Prospective Clinical Affiliates Frequently Asked Questions
 

Laboratory Administrators, Do you have vacancies you can't fill? Are you facing a large number of retirements in the coming years? Are you concerned about finding certified laboratory professionals to staff your laboratory?

If so, the St. Petersburg College (SPC) Medical Laboratory Technology (MLT) Online Program may provide a long-term solution to your staffing needs. This unique program is designed for working adults and does not have any on-campus requirements, making it ideal for your phlebotomists or lab assistants who would like to become MLTs. Consider becoming a clinical affiliate of the SPC program so you can sponsor your employees in the program and provide their clinical experiences right in your own laboratory. In just 2-3 years, you'll have new certified MLTs on your staff, ones who have been trained in your policies and procedures and who are likely to stay.

For further details, please review our Frequently Asked Questions below or contact the program director at polansky.valerie@spcollege.edu or 727-341-3714.


How can you teach medical laboratory technology online?

Is the SPC MLT Online Program accredited?

How long has the SPC MLT Program been in existence?

What can you tell me about the quality of the program?

What clinical laboratories are affiliated with the SPC MLT Program?

I’d like to talk to someone at one of your affiliated laboratories to see how the program works for them. Is that possible?

What are the qualifications to become a clinical affiliate of the SPC MLT Program?

How does my laboratory become a clinical affiliate?

Where do you have clinical affiliates?

Is there an application fee or any other charge to the clinical affiliate?

Does the college pay the clinical site for providing clinical instruction?

Will my staff have to deliver lectures and develop tests?

How much paperwork would my staff have to do?

Will we need to have an education coordinator or a dedicated instructor?

How many hours of clinical instruction are required in the program?

How many hours a week are required for clinical work?

What days and hours must the clinical work be completed?

We’re used to working with students from another program. Can we just follow that program’s curriculum?

Can students do any of their clinical hours on company time?

How long would it take for my employees to complete the program?

What is the tuition for the program?

We have a tuition reimbursement plan and only pay if the student earns a "B" or higher. Can our students pay their tuition after they complete each course?

We want to pay our students’ tuition up front. How can we do that?

Our laboratory is not in Florida. Will our students have to pay out-of-state tuition?

There is just one employee that we want to sponsor in the program. Can we limit the affiliation agreement to that one person?

If we sign an affiliation agreement with SPC, are we obligated to take students who are not employees?

We have a lab assistant who already has a BS in Biology. Since the SPC program is an AS program, could this person apply?

We have a phlebotomist who is interested in the program. Would she have to take the two phlebotomy courses?

We have a lab assistant who started an MLT program in our area but didn’t complete it. Would she receive credit for the work that she did in that program?

My employees are fast learners. Can they complete the program at their own pace?

How often do you admit a class?

Do you have selective admissions?

When should my employees apply for admission?

What are the entry requirements?

Do my employees have to take all of the credits through SPC?

How can I receive more information about the program?


Q: How can you teach medical laboratory technology online?

A: It’s really just the theory that’s online. The program requires the same amount of hand-on experience as most traditional programs, but they take place in affiliated clinical laboratories instead of on campus.

Top


Q: Is the SPC MLT Online Program accredited?

A: Yes, the program is fully accredited by the National Accrediting Agency for Clinical Laboratory Sciences (NAACLS).

Top


Q: How long has the SPC MLT Program been in existence?

A: SPC has had an MLT Program since 1972. The program was restructured for distance delivery in 2001.

Top


Q: What can you tell me about the quality of the program?

A: As one of the first MLT programs designed for and dedicated to true distance education, the SPC MLT Online Program has a proven track record of success. Since its inception in 2001, the program has maintained a 100% pass rate on the national certification exam and program means exceed the national mean for every section of the exam. Clinical affiliates and employers express satisfaction with the program and its graduates.

Top


Q:  What clinical laboratories are affiliated with the SPC MLT Program?

Click here to see a list of current clinical affiliates

Top

 


Q: I’d like to talk to someone at one of your affiliated laboratories to see how the program works for them. Is that possible?

A: Yes. Just contact the program director at polansky.valerie@spcollege.edu or 727-341-3714 and she can provide contact information.

Top


Q: What are the qualifications to become a clinical affiliate of the SPC MLT Program?

A: Affiliated clinical laboratories must be accredited by CAP and/or JCAHO and must have the staffing, instrumentation, test menu, and test volumes to deliver the SPC clinical curriculum. The laboratory must be able to provide instruction in Phlebotomy, Hematology, Clinical Chemistry, Blood Banking, and Clinical Microbiology. See the Essential Instruction Checklist for more details.

Top


Q: How does my laboratory become a clinical affiliate?

A: Download and complete the Clinical Affiliate Application and submit it, along with the requested documentation. The application will be reviewed by the SPC MLT Advisory Committee. If approved, a Request for Contract will be submitted to the SPC Attorney. The affiliation agreement must be signed by both parties before students may begin the clinical courses.

Top


Q:  Where do you have clinical affiliates?

Click here to see a list of clinical affiliates.

Top


Q: Is there an application fee or any other charge to the clinical affiliate?

A: No.

Top


Q: Does the college pay the clinical site for providing clinical instruction?

A: No.

Top


Q: Will my staff have to deliver lectures and develop tests?

A: No. All theory is delivered online and clinical affiliates are provided with the complete clinical curriculum. Your staff’s responsibility will be to demonstrate laboratory procedures and to supervise the students as they learn to perform them.

Top


Q: How much paperwork would my staff have to do?

A: The clinical instructors will be asked to communicate with the college instructors by email to provide regular updates on student progress, to sign the students’ time reports, and complete an evaluation form at the completion of each clinical experience course.

Top


Q: Will we need to have an education coordinator or a dedicated instructor?

A: In almost all of our affiliated laboratories, instruction is delivered by the testing personnel.

Top


Q: How many hours of clinical instruction are required in the program?

A: There are 878 hours of clinical work. Once the student begins the courses in the major, there are clinical assignments each semester.

Top


Q: How many hours a week are required for clinical work?

A: That varies from semester to semester. The last column of the Planning Guide shows the clinical hours for each course.

Top


Q: What days and hours must the clinical work be completed?

A: The college provides the student with a weekly assignment that is usually due at midnight on Sunday. The days and times for completion of the work are flexible and are determined by the clinical supervisor in the affiliated laboratory.

Top


Q: We’re used to working with students from another program. Can we just follow that program’s curriculum?

A: No. Students in the SPC program must complete the SPC curriculum.

Top


Q: Can students do any of their clinical hours on company time?

A: That is up to each individual employer to decide.

Top


Q: How long would it take for my employees to complete the program?

A: The program takes two years for students who can attend full time. Students who are working full time should plan to take the part-time track. Most part-time students complete the program in about three years.

Top


Q: What is the tuition for the program?

A: Click here for the schedule of fees: http://www.spcollege.edu/webcentral/catalog/Current/fees.htm

Top


Q: We have a tuition reimbursement plan and only pay if the student earns a "B" or higher. Can our students pay their tuition after they complete each course?

A: No, tuition payment is required before classes start.

Top


Q: We want to pay our students’ tuition up front. How can we do that?

A: You can call the SPC Business Office and pay with a corporate credit card.

Top


Q: Our laboratory is not in Florida. Will our students have to pay out-of-state tuition?

A: Yes.

Top


Q: There is just one employee that we want to sponsor in the program. Can we limit the affiliation agreement to that one person?

A: The college is seeking long-term partnerships with clinical laboratories. Because of the time and effort required for application approval, contract negotiations, and orientation of clinical personnel, in most cases, an affiliation for the purpose of educating just one individual will not be approved.

Top


Q: If we sign an affiliation agreement with SPC, are we obligated to take students who are not employees?

A: You would be asked to do so if the college received an application from a qualified individual in your area; however, it is always the laboratory’s prerogative to decline.

Top


Q: We have a lab assistant who already has a BS in Biology. Since the SPC program is an AS program, could this person apply?

A: Yes. Many students who enter the program already have bachelor’s degrees and some even have master’s degrees. All previous course work from regionally-accredited colleges or universities will transfer to SPC. These individuals are only required to take the 45 credits in the major.

Top


Q: We have a phlebotomist who is interested in the program. Would she have to take the two phlebotomy courses?

A: No, she can apply for credit for the phlebotomy courses through the SPC Experiential Learning Program. The program director will provide details once the employee is accepted to the program.

Top


Q: We have a lab assistant who started an MLT program in our area but didn’t complete it. Would she receive credit for the work that she did in that program?

A: It would depend on whether the program was accredited, how long ago the courses were taken, and whether the course descriptions match those in the SPC MLT Program.

Top


Q: My employees are fast learners. Can they complete the program at their own pace?

A: No, although the program provides a lot of flexibility, it follows the regular academic calendar and courses are only offered once a year. The program is not self paced, nor is it a self study. All of the courses are led by instructors who are online five days a week to lead discussions and answer questions.

Top


Q: How often do you admit a class?

A: Once a year, in August.

Top


Q: Do you have selective admissions?

A: Students are admitted on a first-qualified, first-accepted basis and an interview is not required. A 2.0 GPA is required.

Top


Q: When should my employees apply for admission?

A: They may submit the College Application at any time but the Application to Health Programs should not be submitted until the pre-entry requirements are met. Class size is limited, so early application is encouraged.

Top


Q: What are the entry requirements?

A: The pre-entry requirements are outlined on the Program Plan.

Top


Q: Do my employees have to take all of the credits through SPC?

A: No. All credits other than those with the MLT prefix may be earned at any regionally-accredited college or university and transferred to SPC. Out-of-state students may find it is more economical to take the general education and support courses at their local college.

Top


Q: How can I receive more information about the program?

A: You can contact the program director at Polansky.Valerie@spcollege.edu or 727-341-3714.

Top