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The final components of gerontology students' curriculum are the Practicum (GERO 491) and Practicum Seminar (GERO 493), which
is normally taken during the senior year. The practicum for general gerontology students consists of a minimum of 400 hours
experience in a program, agency or institution that serves older adults. Students must pay tuition during their practicum,
and receive 10 semester hours of academic credit upon satisfactory completion of the experience. Students are normally on
placement 40 hours per week for approximately two and one-half months. Alternative placement schedules must be approved by
the Program Director.
The long-term care practicum consists of a minimum of 800 hours experience in an approved skilled nursing facility under the
supervision of an Ohio licensed nursing home administrator who has been practicing for at least two years. Although the practicum
is completed in one facility, during the practicum, students must spend at least one day each in a proprietary, philanthropic,
and governmental facility to observe the diversity of long-term care settings. The student must pay tuition during his/her
practicum, and receives 20 semester hours of academic credit upon satisfactory completion of the experience. The student is
normally on placement 40 hours per week for five months. Alternative placement schedules must be approved by the Program Director.
Students enrolled in practicum are required to keep a daily activity log during this experience, and submit this log to the
Program Director. The activity log should provide a daily accounting of the hours worked, activities engaged in, and any insights
gained from the activities. At the completion of the practicum, students must provide the Program Director with their daily
activity log, as well as an 8-10 page paper on a project that they undertook as part of their practicum (e.g., an assessment
of the feasibility of establishing a child care center in a life care community; a report on residents' satisfaction with
meals served in a nursing home). The Practicum Seminar (GERO 493) is taken concurrently with Practicum (GERO 491). During
the seminar, students who have completed/are close to completing their internships return to campus to share their practicum
experiences with program faculty and students who are preparing to go on internship. The daily activity log and the final
paper must be turned in during the practicum seminar.
Purposes of the Practicum
The basic purposes of the practicum, which is a key part of the curriculum, are to:
- Provide students with a professional experience and to provide an opportunity for career orientation.
- Give students an opportunity to put the knowledge they accumulated to use in a facility serving the elderly and thus begin
to integrate knowledge and practice.
- Give general gerontology students an understanding of the workings of a specific program/agency/institution and its relationship
to other programs/ agencies/institutions.
- Satisfy, for Long-Term Care Administration students, the training requirements established by the Ohio Board Examiners of
Nursing Home Administrators to enable them to sit for the Ohio licensure examination.
Prerequisites to Enrollment in the Practicum
- Students must be seniors at the time they begin the Practicum and have a grade point average of 2.5 one semester prior to
the beginning of the Practicum.
- Students must complete at least 50 clock hours of volunteer or paid experience in one or more programs, agencies, or institutions
serving the elderly.
- An interview with the Program Director will be conducted in the first month of the semester before the student believes that
he/she is ready to begin practicum. If the Director does not feel that the applicant is ready to begin practicum, or does
not have the potential for professional practice, he/she reserves the right to not accept the student for practicum at that
time.
- Students must file an Internship Assignment form (General Gerontology students) or Administrator-in-Training form (Long-Term
Care Administration students) at least three months before the term they wish to begin their practicum. The form must be filled
out completely before it will be accepted.
The matter of where the placement will occur is a negotiable matter among the student, the Program Director, and the facility.
Evaluations and Grading
The Practicum experience is graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis. The preceptor in the facility is provided an evaluation
form by the Program Director. The evaluation form elicits information from both the preceptor and the student. The evaluation
form is to be completed, signed, shared with the student, and returned at the end of the internship (i.e., after 400 and 800
hours have been completed). The practicum. grade is based on the student's performance as assessed by the preceptor and the
successful completion of the daily activity log (as evaluated by the Program Director).
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