2 years
(6 terms, including 2 summer terms)
2 years
(6 terms, including 2 summer terms)
The PA Studies program curriculum combines didactic courses with clinical rotations to equip students with the necessary skills to become health care leaders as PAs at the end of the two-year program.
Each student must complete the program within five calendar years of their first day of class in their first term.
Instruction is provided by PAs and other health care providers who have expertise in their respective specialties and fields.
The PAS course “Transition to Professional Practice” must be completed within the final four months of the program, during the clinical year.
Students benefit from specialty instruction in:
The program works to build and maintain a strong pool of clinical sites and preceptors across the United States, including accepting suggestions from prospective and enrolled students. The program evaluates clinical sites and preceptors for educational suitability, among other important considerations.
All didactic courses are sequential and must be successfully completed in order to progress to the next term of the curriculum. Since each course in the program is offered only once during each academic year, any departure from completing a course in its planned sequence (e.g. failure to receive a passing grade of ‘C’ or better, leave of absence from the program) will result in a delay by retaking the course the following year, as well as delays in completing the program. Each student must complete the program within five calendar years of their first day of class in their first term.
Spring Term (15 Credits)
Summer Term (15 Credits)
Fall Term (15 Credits)
The order in which a student completes all of the below clinical courses may vary, so course numbers are not listed by discipline.
Learn more about the Supervised Clinical Practice Experiences and background check requirements.
Spring Term (12 Credits)
Summer Term (12 Credits)
Fall Term (13 Credits)
Transition to Professional Practice
This course will be taught by our clinical education faculty members, and it will incorporate the world-renowned experts and resources of the Winter Institute for Simulation, Education and Research (WISER) of UPMC and the University of Pittsburgh, among other state-of-the-art simulation and immersive learning technologies, as students progress through its learning activities.
The course combines instruction and immersive learning opportunities on practical issues as they relate to the practicing PA, especially the new graduates, with evaluation instruments that measure if and verify that the learner has met the learning outcomes of the program and has the knowledge, interpersonal skills, clinical and technical skills, professional behaviors, clinical reasoning and problem-solving abilities required for PA practice. This course includes a summative assessment of each student that must occur within four months of their graduation.
TOTAL PROGRAM CREDITS: 82