I was thinking about doing a Masters in Nutrition from my undergrad school. Then I came across VCU's pre-medical degree certificate. Its still considered graduate work, but not a masters.
my undergrad school is instate and ~15 minutes away, whereas VCU is out of state and 2.5 hours away.
i understand heavy science and having it related to "dental school material"
what do you guys think of this nutrition curriculum?
A. Science courses in Nutrition science to meet the Master of Nutrition requirements listed below (16 or more credits (excluding the employer projects/internship courses))
1) BCH 451 Introductory Biochemistry 4 cr
or NTR 501 Advanced Nutrition and Metabolism* 3 cr
or equivalent course taken in undergraduate status
2) BCH 553 Introduction to Molecular Biology & Metabolism 3 cr
or BCH 571 Regulation of Metabolism 3 cr
3) NTR 601 or FM 601 MR Seminar* 1 cr
4) At least 8 additional credit hours of NTR (nutrition science) courses at the 500 level or above.
NTR 500 - Principles of Human Nutrition*
NTR 501 Advanced Nutrition and Metabolism*
NTR 510 - Food Lipids: Issues and Controversies*
NTR 515 - Comparative Nutrition*
NTR 520 - Community Nutrition
NTR 521 - Nutrition through the Life Cycle
NTR 525 Advanced Feed Science and Technology*
NTR 550 - Applied Ruminant Nutrition*
NTR 554 - Lactation, Milk, and Nutrition*
NTR 555 - Exercise Nutrition*
NTR 560 - Nutrition and Biotechnology
NTR 701 - Protein and Amino Acid Metabolism
NTR 706 - Vitamin Metabolism
NTR 708 - Energy Metabolism
NTR 775 - Mineral Metabolism
NTR 785 - Digestion and Metabolism in Ruminants
NTR 790-601 Advanced Feed Formulation*
5) 3-6 Credits, to total at least 18 credits in group A, from the following:
FM 594 - Advanced Feed Mill Practicum*, or
NTR 665 - Nutrition, Food and Feed Science Practicum*
Then 9-12 credits of business, leadership, and professional development courses. Thats for a professional science masters.
I can do 9-12 of more nutrition courses for a 100% nutritions masters.
Do you guys think these nutrition courses are sciency enough? A few look good, but then you have things like Feed and Mill nutrition, Feed science, Lactation and milk.