Name BANNER ID @ Address
Transcription
Name BANNER ID @ Address
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY ASSISTANT PROGRAM STUDENT INFORMATION COVER SHEET FOR ADMISSION SEPTEMBER 2014 Please complete this form carefully. Incomplete or illegible applications will not be reviewed. Name BANNER ID @ Address City Phone number (home) State Zip ___________ Phone number (work) Phone number (cell) E-mail How did you hear about the program? Please list 6 of the 9 required pre requisite courses.(see the bottom of page 2 of this application) All courses must be completed with a grade of C or higher by May 30, 2014 Course name Catalog Number College where course was taken Semester/Yr Taken Grade Intro to Biology Please attach a copy of the transcript from each of the schools (including HCC) from which you have credits. Official transcripts from these same schools must be on file and evaluated by the Advising office prior to June 1, 2014. A printout from HCC that shows that courses completed outside HCC have been accepted as transfer credits must be attached for the application to be considered. Semester and Year you completed computer fundamentals course _________This must show up on transcript OR Signature of the computer fundamentals proctor_______________________________________________ Indicating successful completion of the test. Date you attended an OTA information session Date you took OTA Admissions Essay Test _____________ A copy of the letter you received indicating your score on the Essay test must be attached. This application must be postmarked no later than June 1, 2014 to be considered for September 2014 admission. 1 ADMISSION TO THE OTA PROGRAM The Occupational Therapy Assistant program is open to students from outside the college as well as from the student body currently attending HCC. In order to apply for admission all students must first meet these BASIC REQUIREMENTS 1. Be admitted to the college (see college catalog for this process). 1. Have a Banner ID number. 2. Have transcripts from all previous schools sent to the HCC admissions office and evaluated by the advising office ( 203-332-5215) so that they appear on the HCC transcript. 3. Take the placement test and place above developmental levels of both Math and English OR have successfully completed Developmental Math and English courses. 4. Complete the computer fundamentals course with a C or higher or pass the computer fundamentals test at HCC. 5. Successfully complete the OTA Clinical Writing test. You can schedule the test by calling 203-332-5019. 6. Earn a programmatic GPA of 3.0 or Please see the college catalog for courses applicable to the OTA program. 7. Attend a program information session within 12 months prior to the anticipated entrance date. Please see the website http://www.hcc.commnet.edu/academics/programs/OTA/index.asp for information session dates. Complete Biology 105 with a grade of B or higher and 5 more of the following 9 courses with a grade of C or higher (Use the course elective codes in the HCC catalog to determine which courses fulfill these requirements) If you are unsure about which courses transfer in to fulfill these requirements contact Mr. Tracy Chavis at 332-5215 Biology 105 B or higher English 101 English 102 Math 103 or higher Psychology 111 Psychology elective (200 level) Fine Arts Social Science Elective Biology 117 8. 9. Complete both exploratory assignments with college level writing . You should contact the OTA program director for approval of your volunteer/worksite experience. See attached for a full explanation of the exploratory assignments. Applications are ranked according to English 101 grades, programmatic GPA , writing scores and exploratory assignments. Please be aware that completion of the basic requirements does not guarantee admissions. Students who meet minimum requirements will be asked to a group interview conducted by the faculty .Final determination will for acceptance will be made by the interviewers. 2 Exploratory Assignments All applicants must successfully complete the following 2 exploratory assignments Evidence of completing these assignments must be submitted using specific forms and guidelines in this packet. 1. Exploratory Assignment 1 : Review three online videos of OT treatment sessions and complete a structured essay about one of the sessions 2. Exploratory Assignment 2: Twenty (20) hours of paid or volunteer experience working directly with people with disabilities. These hours SHOULD NOT be completed in an Occupational Therapy Department. The setting must be approved by the OTA Program Director prior to beginning the volunteer work. Applications without completed documented exploratory assignments will be considered incomplete and will not be reviewed. *** 3 Student Name BANNER ID @ EXPLORATORY ASSIGNMENT 1 OBSERVATION OF A THERAPIST: DIRECTIONS FOR WRITING THE ESSAY As an exploratory assignment for entrance into the program, you must write a paper describing your observation of an Occupational Therapist using the guidelines below. You are to review the three videos at the AOTA websitehttp://www.aota.org/Education-Careers/Considering-OT-Career/TherapySessions.aspx Please DO NOT contact local Occupational Therapists for the assignment. Write a review of one of the sessions on the website using the following outline. The essay must be a minimum of 2 pages typed double spaced 12 point ARIAL font with one inch margins Your essay should cover the following information Name of the patient Diagnosis/disabling condition Current challenges due to disabling condition The overall goal of therapy for this patient Describe three treatment interventions and how they will help the patient to become more functional 4 EXPLORATORY ASSIGNMENT 2 DOCUMENTATION OF DIRECT EXPERIENCE WITH DISABLED POPULATION Student Name BANNER ID @ These hours should be completed through a volunteer department or a work setting and can be completed with any disabled population. They need not be done in an OT setting. Applicants are encouraged to go through the volunteer department of the facility. Have the supervisor you work with fill out this form. Include the completed form in your application packet. Please print legibly. Facility Name: Supervisor’s Name: Job Title: Phone Number: ( ) Area Code Facility Address: Street Address City State Zip Name of student volunteer/employee: Start date of volunteer or work experience: End date of volunteer or work experience: Number of hours volunteered or worked: Please list the duties of this volunteer/worker: I certify that the above named volunteer/worker completed hours of (volunteer) work at my facility. Supervisor’s Signature 5 NON ACADEMIC ESSENTIALS A. OBSERVATION SKILLS 1. The OTA/student must be able to acquire a defined level of necessary information as presented through educational experiences in pre-professional, professional, and continuing education courses. 2. The OTA/student must perceive, assimilate, and integrate information from a variety of sources. These sources include lectures, conversations, printed materials, visual and auditory media, clinical experiences, and hands-on demonstrations. 3. The OTA/student must demonstrate adequate functional use of visual, tactile, auditory and other sensory and perceptual abilities, to enable such observations and information acquisition necessary for academic and clinical performance. B. INTELLECTUAL/CONCEPTUAL ABILITIES 1. The OTA/student must demonstrate critical thinking skills so that s/he can problem-solve creatively, master abstract ideas, and synthesize information present in clinical settings which may present ambiguities and ethical dilemmas. 2. The OTA/student must be able to measure, calculate, reason, analyze, process, integrate, synthesize, apply and retain facts, concepts, and data related to the art and science of health care. 3. The OTA/student must be able to comprehend three-dimensional relationships and understand the spatial relationships of anatomic structures. 4. The OTA/student must be able to apply theoretical knowledge and current research evidence to specific client populations and diagnoses, and justify the rationale for medical and therapeutic interventions. 5. The OTA/student must develop a sense of socio-medical ethics, and recognize and apply pertinent legal and ethical standards. C. COGNITIVE DEMANDS 1. The successful OTA/student maintains a high level of alertness and responsiveness during classroom and fieldwork situations. 2. The OTA/student must possess the ability to focus on a task for a prolonged period of time to allow for successful learning to take place. 3. The OTA/student must be able to recall information and organize information in an efficient and useful manner. This includes the ability to acquire, retain, and prioritize informational data, conceptualize and integrate abstract information, apply theoretical knowledge to specific client populations and justify a rationale for therapeutic interventions, and problem-solve to create innovative and practical solutions. 6 D. COMMUNICATION SKILLS 1. Effective communication is critical for the OTA/student to build relationships with patients, clinical supervisors, other professionals, and care givers, in his/her various roles of learner, peer, colleague and professional. 2. The OTA/student must be able to gather, comprehend, utilize and disseminate information effectively, efficiently, and in accordance with professional standards. Students are required to communicate in the English language both verbally and in writing at a level consistent with competent professional practice. 3. The OTA/student is expected to use grammar and vocabulary proficiently. The OTA student must be able to elicit information, gather information, and describe findings verbally and in writing (e.g. reports, treatment plans, progress notes, and discharge summaries), that are comprehensible by clients, care-givers, professionals and nonprofessionals. 4. The OTA/student must have the ability to use computers, keyboards and accessories for searching, recording, storing, and retrieving information as well as the ability to hand write legibly in charts. E. CULTURAL COMPETENCY 1. The OTA/student must be able to communicate accurately, sensitively and effectively with clients and professionals from different cultural and social backgrounds. The OTA student should be able to observe, recognize and understand non-verbal behavior. The OTA student must be able to establish rapport with clients and communicate evaluation and treatment information effectively, while adhering to principles of confidentiality. F. BEHAVIORAL AND SOCIAL SKILLS 1. The OTA/student must demonstrate emotional stability and be capable of developing mature and effective interpersonal relationships with other peers, coworkers, clinical supervisors, and other professionals. 2. The OTA/student must be able to tolerate physically and emotionally taxing workloads and to function effectively under stress. 3. The OTA/student must be able to adapt to changing environments, display flexibility and function in the face of real-world ambiguities. 4. The OTA/student must exhibit the ability and commitment to work with individuals in fastpaced, demanding settings. 5. The OTA/student must acknowledge and manage personal biases in order to meet the needs of people from diverse cultures, age groups, and socioeconomic levels. 6. The OTA/student must be prepared to work with individuals who are severely medically involved, injured or disabled; be limited by cognitive, emotional and functional impairments; and exhibit extreme behavior that may elicit an aversive reaction. The ability to successfully interact with such individuals without being judgmental or 7 prejudicial is critical to establishing a therapeutic relationship and maintaining one’s professionalism as indicated in the OT code of ethics. 7. The OTA/student must demonstrate attributes of empathy, integrity, concern for others, interpersonal skills, interest, and motivation 8. The OTA/student must possess the emotional wellbeing required for use of his/her intellectual abilities, the exercise of care of patients, and the development of mature, sensitive, and effective relationships with patients. 9. The OTA/student must be able to adapt to ever-changing environments, display flexibility, and learn to function in the face of uncertainties and stresses which are inherent in the educational process, as well as the clinical problems of many patients. G. PHYSICAL/MOTOR SKILLS & ENVIRONMENTAL REQUIREMENTS 1. The OTA/student must possess sufficient motor abilities, including physical strength and coordination to effectively operate and maintain equipment, safely handle, transfer, and move clients, carry out medical procedures, perform evaluations, provide treatment intervention with a variety of clients, and in multiple, non-isolated settings. 2. The OTA/student must demonstrate good gross and fine motor skills including but not limited to, the ability to walk, balance, bend, climb, stoop, kneel, crouch, rotate body, coordinate arms, and reach overhead. 3. The OTA/student are required to use multiple grasp and pinch patterns, including dexterity for writing and keyboard function, and firm grasp for sustained hand/arm use as in lifting, push/pull, twisting, transferring and carrying. Students must regularly lift and/or move objects up to 10 pounds, occasionally lift and/or move objects at 25-50 pounds, and infrequently lift/move objects at greater than 50 pounds. 4. The OTA/student must have a comfort level and the safety awareness to avoid negatively impacting patient care when dealing with hazardous conditions s/he may be exposed to on the job. These include but are not limited to the following: wet or humid internal environments; proximity to moving mechanical parts, fumes or airborne particles, hazardous materials, body fluids and blood borne pathogens; risk of electrical shock, objects of hot/cold temperature, or vibration. Students who seek information regarding academic accommodations should make an appointment with Ms. Lynn Langella, Director of Disabilities Services at 332-5018. REFERENCES American Occupational Therapy Association (1997), Educating College Students With Disabilities, AOTA, Bethesda, MD. American Occupational Therapy Association (1996). Reference Manual of the Official Documents of the American Occupational Therapy Association, AOTA, Bethesda, MD. Wells, S.A. & Hanebrink, S. (1998), A Guide to Reasonable Accommodation for Practitioners with Disabilities: Fieldwork to Employment. AOTA, Bethesda, MD. 8 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF THE NON ACADEMIC ESSENTIAL REQUIREMENTS OF STUDENTS The OTA student is required to meet criteria outside of the academic requirements.. These are the non-academic skills required of students and are reflective of the essential skills needed to complete the OTA program and in preparation for national certification testing and employment. The student is expected to enter the program with the ability to meet all of the requirements. It is not the responsibility of the faculty to teach these skills to students. Students will be monitored by the faculty throughout the course of the program to ensure that they are meeting the non-academic essentials. Those students failing to meet these requirements will be asked to counsel with a faculty and could be dismissed from the program. In some cases of egregious behavior that threatens the safety of a patient, faculty or peer, a student could be immediately dismissed from the program for failure to meet the non-academic essentials. Failure to fully and consistently meet non-academic essential requirements will result in the inability to register for Level II Fieldwork. Students who cannot meet these requirements will be referred to the program director as soon as possible in the course of their studies to determine if a referral to a different course of study is appropriate. I certify that I have read the essentials and believe I am capable of meeting all of them . I am willing to participate in evaluations of these skills as part of my classroom and fieldwork experiences. I have read the above statements and understand my responsibilities and the consequences of not meeting the non-academic essentials Print Name: Signature Date 9 Make sure your application is complete. Completed applications must be postmarked by June 1th prior to the September start date for which the student is applying. All supporting documentation must be included in the applicant’s packet. The packet should be sent directly to the program director in one envelope. Students are encouraged to obtain a postal receipt when mailing their application package. A completed application includes the following: ___ Student information cover sheet correctly and fully filled out. ___Copy of e mail from program acknowledging successful completion of the OTA admissions essay ___ Unofficial copies of transcripts from all schools attended must be attached to this application ___Official copies of transcripts must be evaluated and on file in the Advising Office (It is the student responsibility to make sure the evaluation is complete and on file) ___ Signed Acknowledgement of Non Academic Essential Requirements ___ Documentation of volunteer/paid hours working with people with disabilities ___ Report of Observation of an OT Of special note: • • • • • • • • • • • • • Incomplete or illegible applications will not be reviewed. Students who have failed out of another nursing or allied health program are generally not accepted into the program but will be considered for admission on a case by case basis under very special circumstances Recommendations from the prior program faculty will be required. Applications submitted past June 1 will be considered on a space available basis. Each applicant who meets all the criteria and submits a complete, legible, satisfactory application will be invited to complete a formal interview with the admission committee and demonstrate the skills, behaviors and attitudes outlined in the interview standards. Applicants who do not pass the interview may not reapply to the program in subsequent semesters. Applicants will be ranked according to G.P.A., number of program courses already completed OTA clinical writing test score and, in case of tie ranking, the postmark of the application packet. In order to be eligible apply for early admission, students must have a programmatic GPA of 3.0 and have completed six (6) of the nine(9) non-OTA courses including English101,English 102 and Bio 105 with a B or higher . A grade of C or higher in Biology 105 is required for admission to Biology 117, however due to the rigorous coursework based on the basic biology, a grade of B or better is highly recommended Any attempt to falsify information in any part of the application process will render the applicant ineligible for program admission for the current or any subsequent semester. Completion of pre requisite requirements does not guarantee admission. Admission is selective and competitive. Students will be notified of their admissions status via e mail by June 30,2014. The office will NOT have decisions on status before then. Please do not call . Students will be contacted and must schedule an interview within 10 days of receipt of this e-mail. Students who have passed the interview and are accepted into the program must attend all three days of a mandatory summer orientation in order to begin the program. This session is held in August and specific dates will be available by July 1, 2014. Graduates of the program must sit for the national certification examination before becoming licensed to practice Occupational Therapy .Students who have been convicted of a felony may not be eligible to take the national certification exam. It is possible that students may have to wait up to 1 year after finishing their academic work to be placed in an appropriate fieldwork setting . Placements are made through the college and cannot be arranged by the individual student. 10 11