PopHealthExperience

A Summer Enrichment Program for Rising 10th - 12th Graders
July 11 - July 22

We are living through an unprecedented time. Now, more than ever, we are committed to educating young people about the fundamental skills of public health. The PopHealthExperience will be offered as a residential learning experience in summer 2022. Sign up for our immersive summer program today!

What do homelessness, air pollution in cities, and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic have in common? These are issues that public health professionals tackle every day.

The PopHealthExperience offers rising 10th-12th-graders an engaging and immersive introduction to the field of public health. Students learn from Boston University School of Public Health faculty and graduate students about a range of public health topics, participate in hands-on research activities, discover career choices, and develop leadership skills.

What they’ll do:

  • Build confidence in their problem-solving skills.
  • Participate in fun teamwork activities.
  • Experiment, design, analyze, and test imaginative public health solutions.

What they’ll learn:

  • We’ll start by introducing the foundations of public health and then delve deeper into the areas of Biostatistics, Environmental Health, Epidemiology, Health Advocacy and Health Policy.
  • We ’ll practice experiential learning activities such as case studies where students test all of their newly acquired knowledge to determine what is the cause of an epidemic.
  • We’ll mentor students as they identify a public health challenge in their community and prepare a mini-documentary explaining the challenge and its possible solutions.

See an example of last year’s program schedule here

Review our Frequently Asked Questions

Contact us with any additional questions!


Your donation has an impact on the future of public health. Your contribution to PHX can help a rising 7th-9th grader attend the PopHealthExperience summer enrichment program. Learn More.

Presenting Public Health as a Lifelong Career Path

Young people are not exposed to public health as a discipline and potential career path until much later in their academic or professional lives— therefore, programs need to reach younger generations earlier in their educational journeys.