Francine Seruya, Ph.D., O.T.R., Program Director
(914) 674-7816
fseruya@mercy.edu
Purpose
Occupational therapy is a health, education and rehabilitation profession that helps people maximize potential and build skills that are important for independent functioning, health, well-being and participation in communities. Occupational therapy practitioners work with people of all ages who may need specialized assistance in learning skills to enable them to lead independent, productive and satisfying lives.
Occupational therapy includes: (1) administering and / or interpreting standardized and non-standardized assessments for the purpose of identifying areas of function and/or dysfunction; (2) evaluation and treatment of motor, cognitive, sensory, psychosocial impairments contributing to difficulty in daily living; (3) customized treatment programs aimed at improving abilities to carry out daily life activities within the home, community, school, or work; (4) comprehensive evaluation of home and job environments and recommendations on necessary adaptations and environmental modifications to prevent injury or enhance independent functioning; (5) design, training and recommendations in the use of specialized tools, adaptive equipment, assistive technology and orthotics; (6) teaching methods that prevent injury or promote and maintain healthy habits and routines; and (7) the provision of consultative, educational or research services.
Occupational therapists work with people experiencing daily living problems that may result from the effects of normal aging, disability or illnesses such as stroke, spinal cord injuries, cancer, autism, cerebral palsy or developmental problems, congenital conditions, and mental illness. Occupational therapists work in a wide range of practice settings including hospitals, rehabilitation centers, nursing facilities, home health agencies, outpatient rehabilitation programs, psychiatric facilities, private and public schools, community centers and private practices. There are expanding opportunities for occupational therapists in the areas of health promotion and prevention within private practices, industry, social and public or community agencies.
Objectives
The Graduate Program in Occupational Therapy is a full-time 60-credit weekend program designed to prepare graduates to apply for licensure in Occupational Therapy and to practice at an entry level. Classes are completed in 5 trimesters and are followed by twenty-four weeks of full-time clinical fieldwork. Entry into the M.S. degree program requires a bachelor degree and prerequisite courses. Students without a bachelor degree can apply for a B.S. in Health Sciences that includes prerequisites or pre-professional occupational therapy courses.
The Occupational Therapy Program is organized around lifespan stages and incorporates three strands of knowledge within courses in the curriculum. The strands are 1) the importance of engagement in occupation in promoting health and participation; 2) client centered occupational therapy evaluation and intervention approaches focused on the interaction of the person, environment and occupation; and 3) exploration and application of available evidence based knowledge and information to support critical thinking and clinical decision making. All three strands contain themes that are reflective of the program’s philosophy and mission. The program provides students with entry-level proficiency in occupational therapy practice with people of all ages, cultures and disabilities. The program places a strong emphasis on encouraging clinical reasoning and critical thinking and is designed to reinforce the self-directed learning style inherent in the professional role. The Occupational Therapy Program is committed to preparing practitioners who can competently fulfill responsibilities of the professional role within a changing health care world.
Occupational Therapy Program Goals
Upon completion of the program, graduates are expected to:
- Master entry-level proficiencies in occupational therapy knowledge and practice skills with individuals of all ages.
- Display professional behaviors, cultural competence, ethical values and a commitment to maintaining currency with professional knowledge and practice.
- Use a dynamic process of inquiry to guide evidence based clinical decisions to competently fulfill theresponsibilities of the occupational therapist’s role within a complex and changing health care environment.
- Demonstrate a commitment to advocate with professional colleagues for diverse populations of clients’ access to health, educational, and rehabilitative services to foster life and community participation.
Admission Requirements
Please refer to the general requirements for admission and matriculation in the Admissions section.
Program Requirements
The Occupational Therapy Program begins in the fall of each academic year. Applications are accepted for consideration from April 1st through June 1st. To apply to the occupational therapy program students must submit:
- A completed graduate program application.
- A bachelor’s degree transcript from an accredited college or university or a minimum of 90 undergraduate credits (including 48 credits of general education requirements).
- Two letters of professional reference (with required letter of recommendation form).
- A completed course prerequisite form.
- Students with a minimum of 90 undergraduate credits can apply to the program for provisional acceptance up to one year in advance of entry into the program. The bachelor’s degree must be completed before beginning the master’s program. The prerequisite GPA as well as the overall GPA or GPA from the last degree will be considered in the admission process.
- Admission applications will be accepted between April 1st and June 1st
- Requirements for admission include completion of at least 20 credits of prerequisite courses by the end of the spring term of application and a prerequisite GPA of 3.0.
- Preference is also given to students who have a higher prerequisite GPA and have completed additional Mercy-specific prerequisite coursework, particularly HLSC Science courses (HLSC 303, HLSC 314, HLSC 410).
- All students must present a realistic plan to complete Mercy-specific prerequisite courses prior to enrollment into the program (admission prerequisite completion checklist form must accompany application). Students are required to complete all prerequisite courses prior to starting the Graduate Program in Occupational Therapy (see below).
- Acceptance is provisional upon successful completion of all prerequisite with a prerequisite courses with an average minimum GPA of 3.0, a grade of B or better in A & P I and II (BIO 130/130A and 131/131A), a grade of Bor higher in HLSC 344 Group Process and a grade of C or higher in prerequisites
- A maximum of 35 students will be accepted into each class.
Students may transfer general prerequisite courses from other colleges that are considered equivalent as evaluated by the occupational therapy admissions committee, and may be required to provide a copy of the course outline and required assignments for review. Mercy-specific prerequisites should be taken at Mercy College within the last five years. Students who take courses outside of the above guidelines may be required to complete a competency exam and/or provide additional documentation at the time of application.
General Prerequisites
** General Bio I or II (4 credits with a lab) including with a grade of B or higher from a four-year institution, can substitute for A&P II for students with a bachelor’s degree.
- Anatomy & Physiology I and II with a Lab including vertebrae dissection (BIOL 130/130A and 131/131A)** Credit(s): 3
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (Intro to Sociology, Anthropology or Cultural Diversity) Credit(s): 3
- Abnormal Psychology (PSYN 212) Credit(s): 3
- Developmental Psychology (PSYN 233) Credit(s): 3
- Statistics for the Social and Behavioral Sciences (BHSC 370) Credit(s): 3
or
- a Statistics course at the 200 level or higher
Mercy-Specific Prerequisites
- Group Process for Health Professionals (HLSC 344) Credit(s): 3
- Overview of Occupational Therapy Practice (HLSC 210) Credit(s): 1
- Human Anatomy with Cadaver (HLSC 303 / 303A) Credit(s): 4
- Pathology for Rehabilitation (HLSC 302) Credit(s): 3
- Clinical Kinesiology and Applied Physics (HLSC 314) Credit(s): 4
- Applied Neuroscience for the Rehabilitation Professional (HLSC 410) Credit(s): 4
- Standard Safety Precautions for the Health Care Professional (HLSC 205) Credit(s): 1
- Introduction to Accessing and Reading Scholarly Literature (HLSC 225) Credit(s): 1
- Scientific Writing (HLSC 402) Credit(s): 2
- Foundations in Occupational Therapy (HLSC 420) Credit(s): 3
The prerequisite courses are offered at Mercy College days, evenings and weekends. Please note that students must qualify to take ENGL 111 to be admitted into a prerequisite science course.
The grades of any repeated program specific prerequisite courses will be averaged together into the GPA. Students currently repeating a Mercy-specific prerequisite course will have the standing grade for that course included in their admission GPA until the new grade is averaged with the existing grade. Grades lower than B in BIOL 130/130A and 131/131A, B- in HLSC 344, and C in all other prerequisite courses are not accepted.
(Courses listed above are at the undergraduate level. Please refer to the undergraduate catalog for course descriptions).
Students Without a Bachelor’s Degree
To be eligible for a bachelor’s degree in Health Science, students must complete a minimum of 30 undergraduate credits at Mercy College and 18 credits in the major concentration of Health Sciences.
All of the required Occupational Therapy Program prerequisite courses can be used to fulfill the requirements for the Bachelor of Health Science Degree. In addition, ninety undergraduate credits must be completed (including 48 credits of general education). For further information, please refer to the Undergraduate Catalog Pre-occupational Therapy track.
Program Application
The following components should be submitted to Mercy College:
- Two references on the Mercy College Occupational Therapy Recommendation Form; (one from a work supervisor and one from faculty of a prerequisite course). The recommendations must be less than six months old. Each reference should be in a sealed envelope with the referee’s signature over the seal.
- A one page written essay with 3 citations
- A résumé of professional, educational, and volunteer experiences, if appropriate.
- Official transcripts from all colleges attended.
- A written plan for completion of remaining prerequisite courses, using the Prerequisite Checklist to indicate courses taken, courses to be completed along with dates of expected completion.
Admission Procedure
- Prospective students are required to meet with an admissions counselor for evaluation of transfer credits prior to submitting an application to the Occupational Therapy Program.
- All candidates for the Occupational Therapy Program must first be admitted into Mercy College. General information regarding eligibility for the Master of Science Degree Program is available online or from the Admissions Office, or the Occupational Therapy Program Office at the Dobbs Ferry Campus. Perspective students should complete the Graduate Application for admissions to Mercy College available online, and should indicate Occupational Therapy as their area of interest.
- After applying to the College, students will receive an email containing the Occupational Therapy Application materials. Application materials must be completed and returned with an application fee and should be submitted between April 1st and June 1st for entrance to the Occupational Therapy Program during the fall trimester one year later. Applications from qualified applicants may continue to be processed after the application deadline if there are available spaces in the program.
- Selected applicants will be invited to interview with representatives of the Graduate Program Admissions Committee at which time an onsite writing sample will be required.
- Each applicant’s records will be presented to the Admission Committee of the program. The final admission decision is based on a combination of GPA, references, interview, and written work. Candidates will be notified as to their acceptance into the next Occupational Therapy class for the following year in August. All acceptances will be provisional, based on successful completion of all minimum requirements.
- Students accepted into the program will be required to pay a non-refundable deposit of $250 at the time of acceptance. This fee will be applied to the fall tuition payment of the first fall trimester of the graduate program.
- Acceptance may be deferred up to one admission cycle under severe and extreme circumstances. The student must submit a written request for deferral and supporting documentation to the Program. The PD and Admission Committee will review the request and notify the student of the decision.
Transfer Credits
Up to six credits of graduate occupational therapy coursework taken at another institution may be credited towards the occupational therapy degree, if equivalent in content, to Mercy College occupational therapy courses. Permission to transfer credits must be requested at the time of admission and official transcripts and course descriptions must be submitted to the program director for evaluation of equivalency. Students may be required to provide a copy of the course outline and required assignments for review by the Occupational Therapy Program Admissions Committee.
Program Design
The professional program in Occupational Therapy is a full-time weekend program that takes approximately 7 trimesters. The program is divided into seven trimesters of academic work. Classes are held every other weekend from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. on Friday evenings and 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on Saturday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday. The student is required to take nine to eleven hours per trimester in the designated sequence. The student is also required to complete a research seminar, splinting course, and assistive technology course during the summer between the first and second years and a capstone project during the second year of the program. The summer weekend courses are scheduled between May and July and do not always follow the alternating weekend schedule. Since the program involves a full-time graduate course load, it is not recommended that students work for more than 20-25 hours per week.
The curriculum is organized around the life-span stages of childhood, adolescence, adulthood and geriatrics. Concepts related to health, learning, the impact of illness and occupational therapy practice are integrated within each life-span stage. The program provides an intense learning experience and is especially designed for the motivated adult learner.
The program incorporates a variety of learning methods including a mixture of lecture, discussion, small group problem solving, hands on experiences and problem based learning (PBL). In PBL, students meet in small groups with a faculty facilitator to discuss clinical cases. The case context drives learning, requires students’ active participation and involvement in the learning process, and reflects the actual process occupational therapists engage in within practice. The cases require students to call upon previous learned knowledge from prerequisite courses, engage in independent and self-directed learning, and use a variety of learning resources. PBL allows students to learn the content specified for the course by applying clinical reasoning and inquiry skills.
Each life-span module is linked to a Level I Fieldwork course designed to connect theory to practice. Students are assigned to various clinical and community settings for a minimum of seven weekdays each fall and spring trimester. Level I Fieldwork in Pediatrics is completed in settings such as children’s specialized hospital and rehabilitation centers, private practices, school based practices, special education schools, pediatric units in general hospitals, and outpatient clinics. Level I Fieldwork in Adolescence is completed in residential care facilities for children and youth with emotional disabilities or after school programs for impoverished and “at-risk” youth that are located primarily in the counties surrounding the college. Accommodations may be made for students outside of the tri-state area. Level I Fieldwork in Adults is completed with a physically disabled population in hospitals and rehabilitation centers, private practices, outpatient clinics. The final Level I Fieldwork course in Geriatrics is completed in community settings typically in social based adult day programs for individuals with dementia.
A total of 24 weeks of Level II Fieldwork experiences is required for students to graduate and be eligible for national certification and state licensure. This fieldwork is usually completed at the end of the curriculum sequence as two full -time 12-week placements. Modifications, such as part time (i.e., three-day-a-week schedule) or placement in three practice sites (e.g., 12 weeks in physical disabilities, eight weeks in pediatrics, and eight weeks in mental health) may be possible depending on a student’s GPA, work schedule and availability of fieldwork sites with contracts with Mercy College. Part time fieldwork experiences may limit the populations and settings in which the fieldwork can be completed, and will lengthen the time needed to complete the program, but for some students offers the opportunity to balance educational requirements with work or family responsibilities. Specialty or third affiliations are offered in focused areas such as hand rehabilitation or pediatric early intervention after the student completes the basic fieldwork experiences. All fieldwork placements must be successfully completed within 24 months of the didactic course work unless the program Faculty Review Committee grants an extension for extenuating circumstances. Participating in a Level II fieldwork involves a commitment commensurate to a full-time job.
Degree Requirements:
Requirements for the Master of Science Degree in Occupational Therapy include:
Professional Courses |
48 Credits |
Clinical Education |
12 Credits |
Total* |
60 Credits |
* Including completion of Comprehensive Capstone Project