SWAGƵ

Skip to Content Skip to Footer
College of Pharmacy marketing photos taken in May 2019.
SWAGƵ / College of Pharmacy / Office of Experiential Education (OEE)

Office of Experiential Education (OEE)

College of Pharmacy practical experiences are an essential part of our curriculum, and account for nearly 45% of the program. The OEE oversees these experiences, and is committed to facilitating the highest quality hands-on education and patient experiences for our student pharmacists.

College of Pharmacy Associate Professor of Pharmaceutical Science Arezoo Campbell, PhD, left, leads a hudlle in the pharmacy lab with MSPS student Jenny Tran, to her right, MSMS student DaVon Marshall, CPP chemistry student Abigail Trujillo and graduate volunteer Alex Kim.

Core Value Office of Experiential Education

Core Value: Improving patient care by optimizing the clinical training of student pharmacists.

SWAGƵ proudly maintains a reputation for providing quality meaningful experiential learning opportunities for its students that exceed the standards established by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE).
  • About Experiential Education

    Introductory Pharmacy Practice Experiences
    During the first two years of the professional program, student pharmacists participate in Introductory Pharmacy Practice Experiences (IPPE), which integrate guided learning from SWAGƵ faculty members with experiences in real practice environments. This has long been an important part of pharmacy education at SWAGƵ, but with growing emphasis being placed on the experiential aspect of the PharmD curriculum, SWAGƵ expanded its program to cover a broader range of practice experiences.

    SWAGƵ student pharmacists will complete ~320 contact hours during their first two professional years, which are designed to develop the technical and professional practice skills needed to be effective in various practice environments. These experiences help ensure success in their advanced pharmacy practice experiences (APPE) in the third and fourth years, and in practice beyond graduation. The expansion of the program has resulted in an increased demand for preceptors for student pharmacists who are in the first two years of the program. Serving as a preceptor for early experiential students can be an excellent stepping stone for advanced practice rotations and can be an extremely rewarding experience.

    Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experiences
    The final year and a half of the professional program (P3 and P4 students) is spent completing advanced pharmacy practice experiences: three required rotations (community practice, ambulatory care, acute care), three elective rotations (specialty care or non-patient care), all six weeks in duration, and a “capstone” Advanced Elective rotation, which is 16 weeks in duration. ACPE accreditation standards require 36 weeks of rotations. SWAGƵ requires their graduates to have 52 weeks.

    SWAGƵ supports rotation experiences across the country and around the world. An expanding international presence has provided many opportunities for students interested in better understanding global health issues.

    Advanced Electives:
    It is during the APPEs that student pharmacists have the opportunity to learn and participate in a wide variety of pharmacy practice settings. Often, it is during the APPEs that student pharmacists discover the area of pharmacy practice they wish to enter upon graduation. At the end of this year, student pharmacists will have the opportunity to gain specialized skills and knowledge in an area of community pharmacy or in an area of Health-Systems based clinical pharmacy in the 16 week AE Program. This is intended to offer additional training which will provide skills above the standard entry level in the chosen area of pharmacy practice. Tracks offered include Health-Systems Pharmacy, Community Pharmacy Practice, or Community Pharmacy-Entrepreneurial Independent Ownership.

    We believe student pharmacists who successfully complete this intensive “capstone” experience will be better positioned for career opportunities and have a competitive advantage when applying for residencies, pharmacist positions, or acquiring/managing a community pharmacy. Each student pharmacist must successfully complete the didactic portion of the curriculum and the six APPE rotations prior to starting their Advanced Elective (unless specific permission is given otherwise).

  • Preceptor Teaching Resources

    The SWAGƵ OEE offers a variety of resources to help our preceptors become better teachers.

    • University library access, including access drug information resources and clinical research portals (upon appointment of an adjunct/clinical faculty title)
    • Online Preceptor Development Continuing Education
    • Pharmacist Letter Preceptor News Network
    • Collaborative Education Institute (accessible through )
    • Ed Scholar’s Experiential Education teaching module
    • Live Preceptor Development Continuing Education
    • The SWAGƵ OEE holds periodic live continuing education events in the Greater Los Angeles Area, and occasionally in other areas of California.
  • CONTACTING THE OEE

    Western University of Health Sciences College of Pharmacy
    Office of Experiential Education
    309 E. 2nd Street, HPC 203
    Pomona, CA 91766
    Email: OEE@SWAGƵ.edu
    909-706-3473 (fax)

    Huan (Mark) Nguyen, PharmD, FCSHP
    Assistant Dean, Experiential Education
    909-706-3537
    mnguyen3@westernu.edu

    Patricia Carrillo
    Director of Experiential Education
    909-469-5601
    carrillop@westernu.edu

    Letty Ramirez
    Director of Rotations (IPPE and AE )

    909-469-5553
    lramirez@westernu.edu

    Jillian Matzner
    Rotations Manager, IPPE-1

    909-469-8243
    jmatzner@westernu.edu

    Jennifer Sandoval
    Experiential Programs and Budgetary Support Associate
    909-469-5517
    jsandoval@westernu.edu