Spring 2024 Trine Course Catalog

Doctorate of Occupational Therapy (103 hrs)

The Doctorate of Occupational Therapy Program at Trine University supports students in developing the skills, competencies, and knowledge base necessary to practice entry-level occupational therapy across a variety of health care settings, and in the community. Occupational therapists collaborate with clients to support their optimal engagement in occupation through outcomes focused on improvement or enhancement of the client’s occupational performance; prevention of unhealthy conditions, risk factors, or diseases; improvements in the client’s quality of life and well-being; and by supporting clients’ access to and participation in the full range of daily life activities and roles which the client prioritizes. OTD students will be immersed in rich discussions, mentoring, and authentic hands-on classroom learning combined with experiences in both traditional healthcare settings in the community, and in emerging areas of occupational therapy. The curriculum synthesizes the humanities, occupational science, theoretical perspective, research and advocacy, and evidence-based occupational therapy practices, to prepare the OTD students for their final Level II Fieldwork experiences. Students move beyond the generalist level of occupational therapy as they complete their OTD journey by creating, implementing, managing, and presenting an in-depth Capstone Project following their mentored capstone residency experience, choosing an area of their special interest to develop additional expertise.

Mission

The OTD Program at Trine University will provide an educational environment that develops occupational therapy leaders within the healthcare team and successful graduates who serve clients and engage in the healthcare community through evidence-based practice to optimize health and wellness.

Vision/Philosophy Statement

The OTD Program at Trine University will be recognized as a premier provider of occupational therapy education characterized by strategic engagement with an interdisciplinary team of healthcare students, application of multimodal instructional strategies, and occupation-based approaches that results in successful workforce ready graduates.

Student Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of the Doctorate of Occupational Therapy program, the student will be able to:

1.      Incorporate reflective critical reasoning and professionalism into occupational therapy services.

2.      Utilize occupational evaluation to plan, implement, monitor, and manage occupation-centered interventions that lead to optimal occupational outcomes for the client.

3.      Advance professional ethical standards, values, and responsibilities of the occupational therapy profession through service, scholarship, advocacy, and best practices.

4.      Advocate for holistic and seamless healthcare services for clients who participate in occupational therapy through collaboration with the interdisciplinary health care team.

Accreditation

The entry-level occupational therapy doctoral degree program has applied for accreditation by the Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE) of the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA), located at 6116 Executive Boulevard, Suite 200, North Bethesda, MD 20852-4929. ACOTE’s telephone number c/o AOTA is (301) 652-AOTA and its web address is www.acoteonline.org.

The program must be granted Candidacy Status, have a pre-accreditation review, complete an on-site evaluation, and be granted Accreditation Status before its graduates will be eligible to sit for the national certification examination for the occupational therapist administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy (NBCOT). After successful completion of this exam, the individual will be an Occupational Therapist, Registered (OTR). In addition, all states require licensure in order to practice; however, state licenses are usually based on the results of the NBCOT Certification Examination. Note that a felony conviction may affect a graduate’s ability to sit for the NBCOT certification examination or attain state licensure.

Degree Requirements

Program Requirements

OTD 5111CARE I

1

OTD 5113Occupational Therapy Fundamentals

3

OTD 5123OT Theory & Behavioral Health

3

OTD 5132Principles of Documentation

2

OTD 5221CARE II

1

OTD 5223Innovations in Practice

3

OTD 5232Professional Development

2

OTD 5243Scholarly Inquiry & EBP I

3

OTD 5251Occupation-Based Intervention 1

1

OTD 5253OT Theory & Pediatrics

3

OTD 5322Applied Physiology I

2

OTD 5331CARE III

1

OTD 5332Practice Design and Implementation

2

OTD 5333Movement & Occupational Analysis

3

OTD 5343Scholarly Inquiry and EBP II

3

OTD 5351Occupation-Based Intervention 2

1

OTD 5353OT Theory & Adults

3

OTD 6423Neuroscience of Occupations

3

OTD 6433Leadership, Management, and Supervision

3

OTD 6441CARE IV

1

OTD 6443Scholarly Inquiry and EBP III

3

OTD 6522Applied Physiology II

2

OTD 6532IPCP & Emerging Practice

2

OTD 6543Assistive Technology in OT

3

OTD 6591Occupation-Based Intervention 3

1

OTD 6551CARE V

1

OTD 6553OT Theory & Older Adults

3

OTD 6554Capstone Development

4

OTD 6644Level II Fieldwork A

14

OTD 7740Level II Fieldwork B

10

OTD 7842Doctoral Capstone Presentation

2

OTD 7844Doctoral Capstone Experience

14

Total Credit Hours: 103