Hey all,
Really stuck between Emory's Global Epidemiology program, Michigan's Global Epi program, and Boston University's Epi program with a social justice certificate. Any and all insight/thoughts on these three programs would be greatly appreciated!
I'd look at factors like tuition, rent in each of these cities, and opportunities available for research. I am always a big fan of Emory, I know people who are students there and love it, so personally for me I'd choose Emory or Michigan. Michigan is fantastically ranked, I'd have to look closer as I'm not super familiar with the school. BU isn't big on research, so if you want to do something research related, or maybe get a PhD, then I'd have to say no, if given the option to go elsewhere.
Also . . . a certificate in 'social justice' at BU? To be honest, it sounds super vague, social justice is such an encompassing term, I was surprised to find a lot of the stuff I'm interested in falls under this rubric, but it is a big umbrella, and sort of more of a buzz word than a specific discipline. I dunno, I heard that BU has 'urban activist labs' and they encourage students to go 'into the city' and do . . . stuff, is this somehow related to a social justice certificate? I just don't see how this would be marketable in a lot of the workplaces you'll find people with public health degrees as it doesn't set a job candidate apart from anybody else (I, tongue in cheek, have a 'social justice' concentrated MPH), and it doesn't advertise any hard skills. This seems like a certificate that is offered in order to draw in applicants, but it might not do much for you after graduation. I think as a rule of thumb it's a good idea not to undertake any academic coursework that is hard to define to most people, unless you're doing something esoteric which has its own niche, UNLESS you learn more about what the coursework for this certificate is and if it appeals to you and you can see yourself gaining tangible skills. There's always time to be engaged in activism and social justice issues, you don't need to pay super high tuition to do it, better to save that for more hard skills.
They really need to focus down this certificate, maybe make it into something like a certificate in "quantitative analysis of public health interventions for marginalized populations". It could be something cool like working with homeless families or PLHIV, but as is that is so vague, it could be just making signs for people to march on city hall every weekend. Who knows?
BU changed their curriculum recently in order to offer certificates as the old curriculum was kind of watered down, so I'm not sure if this is an experimental offering, or a marketing way for BU to try to stand apart, or maybe they are still working on upgrading the curriculum. I don't really know what is offered for this certificate, if you want to do something Epi related do you need this or something else?
It sounds like a marketing tactic, a way to get people interested in social justice in general to enroll. In the end, a lot of these schools are run as businesses, if they hear many applicants are interested in social justice issues these days, then they'll make a concentration, if they hear people are interested in unicorns, you might be able to get a certificate in unicorns! But you have to figure out if employers need unicorn experts or people with a certificate in Biostatistics with a concentration in Epidemiology.