Degree: Associate in Applied Science
HEGIS Code: 5210
Curriculum Code: 0665
Campus Location: North
Health Sciences Division
Pre-Admission Recommendations: 80% HS Avg., 2.80 GPA within 5 years of prospective admission for Undergraduate College Students, Placement test, waiver or completion of developmental English and Math courses. See admission requirements listed below.
Recommended High School Courses and/or Experiences: HS Biology, HS Psychology, HS Anatomy & Physiology, HS Math-Algebra, Geometry, Statistics & Probability, HS Physics, HS English & Writing Courses, Volunteer experience in health care settings
Career Opportunities/Further Education: Hospitals, Rehabilitation Centers/Outpatient Clinics, Home Health, Long Term Care, Early Intervention, School-Based Settings, Academia, Day Treatment Settings/Developmental/Physical Disabilities, Psychosocial Rehab/Mental Health, Community-Based Wellness & Prevention Programs
Program Description
There have been dramatic shifts in U.S. population as a result of an increased average life span. This phenomenon, along with advances in science, technology, wellness, and medicine has brought occupational therapy into the forefront of the health care field. The U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) projected employment of occupational therapists to increase by 18% and of occupational therapy assistants to increase by 31% between 2018 and 2028. United States Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics also reports a 2018 median annual income of $60,220 for occupational therapy assistants.
The Occupational Therapy Assistant curriculum prepares entry-level occupational therapy assistants to work in community and institutional health care programs, providing direct and consultative occupational therapy services to individuals, groups, communities, and populations.
The Occupational Therapy Assistant curriculum combines Occupational Therapy Assistant and general education courses with selected laboratory experiences. Program courses cover theory and application of theory, development across the lifespan (birth to death), therapeutic use of self, pediatric/adult/and geriatric patient/client treatment, physical disabilities/mental health, research, evidence-based practice, technology and documentation. The Occupational Therapy specific classes are complemented with general studies in anatomy, physiology, psychology, sociology, and English composition. Although the Occupational Therapy Assistant curriculum is designed to be completed in two academic years, students may take a longer time to fulfill their degree requirements, depending on individual circumstances.
In the Occupational Therapy Assistant Program, students receive instruction in theory and develop practical skills relating to occupational therapy through classroom, laboratory and fieldwork settings. Through second year course work, students participate in fieldwork practice settings to include general physical medicine and psychiatric centers, developmental disabilities, schools, nursing homes and community agencies. In these experiences, students work with and teach patients and clients methods for engagement in self-care, work, play/leisure, education, social skills, rest/sleep, and home/community living skills.
Technical Ability Standards do exist for the OTA Program and they are a reality of the profession. However, due to the diversity of occupational therapy practice areas, OTA Education lends itself toward attracting students of diverse abilities. The Erie Community College OTA Program is committed to the notion of dis-ABILITY as diversity. Provided a student has the capacity to successfully navigate the program, graduate, and pass their certification exam, it is our goal to provide reasonable accommodations to facilitate every student’s success. Please read, “Special Admission Requirements/Pre-requisites: Technical Ability Standards,” as listed below for more information.
Mission of SUNY Erie Community College
Erie Community College meets the needs of a diverse student body and contributes to regional economic vitality by providing high-quality, flexible, affordable and accessible educational programs committed to student success.
Mission of SUNY Erie Community College Occupational Therapy Assistant Program
SUNY Erie Occupational Therapy Assistant Program embraces diversity and is student focused with a commitment to student success by providing high-quality education that fosters professionalism, a passion for occupational therapy, and life-long learning. We serve our students, the Occupational Therapy profession, and the community by graduating highly qualified occupational therapy assistants who meet the dynamic health care, human service, wellness, habilitation and rehabilitation employment demand in Western New York. We prepare students to work in traditional and emerging areas of practice, provide client-centered occupation-based interventions, and use scientific evidence to guide decision making in ongoing practice.
Core Values
Student Focused - Service to students is the primary reason for SUNY Erie’s existence. The student is at the center of all SUNY SUNY Erie programs and services.
Accessibility - SUNY Erie serves the needs and wants of all students, including those not having educational opportunity elsewhere. Access means inclusion by overcoming financial, location, physical, language or other impediments.
Academic Excellence - We expect academic rigor in all curricula and from all students. We believe that quality teaching with comprehensive support results in positive learning outcomes and student achievement.
Openness and Respect - A broad range of cultures, attitudes, and viewpoints creates an environment of respect, caring, and trust. Everyone, no matter their limitations, should be recognized for their intrinsic dignity and unique capabilities.
Commitment to Our Students - In a context of respect, caring, and trust, we seek to guide students in the holistic learning process to become competent and caring entry-level occupational therapy assistant practitioners who demonstrate the clinical and interpersonal skills, knowledge, cultural sensitivity, experience, maturity, and values necessary for success in the dynamic healthcare, human service, wellness, habilitation and rehabilitation demands in Western New York. We are also committed to equipping students to be lifelong learners by teaching them the skills to be self-learners and providing them with the resources and access to quality, relevant, continuing education and higher education transfer opportunities.
Commitment to Our Profession - With integrity and accountability, we are committed to providing a high-quality, multifaceted, state-of-the-art curriculum and learning resources that reflect current, applied and emerging areas of occupational therapy practice, and exceed the standards of our profession’s accrediting body. We are also committed to playing a visible and active role in our regional occupational therapy professional community.
Commitment to Our Community - Through our relationships with employers, fieldwork affiliates and the community-at-large, we are committed to serving our community by promoting occupational therapy as an important contributor to health, function and well-being, and by graduating highly qualified occupational therapy assistants who will meet the dynamic health care, human service, wellness, habilitation, and rehabilitation employment demands in Western New York.
Program Philosophy
Our Program Philosophy embraces the overarching values of occupational therapy and occupational therapy education. We emphasize volition, client driven services, the power of occupation to be a healing agent with therapeutic benefits for health and wellness, adaptation to empower the individual, and the significance of optimal independence for quality of life. We recognize that education is an ongoing process and our educational philosophy embraces academic and experiential learning to help shape the students’ professional identity and prepare them to work collaboratively with clients and other professionals.
Occupational Therapy Philosophy
Volition and Client Driven Services
Humans, intrinsically motivated by personal values and aspirations, and extrinsically directed by environmental demands, inherently engage in a variety of occupations. Occupational Therapy practitioners place value on the volition of individuals we work with. Therefore, volition must be encouraged and supported through therapeutic relationship with an emphasis on patient/client choice and involvement, and respect for the values, culture and beliefs of patients/clients.
The Power of Occupation
Occupations are “Activities…of everyday life, named, organized and given value and meaning by individuals and a culture” (Law, Polatajko, Baptiste and Townsend, 1997). Occupations occur across the lifespan, resulting in societal participation. Through self-selected occupations that are relevant, meaningful and therapeutic, humans have the capacity to influence their physical and mental health, as well as their social, physical, cultural, temporal, and virtual environments. Mary Reily, an early leader in the occupational therapy profession, reflects the values of the profession in the simple, yet profound statement: “Man, through the use of his hands, as they are energized by mind and will, can influence the state of his own health.” (1962).
In occupational therapy, we use occupations which have intrinsic and extrinsic value as both a therapeutic medium, and the desired result of therapy. Occupations that have immediate and long-term therapeutic benefits address the needs of the people, families, communities, and populations that we serve (AOTA, 2017).
Adaptation and Enablement
At times, throughout the lifespan, individuals may be unable to engage in their life roles and occupations. When barriers occur, occupational therapy practitioners may adapt a task, the way the task is performed, or the environment to enable engagement in occupational roles and societal participation (AOTA, 2014).
Occupational Therapy Education Philosophy
It is our department’s belief that learning is a dynamic process that develops over a time and learning promotes cognitive and affective maturation.
Cognitive maturation is the “development of an internal process by which learners select ways of attending, learning, remembering, or thinking to develop creative problem solving and thinking” (Gagne 1992). We promote problem solving and critical thinking by building complex learning on the simple, and abstract learning on the concrete. Learning develops within a hierarchy from general information acquisition to concept formation to problem solving. For cognitive strategies to be learned the students must engage in developing solutions to problems, learning new attitudes and be exposed to role models.
Both pedagogy and andragogy need to be considered as we have a diverse student body and there are many concepts that are universally supported regardless the age of the learner.
Students have the potential to discover meaning and connect that meaning to their career and their lives. Students bring with them a set of acquired attitudes and behaviors that impact their motivation for learning. We believe that as students learn, attitudes and behaviors can change and grow. Behavioral development occurs as students receive and respond to new information and ideas, value certain ideas, organize new values into existing value schemas, and act consistently with values that one has internalized (Krathwohl’s affective taxonomy, 1964).
We believe cognitive maturation and behavioral development of students are equally important and occurs on a continuum throughout the program. As students learn how to apply specific skills through practice, feedback, and self-reflection, their confidence builds and cognitive maturation as well as behavioral development ensues (Carnegie Melon University, 2018).
In addition, occupational therapy faculty maintain core values and principles of the profession to include: beneficence, non-maleficence, autonomy/confidentiality, fairness/equality, honesty, respect/dignity, duty/care, and sound judgement (AOTA, 2015).
Accreditation
The program is accredited 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, Maryland 20852-4929. ACOTE’s telephone number c/o AOTA is 301-652-AOTA. Website for ACOTE: www.acoteonline.org. Website for AOTA: www.aota.org.
Graduates of the program will be eligible to sit for the national certification examination for the occupational therapy assistant administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy (NBCOT). After successful completion of this exam, the individual will be a Certified Occupational Therapy Assistant (COTA). 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 and attain state licensure.
Graduation/Certification/Licensure
- An Associate in Applied Science degree is granted to each student who successfully completes all coursework and all fieldwork. The student must also demonstrate proficiency in algebra with a minimum placement test score of 40 for the Algebra Test.
- New York State licensure is required for employment in New York State. Upon graduation from the program, an individual is eligible to apply to take the NBCOT OTA Certification Exam and to apply for licensure. All states in the U.S. require state licensure. Separate applications for state licensure must be filed within that state. Note that a felony conviction may affect a graduate’s ability to sit for the NBCOT certification examination and attain state licensure.
- New York State DOES require passing of the National Certification Exam (NBCOT) for employment in New York State. A final, official transcript indicating confirmation for an Associate in Applied Science degree (A.A.S.) in Occupational Therapy Assistant must be submitted to NBCOT as part of the application process for the national certification exam.
- Retention Data and Results of the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy (NBCOT) Exam:
Admit/Graduation
Year
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Number of Program Graduates for this given graduation year
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Graduation Rate for this given admit year**
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Number of New Graduate test takers for this given graduation year
|
Number of New Graduate test takers who passed the exam for this given graduation year
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Percentage of New Graduate test takers who passed the exam for this given graduation year
|
2014
|
12
|
59.10%
(13 graduates/22 admits)
|
12
|
12
|
100%
|
2015
|
17
|
70.83%
(17 graduates/24 admits)
|
16
|
16
|
100%
|
2016 |
14 |
79.17%
(19 graduates/24 admits)
|
11 |
11 |
100% |
2017 |
17 |
TBD*
(X graduates/21 admits)
|
19 |
18 |
95% |
2018 |
15 |
TBD*
(X graduates/23 admits)
|
15 |
15 |
100% |
2019 |
17 |
TBD*
(X graduates/19 admits)
|
17 |
17 |
100% |
Total/
Average
|
T=92
|
A=69.7%
|
T=90
|
T=89
|
A=99%
|
|
*TBD=To be determined
**Graduation Rate includes both 2 and 3 year track students.
Program results from the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy (NBCOT) can be found online at https://secure.nbcot.org/data/schoolstats.aspx.
Website for NBCOT: www.nbcot.org
Website for NYSED-Office of the Professions regarding licensure/authorization/permit to practice: http://www.op.nysed.gov/
Licensure Compliance Statement
New York State prides itself in the high quality of its licensed and certified professionals. For the protection of its citizens, each license and certificate has requirements that individuals must meet in order to be licensed or certified in New York State. SUNY’s academic programs leading to licensure or certification are carefully designed to meet and exceed these State requirements. This is a role SUNY plays in protecting the public. Other states frequently have their own requirements, so if your goal is to practice in another state, the following disclosure statement will help you check to see what that state requires.
Per U.S. Federal Regulations, §668.43 (2019 Rule), and in compliance with the State Authorization Reciprocity Agreements (SARA) Manual version 19.2, SUNY ERIE Community College OTA Program provides the following disclosure statement related to the educational requirements for professional licensure and certification:
SUNY Erie’s Occupational Therapy Assistant Program is an ACOTE accredited occupational therapy assistant educational program. The Program also meets the educational requirements by the Board of Regents in New York State to award an Associate in Applied Science Degree (AAS) with a major in occupational therapy assistant.
Special Admission Requirements/Prerequisites
“Technical Ability Standards”
- “Technical ability standards” for the Erie Community College Occupational Therapy Assistant Student are essential functions or abilities required to meet the physical and intellectual demands of an OTA student while participating in the program. Technical ability standards can be met with or without reasonable accommodations. Students must demonstrate good physical endurance and good health. Sufficient physical strength is required for lifting and moving the human patient in a clinical setting. Additional required skills for a clinical setting include: visual observation of patients and clients in treatment sessions; manipulation and handling of therapy equipment; and ability to demonstrate cognitive skills relative to problem solving, clinical reasoning and handling stress. If you have any concerns that you might not meet these standards, please contact the OTA Department to set up an appointment for advisement. Additionally, as a student of the SUNY Erie OTA Program, students must conduct themselves in a professional manner adhering to the American Occupational Therapy Association Code of Ethics, Standards of Practice, client rights, and confidentiality. Note that a felony conviction may prevent a student from completing our academic program through fieldwork, a degree requirement, required for degree completion.
- Introduction of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the Americans with Disabilities Act requires that no qualified individual with a disability shall, by reason of such disability, be excluded from participation in or denied the benefits of SUNY Erie Community College’s services, programs or activities or be subjected to discrimination by SUNY Erie. The term “qualified individual with a disability” means an individual with a disability who, with or without reasonable modifications to rules, policies, or practices, the removal of architectural, communication or transportation barriers, or the provision of auxiliary aids and services, meets the essential eligibility requirements for the receipt of services or for participation in programs or activities. Students must be able to perform the essential functions of the program in order to meet certain minimum academic and technical standards.
- Essential Functions as needed for typical program success:
CAPABILITY CATEGORY
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SPECIFIC SKILL OR ABILITY
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Motor Capability
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Move from room to room and maneuver in small spaces.
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Transfer patients who may require physical assistance.
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Guard and assist patients with ambulation.
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Perform exercise techniques, including applying resistance during exercise. Therapeutically handle patients.
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Lift and carry up to 50 pounds, and exert up to 100 pounds force for push/pull.
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Squat, crawl, bend/stoop, reach above shoulder level, kneel, use standing balance, and climb stairs.
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Use hands repetitively; use manual dexterity. Ability to use fine skilled movements such as finger dexterity and eye-hand coordination, for effective tool use, dressing, personal hygiene, grooming, cooking, and communicating.
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Adjust, apply, and clean therapeutic equipment.
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Perform CPR.
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Travel to and from academic and clinical sites.
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In the average clinical day, students sit 1-2 hours, stand 6-7 hours, travel 1-3 hours.
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Sensory Capability
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Coordinate verbal and manual instruction.
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Assess a patient from a distance that allows visual observation of patient posture, response to treatment, and interpretation/assessment of the environment.
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Respond to a timer, alarm, or cries for help.
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Monitor vital signs.
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Auditory, visual, and tactile abilities sufficient to assess patient status and perform treatment (including seeing skin color changes, seeing facial expressions and non-verbal communication, hearing heart/lung sounds, and feeling for muscle contractions/to discriminate hot vs. cold/to fabricate splints).
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Ability to effectively attend to multiple features of a task, personal interaction, and/or group to include ability to selectively focus and attend to key features, use divided and alternating attention between two or more features in a quick and safe manner.
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Communication Ability
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Communicate effectively in English with patients, families, and other health care providers, both in person and through documentation (including explaining treatment procedures, teaching patients and families, documenting in charts).
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Effectively adapt communication for intended audience.
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Interact, and establish rapport with individuals, families, and groups from a variety of social, emotional, cultural, and intellectual backgrounds.
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Assume the role of a health care team member.
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Function effectively under supervision and effectively communicate with supervisor.
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Problem Solving/Critical Thinking Ability
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Function effectively under stress.
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Respond appropriately to emergencies.
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Adhere to infection control procedures.
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Demonstrate problem-solving skills in patient care (including reasoning, prioritizing, and synthesizing data or information).
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Use sound judgement and safety precautions.
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Address problems or questions to the appropriate person at the appropriate time.
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Organize and prioritize job tasks, materials, and schedule.
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Follow policies and procedures required by clinical and academic settings.
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Social-Emotional Capability and Professionalism
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Ability to use effective work ethic skills to include attendance, punctuality, positive work attitude, respect, cooperation, teamwork, professional manners, productivity appropriate to course and job role requirements and to work with persons of diverse backgrounds.
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Computer/Technological/Information Literacy
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Ability to use basic computer (word processing/PowerPoint/Excel), electronic communication and on-line course skills on a regular basis.
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Ability to access, evaluate, and use a variety of information resources such as library services, electronic catalogs, and databases in an efficient, ethical, and legal manner.
|
- SUNY Erie OTA seeks to create an inclusive learning environment. If there are aspects of the curriculum that result in barriers to a student’s inclusion, they are strongly encouraged and invited to notify the Department Head. Our program mission involves serving our students which means making course materials accessible and fostering student success. Students taking classes in the Occupational Therapy Department at Erie Community College who are considering requesting reasonable accommodations or academic adjustments are encouraged to contact Students Access Center at 716-851-1487.
- The need for adaptations within the typical OTA program as determined by essential functions may preclude specific OT practice areas for fieldwork placement. For example, an individual who cannot lift and carry up to 50 pounds or exert up to 100 pounds of push/pull force would not be best suited for a traditional clinic-based adult physical disabilities fieldwork placement. For another example, an individual who does not possess the sensory-motor skills to fabricate an arm/hand splint would not be eligible for fieldwork placement in hand therapy/orthotics. Due to the diverse practice areas of occupational therapy, placement is possible in mental health settings, as well as emerging practice areas.
Other Relevant Admission Requirements/Prerequisites
In addition to the requirements of the SUNY Erie Admissions Department which includes an application indicating OTA as the program of choice for the semester of interest, transcripts, and Placement Testing or waiver, OTA applicants must also meet special admission requirements. All applicants are encouraged to contact the Admissions Department to check the status of their application and verify receipt of all required documents (transcripts, entrance essay, proof of shadow hours). All intended majors are encouraged to make sure that they communicate with the Admissions Department to add an OTA Program focus.
- Applicants should have an 80 percent or above high school average within five years of prospective admission for applicants without any college credit. Should an individual only have high school GPA information older than 5 years, they need to establish an undergraduate college GPA with at least some of the OTA general education courses.
- A minimum cumulative GPA of 2.8 is required for all undergraduate colleges attended within five years of prospective admission. Should an individual only have undergraduate college GPA information older than 5 years, overall undergraduate college GPA will be considered.
- Applicants will comply with the college’s math and English competency requirement, as well as complete developmental course-work prior to admission into the program.
- Applicants must pass the SUNY Erie Math Placement Test with an Algebra Test score of 40 or higher, unless waived from taking the test. (If not successful, applicant must complete and pass MT 006. Any math developmental course must be successfully completed with a minimum passing grade of “C”. Developmental courses may be repeated only once, including grades of “W” (withdrawal).
- Applicants must pass the SUNY Erie English Placement Test at the EN 110/EN 100 level or above unless waived from taking the test. Any English developmental course must be successfully completed with a minimum passing grade of “C”. Developmental courses may be repeated only once, including grades of “W” (withdrawal).
- Submission of an entrance essay (formal, typed paper, with a title page) addressing all of the following (name typed on all pages of your document):
- Demonstrate research into the field of Occupational Therapy by describing the roles and responsibilities of an Occupational Therapy Assistant in two diverse areas of practice. Identify, compare, and contrast the roles and responsibilities of the OTA and OT.
- Describe plan for balancing personal life and academic responsibilities to optimize ability to be successful in this rigorous program of study.
- Describe personal attributes, accomplishments, and experiences that will contribute most to effectiveness and success as an Occupational Therapy Assistant.
- Explain reasons for entering the field at the Occupational Therapy Assistant level. Entry point degrees for the field of Occupational Therapy are as an Occupational Therapist and as an Occupational Therapy Assistant. Provide reasons for pursing the OTA degree.
- Complete 15 hours (minimally) of observation, volunteering or shadowing in an occupational therapy area of practice. Complete and submit the College provide form (see Department Webpage link). This form will be uploaded through part of your online application. Applicants may distribute observation/shadowing hours across two areas of practice.
- It is strongly recommended that interested students meet with a Health Sciences Admission Counselor as admission into the program is based on academic qualifications and space availability. Students with an OTA focus should meet with OTA Department Head for advisement and for consideration of transfer credit. Acceptance into General Studies does not guarantee future entrance into the Occupational Therapy Assistant Program.
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Occupational Therapy Assistant Program is housed at North Campus and admits students in the Fall Semester only. Application deadline is February 15. All pieces of the application packet must be submitted by the deadline of February 15 (online application, high school and all college transcripts, entrance essay, and proof of shadowing hours as specified above).
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Meeting program admission requirements does NOT guarantee acceptance into the Occupational Therapy Assistant Program. Viable candidates are invited for group interviews to help determine final selection for admission. Admission is based on the academic qualifications of the student (transcript rubric, entrance essay rubric) as well as soft skills of the candidate (as determined through interview rubric). Admission is also based on space availability.
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If an applicant is not selected for admission, they must submit another application packet for the following Admission term to be reconsidered. Applicants re-applying must submit an entrance essay and proof of shadowing hours for each time that they apply to the Program. Shadowing hours are good for up to 1 year from the application deadline.
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SUNY Erie OTA does not have a waiting list. If an accepted applicant declines their seat, the Department will contact the next most qualified candidate based on rubric scores.
Department Notes
Level II Fieldwork students, enrolled in the last semester of OTA Program, are not permitted to officially withdraw if they fail a fieldwork placement. The failing grade will be submitted to the Registrar’s Office by the OTA Department.
- The student must maintain a minimum grade of a “C+” in all OT courses and a “C“ in all general education courses required for the degree. A grade of “C” is not passing in OT courses and a grade of “C-” is not passing in general education courses required for degree completion. General education courses may only be re-taken once within a five year period.
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General Psychology, Abnormal Psychology, Anatomy and Physiology I and II, lecture and lab, must have been taken in the last five years. Introduction to Sociology and College Composition (English Writing) may have been taken in the last 10 years with a student earning either an A or a B. Students must acquire computer literacy skills prior to enrolling in OT 101, either through life skills or as a remedial course. Expiration of credit is a reality, as retention of knowledge is an issue. However, expiration of credit exceptions for English, general psychology, and sociology do exist in the event of continuing competency established by supplemental coursework in these fields of study.
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EN 110 or EN 100 is a required course at this time; but EN 102 is highly recommended as well.
- A curriculum required course may be repeated only once while in Program. If approval to repeat a course is given, enrollment in the course is dependent on space availability.
- The curriculum is designed in a sequence of courses to be completed in a specific manner. Refer to course description section for sequence of courses and prerequisites. Both 2 year and 3 year course sequences are available.
- Each student will receive, “The OTA Student Manual” upon admission into the Program. This manual is updated annually. A signature acknowledging receipt and understanding of requirements and responsibilities is required by the first day of OTA classes, each year.
- Students are required to attend OTA Orientation (first year students) and OTA Re-Orientation (second and any third year students). Orientation and Re-Orientation are housed in the OTA Department and take place over the summer months.
- Each student is responsible for providing transportation to off-campus community agencies utilized for clinical or fieldwork activities.
- A physical exam and current immunization report are required annually within the Program. Immunization against Hepatitis B is required. Flu vaccination and documentation as proof is required annually. Two part PPD testing and related documentation is required annually.
- Because of the nature of the profession, deviation from professional conduct may adversely affect patient/client well-being. Therefore, the Department reserves the right to immediately remove a student from didactic, laboratory, or clinical course-work and/or dismiss that student from the program if the Department has determined the student has displayed inappropriate behavior or acted in an unprofessional manner. Appropriate professional conduct and Department policies relative to fieldwork are outlined in the OTA Student Manual.
- Additional fee requirements may include professional membership fees (AOTA and NYSOTA are required), OTKE Exam, fingerprinting/background check for Fieldwork, NBCOT Exam Prep Course and others.
- Student are responsible to meet all requirements and/or costs associated with Fieldwork experience requirements.
Program Competencies
Upon graduation with an Associate in Applied Science degree in Occupational Therapy Assistant, the graduate will be able to:
- Identify factors that suggest or hinder occupational performance by gathering relevant information utilizing available resources: EMR/HER, screenings and evaluations, clinical observations, team and family members.
- Establish service competency in assessment methods such as interviews, observation, assessment tools, and chart reviews within the context of the service delivery system.
- Develop client-centered and occupation-based goals in collaboration with the occupational therapist.
- Plan, select, and implement client-centered and occupation-based interventions effectively in collaboration with client, family/significant other, occupational therapist, and service provider.
- Grade and adapt activities and/or the environment to support engagement in occupations.
- Utilize effective and appropriate verbal, nonverbal, and written communication with client(s), families, colleagues, and the public.
- Produce clear and accurate written documentation according to site requirements to include assessments, progress reports, and discharge summaries, attendance records, statistical reports, and for third party payment.
- Conduct oneself in a professional manner adhering to the American Occupational Therapy Association Code of Ethics, Standards of Practice, client rights, and confidentiality.
- Maintain a therapeutic environment within a clinical setting to maintain order, prevent accidents, promote adherence to safety regulations of self and others.
- Develop appropriate professional behaviors related to self-responsibility, constructive feedback, work behaviors, time management, interpersonal skills, and cultural competence.
- Clearly communicate the values and beliefs of occupational therapy, the role of the occupational therapist, and the occupational therapy assistant to clients, families/significant others, and service providers.
- Make informed decisions based on published research and relevant informational sources.
Curriculum
Total Degree Credits: 63