Master of Science in Occupational Therapy
The Master of Science in Occupational Therapy offers an academic continuation for professional Bachelors in Occupational Therapy. The study programme’s starting point is the profession’s own finality: ‘occupation’ or human contextual action. The programme has three essential objectives: academic research, quality assurance and management, and professional development and innovation.
What
The study programme’s mission is to train you to become a professional who is able to:
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conduct academic research within the field of occupational science, occupational therapy and occupational topics;
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to take up leadership based on the principles of management and quality assurance, and to formulate policy advice based on an understanding of health care organization at a regional, national and international level;
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to play an innovative role in a national and international perspective by adequately implementing research results in the work domain of the occupational therapist.
Academic research makes up the core of the Master’s programme. The study programme focuses on acquiring competencies that enable you to correctly interpret, validate and translate academic knowledge into daily professional practice on the one hand, and to take an active role in the collection, processing and assessing research data on the other. The programme also aims at strengthening management-related competencies and insights, like leadership and motivation. The study programme has a deepening as well as a broadening scope: the former comprising knowledge and knowledge creation in and reflection on the field of occupational therapy. The latter refers to the broader social context in which occupational therapy takes place and the need to be able to respond to a rapidly changing society.
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Remarks
For whom
The admission requirements vary. Depending on your prior education, you are either able to enrol directly, or there are additional requirements.
Structure
This Master’s programme focuses on an influx of professional Bachelors in Occupational Therapy and (non-university) Graduates in Occupational Therapy. The study programme is accessible only after taking the preceding academic bridging programme of 60 ECTS-credits. The programme has been developed in a collaborative effort by most Flemish universities and university colleges. The academic bridging programme is organized at KU Leuven (you also register there) and the Master’s programme at Ghent University.
Taken together, the two-year programme’s course units (i.e. of both the bridging and the Master’s programme) make up three three competency areas:
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science and researcher
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manager of quality assurance,
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professional developer/innovator.
The programme offers a variety of different teaching methods such as lectures, interactive discussion lectures, flipped classroom and blended learning. These didactic methods are used to stimulate critical thinking. The Master’s dissertation is the important final element of the study programme. It is proof of your ability to study an occupational therapy problem in a critical, academic and independent manner, and to disseminate your findings. The classes are grouped together and scheduled on a limited number of days.
The programme puts great store by international networking and cooperation. Every student is given the opportunity to have an international experience, ranging from active participation in international conferences and developing a Master’s dissertation abroad, to collaborating with international partners at home.
Labour Market
Due to the growing consideration for occupational therapists’ competencies by health insurance funds, work reintegration services, home care services, prisons, etc…, an increasing academic basis for occupational therapy is a must. The Master’s programme’s objective is to provide future occupational therapists with the necessary knowledge and skills to take up research and management positions within the different work domains listed above. The study programme delivers graduates with the ability to think innovatively about theory and development of guidelines, and to take up middle management positions in welfare and health care institutions. Furthermore, the programme offers perspectives in the education sector.
Quality Assurance
At Ghent University, we strive to educate people who dare to think about the challenges of tomorrow. For that purpose, we provide education that is embedded in six strategic objectives: Think Broadly, Keep Researching, Cultivate Talent, Contribute, Extend Horizons, Opt for Quality.
Ghent University continuously focuses on quality assurance and quality culture. The Ghent University's quality assurance system offers information on each study programme’s unique selling points, and on its strengths and weaknesses with regard to quality assurance.
More information:
Unique Selling Points
- Broad public support and multiperspectivsm: the Master of Science in Occupational Therapy is an interuniversity Master’s programme (organised by Ghent University, KU Leuven, Hasselt University and the University of Antwerp), and is the result of intense collaboration with all the university colleges offering a professional Bachelor’s programme in Occupational Therapy. The two-year programme consists of an academic bridging programme and an actual Master’s programme, taught at KU Leuven and Hasselt University, respectively. The programme has been developed from a multiperspectivistic outlook, which is why it has garnered broad public support.
- Academic training, management and innovation: based on three core professional roles in occupational therapy, the programme’s leitmotivs are research, management and innovation. All three components are equally important: in addition to research, we focus on management competencies (people management, change management, health care management, …), and innovative thought and action. Both the academic bridging programme and the Master’s programme train students to fulfil these three professional roles at a high level.
- Occupational Science, i.e. research into human action, is at the core of our programme. Evidence increasingly shows that meaningful activities have a positive influence on individuals’ participation in, and quality of, life. This unique perspective takes centre stage in our programme.
- Advanced practice in occupational therapy: In the face of society’s fast-changing views on illness and health, the occupational therapist faces equally fast-changing professional roles. Our programme equips students with the necessary knowledge and skills to face these professional challenges. Through advanced practice in occupational therapy, which is evidence-based and founded on recent insights, students learn how to perform clinical interventions at an expert level. They learn how to coach in an interdisciplinary manner, to take on professional leadership, and to contribute to ethical decisions in specific cases.
Strengths
- Stakeholder involvement: the professional field, research and education. We place great store by the involvement of our different stakeholders in the professional field, in research, and in education. Quality monitoring means taking into account the interests of all our stakeholders’ interests. The quality improvement plan is an excellent starting point for going over the curriculum and discuss potential improvements with alumni, and with specialists from different intervention domains. These consultations allow us to keep abreast with innovations, and to strengthen our obvious ties with the professional field further.
- Our lecturers are strongly involved both in academic research projects, and in clinical practice. This combination of topical research results and clinical experience leads to a curriculum that is clearly research-based and evidence-based.
- In the face of society’s fast-changing views on illness and health, the needs and requirements of future occupational therapists follow suit. Our study programme anticipates these needs, on the one hand, by stimulating our students to think and reason critically, and by introducing course units like “Tech-Supported Innovation in the Rehabilitation, Health and Welfare Sectors”, on the other. This way, we meet changing social contexts and patient populations.
- Student involvement in our study programme is strong. Our students are represented in various councils and committees like the Study Programme Committee, the Steering Group Committee and the Quality Assurance Cell. Since our student group is rather small, we supply (quantitative) results of course feedback by students with structural student consultations.
- Quality assurance and a focus on assessment: under supervision of the Quality Assurance Cell, our programme has established a sound quality assurance policy. Our curriculum, education organisation, and the quality of our lecturers are systematically held up against the light by external experts, lecturers, and students. We also pay particular attention to high-quality assessment: with a regular benchmark of our Master’s dissertations with international institutions, among other things, we aim for a high exit level.
Challenges
- Internationalisation: the Occupational Therapy programme is an academic continuation of a professional Bachelor’s programme consisting of only one actual Master’s year. Internationalisation, particularly in the form of international exchange programmes, is a challenge. We keep looking for alternative international experiences, e.g. by inviting international lecturers and organising short stays abroad like academic conferences and international research projects. To this end, a new course unit on internationalisation has been introduced into the curriculum.
- Distance teaching and blended learning are indispensable components of any interuniversity programme. As it is, we ask of both our students and our lecturers quite a bit of commuting between different campuses at different universities. We are investing in opportunities to expand distance teaching, and to integrate blended learning techniques better into the curriculum. That way we want to try and reduce student commutes to a minimum. The new Master’s curriculum at Hasselt University is set up with a clear focus on distance teaching and blended learning.
- Differentiation: the new Master’s curriculum at Hasselt University works towards thorough differentiation in the programme, and an optimal student intake, study progress and student outflow. We fed our curriculum with typical occupational therapy course units as well as course units from related disciplines taught by doctors, educationalists, psychologists and physiotherapists with a doctorate. As undeniably broadening as this is, it is equally important to have sufficient occupational therapists holding a doctorate to strengthen the programme’s research finality from within the discipline.
This study programme is accredited by the Accreditation Organization of the Netherlands and Flanders (Dutch: NVAO). Accreditation was extended following the positive outcome of the institutional review in 2022. Programme quality was validated by a quality review, i.e. a screening of the Education Monitor by the Education Quality Board. The Quality Assurance Resolution (in Dutch) can be found here.
This information was last updated on 01/02/2023.
In case of questions or suggestions with regard to the publicly available information, please contact the study programme.