2021-2022 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Department of Nutrition
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Autumn C. Marshall, Professor and Chair; Director, Didactic Program in Dietetics
Nancy H. Hunt, Associate Professor
Anne M. Lowery, Associate Professor and Director, Dietetic Internship Program
Tracy Noerper, Assistant Professor and Assistant Director, Dietetic Internship Program
The Department of Nutrition is dedicated to serving its students by integrating Christian faith and practice with academic excellence. The department assists students with the ability to communicate effectively, to think critically, and to develop the breadth and depth of knowledge needed by its graduates for participation in careers in the fields of nutrition therapy, food systems management, public health, and health and wellness promotion.
The food systems management program of study includes concepts from the study of food and human nutrition, food safety, financial and human resource management, marketing, and legal aspects of food service; food systems management majors earn a built-in minor in business. Students in Nutrition may choose a career path in public health, community nutrition, or wellness and health coaching. A student who wishes to become a Registered Dietitian may enter the accredited Didactic Program in Dietetics (DPD) upon completion of the prerequisite courses in the sciences and nutrition. The overall focus of the DPD is to train future dietitians who can serve in a wide variety of roles, from medical nutrition therapy to public health to health care food service management. The knowledge base of the discipline of nutrition includes concepts from the study of food and human nutrition, biology, chemistry, human development and social interaction, and resource management.
Distinctives of the Nutrition Department
Accredited Didactic Program in Dietetics
Lipscomb has a Didactic Program in Dietetics (DPD) that is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Education in Nutrition and Dietetics (ACEND). Students who seek to become Registered Dietitians/Nutritionists must complete a supervised practice experience in an accredited Dietetic Internship program beyond graduation from Lipscomb. The undergraduate program’s acceptance rate into dietetic internships is above 80 percent, much higher than the national average. Students in the DPD program study food science, normal nutrition at all stages of life, nutrition in the treatment of disease, management of food systems, and the biochemistry of nutrition. Students desiring to major in dietetics must complete an application and be accepted prior to completing the major/minor declaration form. Students have the opportunity to gain experience in the field at an undergraduate level in nutrition education for all ages, community nutrition and food systems management. An automatic minor in distributive science is built into the dietetics major. Details are provided by the director of the Didactic Program in Dietetics at Lipscomb.
Food Systems Management
The concentration in food systems management combines the study of food and nutrition with the study of management for students interested in restaurant management and the culinary arts. Students study food, marketing and consumer behavior, the management of financial and human resources, and legal aspects of business. Students have the opportunity to gain experience in the field, learning about human resource management, purchasing, inventory, and event planning and management. Students in this major earn an automatic minor in distributive business and have the necessary background to succeed in both culinary training and graduate school in business management.
Undergraduate DPD Certificate Program
The Undergraduate DPD Certificate Program provides the course work necessary for gaining the foundation knowledge and skills needed in a dietetic internship program. Unlike the traditional Didactic Program in Dietetics, this program provides only the major courses in dietetics and does not grant a second baccalaureate degree. The program is designed to meet the needs of students who already have a bachelor’s degree, and provides the course work necessary to receive a certificate (Verification Statement) from an accredited DPD program. The verification statement grants the eligibility to apply to and enroll in an accredited Dietetic Internship program or other accredited supervised practice program, which is necessary to complete before taking the Registration Examination for Dietitians. Students are welcome to transfer hours into the certificate program, and the DPD Director will complete a transcript evaluation to determine a plan of coursework for the certificate. A minimum of 18 hours must be completed at Lipscomb University in order to earn the certificate.
Students desiring to enroll in the Certificate Program must complete an application and be accepted prior to completing the certificate program declaration form.
Accredited Dietetic Internship Program
Completion of an accredited Dietetic Internship Program or other supervised practice program is required to become a Registered Dietitian. Lipscomb is the first among the Christian colleges in the Southeast to house a Dietetic Internship (DI) Program that is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Education in Nutrition and Dietetics (ACEND). The Dietetic Internship program began in 2002 and is a post-baccalaureate, supervised practice program in which interns complete more than 1,000 hours of supervised practice and complete graduate course work. Eligibility for the DI requires a completed bachelor’s degree and a Verification Statement from an ACEND-accredited Didactic Program in Dietetics (DPD.) Interns complete weekly rotations in a wide variety of settings, including the clinical, community and food service areas of dietetics. Upon completion of the internship, students are eligible to write the Registration Examination for Dietitians. Lipscomb’s first-time pass rate on the exam is higher than 80 percent, a requirement to maintain accreditation.
Career Opportunities
Dietetics
- Community nutrition
- Clinical nutrition
- Food journalism
- Food marketing
- Food systems management
- Education
- Health coaching
- Wellness centers
- Public health
- Private practice nutrition
- Sports nutrition
Food Systems Management
- Food systems management
- Hospitality industry
- Institutional management
- Food marketing
- Culinary school
- Food journalism
- Research and consultation
Nutrition
- Community Nutrition
- Health Coaching
- Public Health
- Wellness
Program of Study RequirementsMajorMinorCourses- NUTR 410V - Special Topics (1-3) F, SP, SU
- NUTR 420V - Independent Study (1-3) F, SP, SU Offered on demand
- NUTR 1011 - Professional Orientation (1) F
- NUTR 1213 - Food Science (3) F, SP
- NUTR 2613 - Principles of Nutrition (3) F, SP
- NUTR 3213 - Food Research and Production (3) SP
- NUTR 3223 - Nutrition Education and Health Promotion (3) SP
- NUTR 3603 - Community Nutrition (3) F
- NUTR 3633 - Nutrition Across the Lifespan (3) SU, on demand
- NUTR 3643 - Maternal and Child Nutrition (3) F
- NUTR 3653 - Nutrition in Aging (3) SP
- NUTR 3703 - Sports Nutrition (3) F
- NUTR 4043 - Practicum (3) F, SP, SU on demand
- NUTR 4093 - Senior Seminar (3) F
- NUTR 4213 - Food Systems Management I (3) F
- NUTR 4223 - Food Systems Management II (3) SP
- NUTR 4232 - Quantity Food Production, Safety, and Sanitation (2) SP
- NUTR 4503 - Medical Nutrition Therapy I (3) F
- NUTR 4513 - Medical Nutrition Therapy II (3) SP
- NUTR 4613 - Nutritional Biochemistry (3) SP
- NUTR 4623 - Clinical Nutrition Documentation (3) SP
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