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ATSU-ASHS holds largest graduation to date

471 students earn degrees

A.T. Still University’s Arizona School of Health Sciences celebrated commencement ceremonies Saturday, August 8, at the Phoenix Convention Center in Phoenix. At the dual ceremonies, 471 students received either master of science or doctoral degrees.

This was the second time that ATSU-ASHS has held two separate ceremonies in one day. At the morning ceremony, 302 online students graduated, and at the afternoon ceremony, 169 residential program students received their degrees. Graduates received degrees in human movement, occupational therapy, physician assistant studies, audiology, physical therapy, and athletic training.

“We are very excited about this graduation, which is our largest ever,” said Randy Danielsen, Ph.D., PA-C, DFAAPA, dean of ATSU-ASHS. “The programs of the Arizona School of Health Sciences continue to thrive with applicant pools meeting or exceeding expectations.”

As part of commencement ceremonies, honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degrees were awarded to keynote speaker David H. Perrin, Ph.D., ATC, provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro, and David P. Goldstein, Ph.D., professor emeritus of audiology at Purdue University.

During the commencement addresses, Dr. Perrin urged graduates not to underestimate the impact they will have on the individuals with whom they work.Gradpic11

“Among your most gratifying experiences will be helping an older person be able to hear his or her partner say ‘I love you’; to extend physician services to a rural setting where a dearth of doctors exists; and to restore an injured worker’s ability to return to his or her occupation, to support a family completely dependent on that individual’s ability to earn a living,” he said.

Dr. Goldstein, who is often referred to as “Father of the Au.D.,” recently donated his historical audiology archives, which represent audiology’s rich history and the transition of audiology to a doctoring status, to ATSU-ASHS. He was also responsible for introducing the concept of an Au.D. program to the school.

Founded in 1995, ATSU-ASHS is committed to educating and preparing its students to practice at the forefront of a rapidly growing healthcare system. According to Dr. Danielsen, during the current academic year, ATSU-ASHS had 192 students enrolled in its five residential degree programs and approximately 1,800 in distance programs.

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