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Course Criteria
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6.00 Credits
Full-time (36- to 40-hours per week) nine-week clinical experience for third year physical therapy students. As available, students will experience a different type setting or different patient problems than in PT 675 and PT 677. Students are prepared to manage patients/clients with musculoskeletal, neuromuscular, cardiopulmonary, and integumentary disorders. Graded credit/no-credit. Offered spring/summer semester. Prerequisites: PT 677 and physical therapy faculty recommendation.
Prerequisite:
Prerequisites: PT 677 and physical therapy faculty recommendation.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Students will complete a reading project or other approved activity building upon declared student interest. Tangible final product must be completed according to criteria developed by the student and advisor. Offered every semester. Prerequisites: Permission of program.
Prerequisite:
Prerequisites: Permission of program.
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1.00 Credits
This is the first of two courses in which physical therapy students fulfill research requirements. Students study the available evidence and apply foundational research concepts. Students propose a method for conducting a research project or complete a case report of systematic review. Guided by faculty mentors. Offered winter and spring/summer semesters. Prerequisite: Successful completion of previous D.P.T. curriculum requirements.
Prerequisite:
Prerequisite: Successful completion of previous D.P.T. curriculum requirements.
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2.00 Credits
Second of two courses in which physical therapy students fulfill research requirements. Students apply foundational concepts, collect data, analyze, and describe results in the context of a research project, case report, or systematic review. Guided by faculty mentors. Offered winter semester. Prerequisites: Successful completion of previous D.P.T. curricular requirements and completion of the Responsible Conduct of Research Training within last 3 years.
Prerequisite:
Prerequisites: Successful completion of previous D.P.T. curricular requirements and completion of the Responsible Conduct of Research Training within last 3 years.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Graduate credit awarded for professional learning acquired through non-credit courses, structured, non-credit professional development programs, and professional work experiences.
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3.00 Credits
An interdisciplinary study of multiple world religions in their cultural, historical, and political context. Students will investigate topics including belief structures, ritual systems, sacred literature, social dimensions, and historical development of various religious traditions. The course will include identification and comparison of key aspects of religion across traditions. Fulfills one of the Foundations - Social and Behavioural Sciences. Fulfills Cultures - Global Perspectives. Offered every semester.
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3.00 Credits
An interdisciplinary introduction to how religion has been understood and has shaped human experience, past and present. Students will also learn to identify and apply basic terminology, conceptual frameworks, and analytical methods in the field of religious studies. Fulfills Foundations - Historical Analysis. Offered fall and winter semesters.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Readings, lectures, and/or discussions in specific topics not normally covered by other courses in the program.
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3.00 Credits
This course explores the intersection of religion with human life, law, politics, and public culture, focusing on contemporary religions' roles in the secular world. Topics may include human rights, fundamentalism, migration/immigration, social and political movements, gender/sexuality, nationalism, contemporary religious movements or phenomena, and environmentalism, among others. Fulfills Cultures - Global Perspectives. Part of the Human Rights Issue. Offered winter semester. Prerequisite: Junior standing.
Prerequisite:
Prerequisite: Junior standing.
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3.00 Credits
This course examines the sacred stories, rituals, and historical development of the three major traditions of the Christian religion: Eastern Orthodox, Roman Catholicism, and Protestantism. It surveys the development of Christianity from its Jewish and Hellenistic roots through contemporary attempts to translate the Christian faith for the 21st century. Offered fall semester.
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