Auburn University Harrison College of Pharmacy
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Education
Practice Ready Curriculum Graduate Programs Dual Degree Programs Experiential Learning Electives What is a Practice Ready Graduate Hands-On Learning Pharmacy as a Career
Research
Research Opportunities Drug Discovery and Development Health Outcomes Research and Policy Pharmacy Practice
Patient Care
Experiential Learning Co-Curricular Interprofessional Education IPPE APPE HSOP Managed Clinics
Student Experience
Auburn Family Caring for Alabama Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Student Life Find Your Village By the Numbers Auburn University Mobile Campus
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    Auburn University Harrison College of Pharmacy
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    Education

    Practice Ready Curriculum Graduate Programs Dual Degree Programs Experiential Learning Electives What is a Practice Ready Graduate Hands-On Learning Pharmacy as a Career

    Research

    Research Opportunities Drug Discovery and Development Health Outcomes Research and Policy Pharmacy Practice

    Patient Care

    Experiential Learning Co-Curricular Interprofessional Education IPPE APPE HSOP Managed Clinics

    Student Experience

    Auburn Family Caring for Alabama Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Student Life Find Your Village By the Numbers Auburn University Mobile Campus
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    Experiential Learning

    The Experiential Programs Office within the Division of Clinical Affairs and Outreach oversees and manages the experiential curriculum, interprofessional education and the co-curriculum. The experiential curriculum accounts for approximately 30 percent of the college's Practice Ready Curriculum and includes the introductory pharmacy practice experiences (IPPEs) and advanced pharmacy practice experiences (APPEs). IPPEs occur beginning in the summer after the P1 year and continue through the P3 year. APPEs occur in the final professional year (P4). Experiential training also includes interprofessional education and the co-curriculum.

    In keeping with the overall mission of the Harrison College of Pharmacy the experiential curriculum prepares students to be highly-competent primary care practitioners who deliver pharmacy care in collaboration with other health care providers. The practice experiences allow student pharmacists to apply knowledge learned in the classroom to actual patients in real practice settings. These practice experiences give student pharmacists opportunities to develop and demonstrate achievement of this endpoint by practicing with pharmacist preceptors who serve as role models.

    As a student progresses through the experiential curriculum, they will have the opportunity to train in a variety of pharmacy practice settings. Each student develops the ability to independently resolve both routine and complex patient care problems. Special emphasis is given on developing the student's ability to resolve pharmaceutical-related problems with professional character, confidence and decisiveness.

    Learn more on the Experiential Programs website.

    When coming to Auburn College of Pharmacy, you can expect to get thrown in right away after P1 year into summer rotations. You get a community block. So you get to work in the community settings, such as like a CVS, or Walgreens. And the preceding years you get to not only retail, but a hospital setting ambulatory care and just gives you the experience that you won't need to have before you graduate to figure out what you want to do with your career path.

    Within your first year as a P1 at Auburn, you'll have the experiences available to you in a real world scenario with real patients. In the Auburn University employee pharmacy, as well as the Auburn University pharmaceutical care clinic. So those are right here within the pharmacy school. It provides you hands on experiences, you're able to fill medications for real patients. It's not just during lab and you're filling a fake medication for somebody it's truly filling medications for patients.

    You will have the opportunity to join many organizations that go out and help the community, whatever club that is, everybody has something that they do in the community to help us out. As far as if it's a blood drive or you know, we're going to take blood pressure or checking blood sugar. So it's plenty opportunities to do that and interact with real people giving them education to better help their health.

    The hands-on learning that this school provides. It really does enforce my decision of choosing pharmacy. I always knew that pharmacy was something that I have always wanted to do, but then just being here and going through the curriculum, and seeing how much of an impact that I have on the community through my experience here is-- really solidified my decision.

     

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    Experiential Learning Co-Curricular Interprofessional Education IPPE APPE HSOP Managed Clinics
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