The Occupational Therapy (O.T.D) program is a full-time enrollment (9 semester), 105 credit, capstone based, cohort designed professional doctoral degree program culminating in student eligibility to sit for the national certification examination and obtain state licensure in occupational therapy practice.

The program is an active learning professional curriculum with blended didactic, fieldwork and service-learning experiential, and capstone components designed to meet the Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE) accreditation standards. 

Classes will take place on both the EVMC and Old Dominion campuses.

Course Sequence

Year 1

Summer

  • OCCT 721: Foundations of Occupational Therapy Practice (2 credits) 
  • OCCT 749: Occupations I (6 credits) 

Fall

  • OCCT 750: Occupations II (4 credits) 
  • OCCT 752:Occupation, Health and Wellness across the Life span (3 credits) 
  • OCCT 754: Professional Reasoning and the Occupational Therapy Process (3 credits) 
  • OCCT 756: Professional Identity and Ethical Formation (3 credits) 
  • OCCT 821: Theories of Inquiry and Scholarly Literature (3 credits) 

Spring

  • OCCT 751: Occupations III (3 credits) 
  • OCCT 752: Pediatric Habilitation and Rehabilitation: Theory and Practice (6 credits) 
  • OCCT 769: FW I Pediatrics (1 credits) 
  • OCCT 755: OT Evaluation of Occupational Performance (3 credits) 
  • OCCT 822: Using Evidence to Inform Practice (3 credits)

Year 2

Summer

  • OCCT 841: Online Education and Learning in Healthcare and Health Education (2 credits) 
  • OCCT 843: Online Leadership and Advocacy in Occupational Therapy Practice (2 credits) 
  • OCCT 845: Online Health Care Policy and Program management (2 credits) 
  • OCCT 847: Online Therapeutic Relationship and Client Collaboration (2 credits) 

Fall 

  • OCCT 850: Adult Rehabilitation: Theory and Practice (6 credits) 
  • OCCT 852: Evaluation and Intervention of the Upper Extremity (3 credits) 
  • OCCT 869: FW I Adults (1 credits) 
  • OCCT 854: OT Technology and Context Adaptation (2 credits) 
  • OCCT 856: Interprofessional Telehealth Care (1 credits) 
  • OCCT 858: Critical Analysis of Occupational Therapy Practice (3 credits) 

Spring

  • OCCT 851: Productive Aging and Rehabilitation: Theory and Practice (3 credits) 
  • OCCT 853: Mental Health Promotion and Recovery: Theory and Practice (6 credits) 
  • OCCT 870: FW I Psychosocial (1 credits) 
  • OCCT 855: Occupational and Activity Analysis (2 credits) 
  • OCCT 859: Scholarship of Practice Approaches and Design (3 credits) 
  • OCCT 890: Practice Scholar Seminar I (1 credits) 

Year 3

Summer

  • OCCT 868: FW II A (6 credits) 
  • OCCT 870: Online Community and Population Health (1 credits) 
  • OCCT 891: Online Practice Scholar Seminar II (1 credits) 

Fall

  • OCCT 869: FW II B (6 credits) 
  • OCCT 871: Online Professional Development Planning (1 credits) 
  • OCCT 892: Online OT Practice scholar Seminar (1 credits) 

Spring

  • OCCT 893: Capstone (7 credits) 
  • OCCT 894: Online Practice Scholar Symposium (2 credits) 

Fieldwork

Active and applied learning is the cornerstone of the program and is integrated across and in alignment with the curriculum. The fieldwork education components are co-designed by the faculty, fieldwork educators, and students and led by the program’s Academic Fieldwork Coordinator (AFWC) to ensure that active learning experiences support program learning objectives and student interests. 

Fieldwork I

In their first and second years in the program, Occupational Therapy program students participate in over 240 hours of structured Fieldwork I experiences co-led by the AFWC, program faculty, and fieldwork educators. During their fieldwork experiences, students engage in a combination of applied coursework, simulated activities, structured community-based activities, and supervised evaluation and intervention of clients. 

Faculty-led experiences in client care, followed by debriefing, aligns with each of the evaluation and intervention courses and strengthens students’ knowledge of occupation and its value in promoting health, the occupational therapy process, leadership and advocacy, and the translation of evidence to practice. 

Fieldwork II

At the start of their third year, students begin their fieldwork II experiences. Fieldwork II is characterized by two twelve-week full-time experiences in occupational therapy practice in a variety of settings with individuals, communities, and populations. During their first experience, students are placed in pairs at a site in collaboration with Consortium of Associate Faculty and Fieldwork Educators.
 
The Consortium is integrally involved with the curriculum, courses, and student learning activities and supports an active and self-directed student learning model in the clinic. During this fieldwork experience, students collaborate with one other, the fieldwork educator, and program faculty, share learning experiences, advance reflective practice and clinical reasoning, and prepare for future collaboration as practitioners and members of a inter-professional team.
 
In the second fieldwork placement, students are placed in a variety of settings where they engage in delivering services to individuals, communities, and populations within a traditional apprenticeship model of professional supervision. During this fieldwork experience, students additionally participate in innovative occupation focused intervention implementation and research, program development and assessment, and education. 
 
To learn more about the Occupational Therapy Fieldwork Program or to join our Consortium of Associate Faculty and Fieldwork Educators please contact Nancy Krolikowski at krolikNE@evms.edu.

Capstone Experience

The Doctoral Capstone is an integral part of the Occupational Therapy program. It is designed to allow students to synthesize their learning across the curriculum and apply that knowledge to provide in-depth exposure to one or more of the following areas of practice and scholarship: specialized clinical practice, research, administration, leadership, program and policy development, advocacy column education or theory development and address a practice and/or professional area of need. The Doctoral Capstone is completed as the final requirement for the Doctor of Occupational Therapy degree, but the experience is integrated across the curriculum.

Through a curricular focus on advanced professional reasoning and innovative practice, practice scholarship, and leadership and advocacy, students grow increasingly responsible for the completion of a collaboratively designed, student centered, mentored learning experience and project. The experience and project are designed to promote the integration of didactic and fieldwork learning to both address a gap in the provision of services or in the profession through an immersive self-directed learning experience. The doctoral experience, that begins in the first semester of a student’s professional journey in the program, provides students an opportunity to serve as an agent of change and prepares them for roles as leaders in the profession.