Exercise Science · Texas
Exercise Science colleges in Texas
Exercise Science program coverage in Texas is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.
Exercise science studies how the body moves and adapts to physical activity, preparing students for clinical, rehabilitation, and athletic-performance careers.
We're still verifying Exercise Science programs in Texas. Try a broader search at /results?q=Exercise Science or browse all colleges in Texas.
What you'll study in a Exercise Science program
- Human anatomy and physiology with a focus on the musculoskeletal and cardiovascular systems
- Exercise physiology and the body's metabolic response to exertion
- Biomechanics and the analysis of human movement and gait
- Motor control, motor development, and neuromuscular coordination
- Hands-on lab testing of oxygen uptake, heart rate, blood pressure, and strength
- Interpreting physiological assessment data to guide exercise decisions
- Exercise prescription and program design for health, rehabilitation, and performance
- Nutrition and energy systems as they relate to physical activity
- A clinical practicum or internship in a clinic, hospital, or sports setting
Where a Exercise Science degree can lead
- Exercise Physiologist
- Clinical Exercise Specialist
- Strength and Conditioning Coach
- Cardiac Rehabilitation Specialist
- Wellness Coordinator
- Pre-Physical-Therapy Pathway
Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 exercise physiologists median $58,160).
Exercise science examines how the human body produces movement and responds to physical activity, drawing on anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, and the mechanics of how bones, muscles, and joints work together. Students learn to measure things like oxygen uptake, heart rate, strength, and gait, and to understand how the nervous system controls coordination and how movement develops and is relearned after injury. Unlike a general biology or kinesiology survey, the focus is applied: testing real bodies under exertion, interpreting the data, and designing exercise that improves health, restores function, or sharpens athletic performance. It differs from athletic training, which centers on preventing, assessing, and managing musculoskeletal injuries, and from physical therapy itself, which is a separate clinical profession built on top of an undergraduate foundation like this one.
The degree is usually earned at the bachelor's level, and coursework pairs lecture science with hands-on lab work where students run physiological assessments on each other, plus a practicum or internship in a clinic, hospital, fitness, or sports setting. Many programs are structured as a pre-professional pathway: graduates who want to become physical therapists, occupational therapists, or physician assistants apply to graduate programs afterward, and physical therapy in particular requires a clinical doctorate and a state license to practice. Some clinical and strength-and-conditioning roles rely on professional certification, and certain programs or career paths carry programmatic accreditation or licensure requirements that vary by state and should be verified directly. Graduates work in cardiac and pulmonary rehabilitation, corporate and community wellness, sports performance and strength coaching, physical therapy and medical clinics as aides or assistants, and research labs that study human movement and health.
In federal data for the closely related occupation of exercise physiologists, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $58,160 and projects employment to grow about 9.5% from 2024 to 2034; a bachelor's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.
Exercise Science in other states
Find more Exercise Science schools
Use CampusPin's filter-first search to narrow all Exercise Science programs in Texas by tuition, school size, acceptance rate, and campus setting.