2024-2025 University Catalog
Communication Disorders and Sciences
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Return to: College of Health Sciences
Communication Disorders and Sciences: Philosophy
The underlying basis for the graduate degree programs in Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology is the practitioner-teacher model, whereby students learn from faculty who have taken on dual roles as academicians and practitioners. This approach to professional education helps bridge the gap that can exist between classroom teaching and clinical service delivery. Students learn in an environment where teaching, research, and patient care are integrated.
The faculty at Rush have established records in clinical service delivery and participate in the clinical process in addition to teaching and research. Students receive outstanding clinical education experiences with diverse patients who present a full range of communicative disorders. The Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology programs are accredited by the Council on Academic Accreditation in Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology (CAA) of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA).
The programs in Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology are based on the philosophy that professional education is optimized by drawing upon the patients, health care providers, and other academic medical center resources. The resources at Rush University enrich and enhance faculty and student research and scholarship, and they provide unique opportunities for interprofessional education and collaboration. The clinical skills of Rush students are fostered and developed through didactic courses, clinical observation, and instruction, and are supervised by practitioner-teachers. The department faculty is supplemented by the expertise of physicians, scientists, and other health care practitioners within Rush University Medical Center.
Mission Statement
The Department of Communication Disorders and Sciences at Rush University Medical Center integrates outstanding graduate education, superior patient care, excellence in research and scholarship, and service to diverse communities.
Vision Statement
The clinical and graduate education programs of the Department of Communication Disorders and Sciences will be recognized as among the best in the United States.
Professional Credentialing
Rush programs in Communication Disorders and Sciences offer the academic and clinical education background necessary to begin the ASHA clinical fellowship year (speech-language pathology) and to meet requirements for certification in audiology and speech-language pathology. Upon graduation students are eligible to do the following:
- Obtain Illinois licensure.
- Meet requirements for professional certification in speech-language pathology or audiology.
- Meet the requirements for the Illinois Educator License as a non-teaching speech-language pathologist. This is under the School Services Personnel category. Eligibility for the Illinois Educator License may require adjustment to a student’s didactic or clinical experiences.
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