国际学生入学条件
Three letters of recommendation
Official transcripts from all institutions attended
Unofficial transcripts uploaded to the online application site
Personal Statement highlighting your desired area of specialization, research interests, as well as your preferred advisor, uploaded directly to the application site
Resume or Curriculum Vitae
You must hold a baccalaureate degree or its equivalent from a regionally accredited college or university.
A cumulative GPA for their most recent degree of 3.0 or higher for the entire degree
Minimum overall scores of 79 (Internet-based test iBT/ iBT Home Edition), 550 (Old Paper-based test PBT) or 22/30 on each of the Listening, Reading, and Writing sections (New Paper-based test- PBT) or higher on the TOEFL test. (TOEFL Essentials is not accepted.)
Personal Statement
A minimum overall score of 6.5 or higher on the IELTS Academic Test
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IDP—雅思考试联合主办方

雅思考试总分
6.5
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雅思考试指南
- 雅思总分:6.5
- 托福网考总分:79
- 托福笔试总分:550
- 其他语言考试:A minimum overall score of 100 or higher on the Duolingo Test.
CRICOS代码:
申请截止日期: 请与IDP顾问联系以获取详细信息。
课程简介
An essential part of human development and families is understanding health and wellbeing, broadly defined, and how to prevent unhealthy outcomes. Faculty and graduate students in this research concentration consider the processes that promote health and well-being, and how to prevent negative outcomes, at the individual, familial, community, and societal levels.<br><br>Almost every HDFS faculty member considers health and wellbeing on some level, and many develop prevention and early intervention policies and practices that work to improve health behaviors, wellbeing, education, and/or relationships in our society and throughout the world. Strengths of UConn HDFS research in this area include:<br><br>Frameworks: HDFS faculty use multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches as well as a variety of quantitative and qualitative methods to understand the social and psychological contexts of health and wellbeing. Faculty work from family systems, developmental science, psychological, sociological, public health, feminist, and other perspectives to consider health, wellbeing, and prevention.<br>Context: Working within a Human Development and Family Sciences framework, HDFS researchers examine these processes in a range of contexts, including families, peer groups, schools, housing, food pantries, socio-economic, community, cultural, environmental, and institutional systems.<br>Lifespan perspective: Faculty and students consider health, wellbeing, and prevention from infancy to late adulthood. Topics include fathers influence on childhood obesity, childhood social and emotional development, substance use and recovery in adolescence, couple therapy, adult sexual behaviors, cancer survivorship.<br>Range of health topics: Research encompasses strategies for coping with chronic illness, social aspects of disability in the context of the family, weight bias and discrimination, children's conduct and mood disorders, cochlear implants, risk behaviors in children and adolescents, and sexual health.<br>Policy and intervention and prevention oriented research: Worksite, school and home-based interventions to improve eating habits, increase physical activity, prevent/control obesity, or improve social and emotional development, school wellness policies, reducing weight stigma, STI prevention, ecological approaches to disease prevention, child maltreatment prevention.<br>Diverse populations: including African American couples, Latino American and immigrant families, multiracial youth, children and families in the United States, Germany, Israel, Netherlands, and Philippines, low income families, deaf children, sexual/gender minority youth, and HIV positive individuals.
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