Students of the Florida campus have made numerous formal requests, backed by signed petitions, for their graduation ceremony to be held in Florida. The overwhelming consensus is clear: traveling to Chicago in the middle of December imposes unnecessary financial strain, exposes students and their families to potential travel hazards, and limits the ability of loved ones to attend. These students have invested years of work and significant personal resources into earning their degrees, and their families have sacrificed alongside them. Insisting on a Chicago-only ceremony disregards both the practical realities and the value of the Florida campus community. It sends the message that Florida graduates are an afterthought, despite contributing equally to the institution’s reputation and success. We urge the administration to correct this oversight and respect the voices of its Florida graduates by hosting a ceremony in Florida. We need a change and a compromise. Graduation for the Florida students needs to be held in Florida.Period.
In addition: They require the students to cover all of their own travel expenses to attend graduation in Chicago, and they continue to refuse holding the ceremony in Florida — even though the FL campus is graduating more chiropractors than in Illinois.The students even offered to cover the cost of tickets per person to host their own...
Read moreI graduated from this facility in 1980 and things have changed very much. More diverse educations for more integrated health fields.
I'm sorry that the person above had a bad experience at the NUHS Clinic. When you get a haircut at the beauty college don't be surprised when the barber messes up your hair. Same in most fields of service. I'm sorry for the individual that had a poor time but experience increases with time and effort. These are students with at most few years of hands on clinical experience.
My experience with NUHS is positive in all ways. The institution has great faculty and students. They don't allow all who apply just like Princeton or any other good school. At the time I attended it was the first Chiropractic College that was accredited and Dr Joseph Janse was President. He and the faculty are on the same side as the students. They want to turn out the finest DC's by offering a heavy course load; because there is so much to learn in only 5 academic years.
Today it offers post graduate education, other degrees in different fields of study, Acupuncture, Naturopathy and more. If I were going to re-invent myself in midlife, I would do it at NAHS. It will prepare you to be a well trained and good Doctor in the...
Read moreI receive treatment at NUHS for adult scoliosis of the spine. They primarily offer chiropractic services, but they also offer accupuncture, massage therapy, physical therapy.
The pros: Relatively inexpensive so I can receive frequent treatment without breaking the bank. The interns will spend time treating you, as opposed to the cursory treatment I have received at other chiropractors that charge far more money. You will be treated by many different interns with different techniques. I have learned different treatment methods for my malady. Over time, you will find that there are some interns with exceptional skills. Scheduling is easy. Insurance covers my treatment.
The cons: You will be treated by many different interns with different techniques. There was only one intern that I didn't like, most were average, and only two I would grade as exceptional (One for massage therapy, the other for physical therapy). Unfortunately, they finish their internship and move on, so there is definitely a loss of continuity with treatment. This is especially difficult when you find someone that you really like. Scheduling only available Monday-Thursday...
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