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Manchester University to offer 5-year athletic-training master’s

Article reposted from The Journal Gazette
Author: The Journal Gazette

Manchester University said today it would begin a five-year dual program leading to a bachelor’s degree in exercise science and fitness and a master of athletic training degree.

The program will enable students to complete two degrees in five years that would normally take six, the North Manchester-based university said in a statement.

Beginning in 2022, anyone who wants to become a certified athletic trainer first must have a master’s degree from an accredited athletic training education program such as Manchester’s, the statement said.

It said students will complete requirements for the bachelor’s degree on an accelerated three-year schedule, taking courses in the summer, fall, January and spring sessions each year.

They will apply to the master’s program after the second year, and begin graduate studies in the summer after the third year, the statement said. After completing degree requirements, they are eligible to take the examination leading to the Certified Athletic Trainer credential.

Manchester said it would not accept students to its current undergraduate major in athletic training after the fall 2016 semester “in order to protect the investment and future marketability of its students.”

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OSU Center for Health Sciences adds graduate program in athletic training

The Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences is offering a new master’s degree in athletic training, the first of its kind associated with an osteopathic medical school in the country.

The athletic training degree program was relocated from OSU-Stillwater to the west Tulsa location, and the graduate program will be the first in a new School of Allied Health at the OSU Center for Health Sciences.

“Athletic trainers are health-care professionals who collaborate closely with physicians and other health-care providers to optimize activity and participation of athletes, patients and clients,” Center for Health Sciences President Kayse Shrum said in a statement. “The move to OSU Center for Health Sciences will help enhance the program by promoting early collaboration between our medical students and students in the athletic training program.”

Athletic training encompasses the prevention, diagnosis and intervention of emergency, acute and chronic medical conditions involving impairment, functional limitations and disabilities.

The master of athletic training degree, which replaces a similar undergraduate program offered by the College of Education at OSU’s Stillwater campus, is the only athletic training program in the state aligned with a medical school and the only one in the country aligned with an osteopathic medical school, said Bruce Benjamin, Center for Health Sciences vice provost for graduate programs.

“Locating the program at OSU Center for Health Sciences will help establish the program as a leader in athletic training due to the collaboration opportunities available with the College of Osteopathic Medicine,” Benjamin said. “With changes in the field and accreditation requirements, it makes sense to align this allied health program as part of our medical school and health sciences graduate programs.”

The first group of seven graduate students began the 53 credit hour program in June. Faculty in the athletic training program in Stillwater are transitioning to the OSU Center for Health Sciences in Tulsa to launch the program.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:
http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/osu-center-for-health-sciences-adds-graduate-program-in-athletic/article_e8a475eb-5222-58e2-94c3-8f08683ed2de.html