Preparing for Public Health School
What You Should Do When...
First-Year:
- Keep your grades up!
- Make sure your name is on the HPAG's Blackboard list.
- Check out the Roanoke College's HPAG web site.
- Join Students Interested in Health Careers.
- Attend health-related programs on campus (including the Hylton Lecture) and visits from representatives of health professions schools.
- Identify public health schools that you might like to attend. Check out the web site for each of these schools and note specific requirements.
- Investigate summer paid or voluntary medically-related experiences.
Second-Year:
- Keep your grades up!
- Make sure your name is on the HPAG's Blackboard list.
- Participate in Students Interested in Health Careers.
- Attend health-related programs on campus (including the Hylton Lecture) and visits from representatives of health professions schools.
- Investigate shadowing opportunities with public health workers. Investigate summer paid or voluntary medically-related experiences.
- Log on the Educational Testing Service (ETS) web site to learn about the Graduate Record Examination (GRE).
- Log on to the Schools of Public Health Application Service (SOPHAS) to learn about the process required for application to schools of public health.
Third-Year:
- Keep your grades up!
- Make sure your name is on the HPAG's Blackboard list.
- Participate in Students Interested in Health Careers.
- Attend health-related programs on campus (including the Hylton Lecture) and visits from representatives of health professions schools.
- Investigate shadowing opportunities, placements, and internships with public health workers.
- Prepare to take the GRE. Consider taking a preparatory course for it.
- Take the GRE in spring semester.
- Complete the schools of public health online application form through the SOPHAS web site. Submit on the first day possible.
- Conduct a practice interview with members of HPAG.
Fourth-Year:
- Keep your grades up!
- Make sure your name is on the HPAG's Blackboard list.
- Participate in Students Interested in Health Careers.
- Attend health-related programs on campus (including the Hylton Lecture) and visits from representatives of health professions schools.
- Investigate shadowing opportunities, placements, and internships with public health workers.
What If You Don't Get In? Try Again!
- Contact schools and ask an admissions counselor what your weak areas are and how you can strengthen your application in the next round.
- Apply again.


