (if needed)    
2nd (soph) BIOE 20B

METX 41

CHEM 8B & CHEM 8M  
BIOL 20L CHEM 8A & CHEM 8L Lower-Division Breadth  
GCH 1      
WRIT 2*      
3rd (junior) NON-STEM Elective 1 CMMU 165 BIOL 113  
BIOL 100 STEM Elective METX 115  
STAT 7 & STAT 7L   GCH 195  
4th (senior)   Non-STEM Elective 2

BIOL 189

 
GCH 190      
       
       

* WRIT 2 should be taken in or before spring quarter of the second year.

The following general education requirements will be fulfilled by the major requirements listed in the above planner: MF, SI, SR, CC and PR general education requirement. In addition to the GE requirements satisfied by the above courses, a student will also need to complete courses satisfying the ER, IM, TA and PE general education requirements.

Sample Global and Community Health B.S., Public and Community Health Concentration, Transfer Two-Year Planner

Additional transfer student sample planners

  Fall Winter Spring Summer 
Entering       KRSG 1T
      Summer Edge (optional)
       
3rd (junior) BIOL 100 METX 41 METX 115  
GCH 1 STAT 7 & STAT 7L

NON-STEM Elective 2

 
  NON-STEM Elective 1 BIOL 113  
4th (senior)        
STEM Elective  CMMU 165 BIOL 189  
GCH 195 GCH 190    

This planner assumes that a student has completed all UC Transfer Pathway courses:

  • General biology with lab: BIOL 20A, BIOE 20B, BIOL 20L
  • General chemistry with lab (one-year sequence) CHEM 3A, CHEM 3B & CHEM 3BL and CHEM 3C & CHEM 3CL
  • Calculus for STEM majors (one-year sequence) MATH 11A and MATH 11B
  • Organic chemistry (full sequence with lab) CHEM 8A & CHEM 8L and CHEM 8B & CHEM 8M