Master of Sports Rehabilitation (MC-SPREHAB)
Masters (Coursework)Year: 2022 Delivered: Online
About this course
Contact
Email: continuing-education@unimelb.edu.au
Phone: + 61 3 8344 0149
Contact hours: https://unimelb.edu.au/professional-development/contact-us
Principal Coordinator
Sonya Moore
Overview
Award title | Master of Sports Rehabilitation |
---|---|
Year & campus | 2022 — Parkville |
Fees information | Subject EFTSL, level, discipline and census date |
Study level & type | Graduate Coursework |
AQF level | 9 |
Credit points | 150 credit points |
Duration | 18 months full-time or 36 months part-time |
The Master of Sports Rehabilitation is a 150-credit point, fully online program designed to produce graduates with extended knowledge and skills for professional practice in the areas of sports and rehabilitation. The curriculum is internationally relevant, fosters interdisciplinary communication and embraces the specialised requirements of different health professionals. It is designed for practicing professionals as it can be studied part time or full time. Graduate attributes are aligned with those of The Melbourne Graduate.
A wholly online Master of Sports Rehabilitation is inherently innovative and combines knowledge fundamental to rehabilitation, sports and exercise and is based on three overlapping foundational pillars incorporated within learning, teaching and assessment tasks. The program has:
- Student centred flexibility within and between subjects, where students make multiple choices within a structured framework to personalise and build their learning experience to best match their practice context and meet career goals.
- Longitudinal assembly of multi-modal professional and community resources. This is envisaged to present tangible evidence of practice competency and the application of learning and evidence applied to practice.
- Cultivation of a International Sports Rehabilitation Community of practice which aligns the needs, demands, expertise and experience of the student cohort, sports and exercise community environments, tutor team, and clinical field experts. This will be characterised by online Master classes, synchronous tutorials, collaborative and independent activities and interactive videos.
This approach is pedagogically robust and embraces the progressing international climate of flexible, sustainable, distance learning models. Assessment tasks can be completed at a distance and submitted electronically, encompassing a variety of written and presentation formats relevant to clinicians in demonstrating knowledge, clinical reasoning, communication and reflective skills in academic and practice contexts.
The Master of Sports Rehabilitation is designed for professionals across degree-qualified health professional disciplines, throughout career stages and internationally. Post-graduates striving to achieve best practice professionally in Sports Rehabilitation will be able to embrace community health through working with recreational athletes to the elite athletes across the lifespan, inclusive of adolescent, adult and senior athletes. The program challenges and extends clinicians to anticipate, enhance and advance best practice internationally.
The curriculum is designed around three elements which will be covered explicitly within learning outcomes in each subject throughout the program: 1) Theory and Practice, 2) Evidence and Innovation and 3) Clinical Practice in Context. Linking theory, research and practice is emphasised, utilising scientific evidence to underpin clinical practice and decisions. The Masters in Sports Rehabilitation core subjects explore professional and clinical practice relating to sport and rehabilitation across the lifespan and across variable levels of abilities. Alongside 8 core (including a capstone) subject, the course includes 3 elective subjects enabling students to scaffold their learning according to their interest areas and practice context. These subjects all require analysis, synthesis and creative problem solving within a range of practice contexts; extending knowledge and understanding, research principles and new innovations that are necessary to undertake sports rehabilitation practice in different environments.
The capstone component is designed to demonstrate the application of knowledge and skills to: plan and execute a substantial research-based project, OR capstone experience OR piece of scholarship, in the area of sports medicine, ensuring that this program meets AQF level 9 requirements. A research project or a professional project can be selected for the Capstone project. The Research Capstone allows students to engage with a research team and more explicitly examine a sports rehabilitation relevant research question in some depth. The professional project capstone will allow the student to complete a professional project in the area of sports rehabilitation practice. They will design and evaluate a professional project in a practice context with the support of an academic mentor.
Entry requirements
1. In order to be considered for entry, applicants must have completed:
- a bachelor degree or equivalent in the discipline of Physiotherapy, Medicine, Exercise Science, Podiatry, or another relevant discipline; and
- at least 2 years of relevant post-entry to practice professional experience in clinical, sport, health or exercise science.
Meeting these requirements does not guarantee selection.
2. In ranking applicants, the Selection Committee will consider:
- prior academic performance; and
- professional experience.
3. The Selection Committee may seek further information to clarify any aspect of an application in accordance with the Academic Board rules on the use of selection instruments.
4. Applicants are required to satisfy the university’s English language requirements for graduate courses. For those applicants seeking to meet these requirements by one of the standard tests approved by the Academic Board, performance band 7.0 is required.
Inherent requirements (core participation requirements)
For the purposes of considering a request for Reasonable Adjustments under the Disability Standards for Education (2005), and Students Experiencing Academic Disadvantage Policy, academic requirements for this subject are articulated in the Subject Description, Subject Objectives, Generic Skills and Assessment Requirements of this entry.The University is dedicated to providing support to those with special requirements. Further details on the disability support scheme can be found at the Student Equity and Disability Support website. http://services.unimelb.edu.au/student-equity/home
Intended learning outcomes
Theory and Practice
- Incorporate knowledge of muscle and exercise physiology and pathophysiology of common conditions in designing, implementing and evaluating effective rehabilitation programs for athletes across the lifespan (adolescent to senior) with different abilities.
- Fluently and accurately discuss and debate key theoretical concepts in contemporary rehabilitation practices using the language of rehabilitation science
- Critically discuss principles and frameworks of professional and ethical practice in the sports health and exercise environment; integrating interdisciplinary practice models within own professional and ethical practice frameworks
- Critically utilise technical and communication skills to integrate contemporary theory in the design, evaluation, implementation and analyses about developments that contribute to advancement of practice in diverse sports, and rehabilitation contexts
Evidence and Innovation
- Design evidence informed rehabilitation programs for complex cases in local, national and global contexts
- Identify, critically appraise and interpret current research knowledge evaluating rehabilitation and sports practice
- Effectively measure both the health status of individuals and groups as well as monitor and measure the outcomes of rehabilitation strategies.
- Design, evaluate, implement, analyse and theorise about developments that contribute to advancement of practice in the rehabilitation of athletes; emphasising evidence-based practice and critical discussion relating to incorporating innovations into practice
Professional Practice in Context
- Critically integrate evidence in the provision of advice and promotion of safe physical activity participation and exercise in different sporting contexts
- Safely and effectively apply evidence informed rehabilitation practices in selected practice contexts, responding to physical, social and cultural factors that influence the individual athlete and likely outcomes of rehabilitation
- Justify clinical decision making for a range of clinical cases in diverse rehabilitation contexts based on literature and practice priorities
- Implement all elements of best practice in rehabilitation, including respectful communication with clients for shared decision making to achieve rehabilitation goals
- Design and execute a substantial professional project or research-based project as part of a capstone experience
Generic skills
- Demonstrate academic writing, oral and creative skills to present information to both specialists and non-specialists in academic forums clinical contexts.
- Demonstrate inter-professional learning and collaboration to effectively produce resources that can be used in a range of rehabilitation settings
- Produce assessment outcomes with a high level of personal autonomy and accountability
- Reflect on their personal skills, values, biases and limitations and identify learning opportunities to build on their knowledge and skills to promote best practice.
- Recognise the influence of the social and culture determinants of health and how these influence individual's choices and health behaviours and act consistently to promote a shared decision making model of practice.
- Demonstrate effective team work through participation in group projects, active contributions to online discussions and the provision of feedback to their peers
- Demonstrate understanding, application and monitoring of the processes of critical reasoning and the need to develop strategies for expert reasoning
- Critically evaluating their practice in relation to new information, promoting the appropriate application of new knowledge and innovations in multidisciplinary practice and decision-making processes
- Communicate and collaborate with the interdisciplinary team and all involved parties in case management
- Plan and manage independent learning and develop sustainable strategies for lifelong learning and reflective practice
- Australian students will further demonstrate a deep respect for Indigenous knowledge, culture and values and recognise the need to design rehabilitation to meet the needs of Indigenous communities in a culturally sensitive and safe manner.
Course structure
- 75 points of compulsory subjects
- 50 points of electives
- 25 points of capstone
Students may take subjects in any sequence subject to availability, however, all core subjects must be completed prior to commencing the Capstone projects.
Compulsory
Code | Name | Study period | Credit Points |
---|---|---|---|
REHB90001 | Foundations of Rehabilitation |
Term 1 (Online)
Term 3 (Online)
|
12.5 |
REHB90007 | Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation |
Term 2 (Online)
Term 4 (Online)
|
12.5 |
MEDI90092 | The Modern Athlete |
Term 1 (Online)
Term 3 (Online)
|
12.5 |
SMED90001 | Biomechanics & Sports Injury Prevention |
Term 1 (Online)
Term 3 (Online)
|
12.5 |
HLTH90001 | Health Behaviour Change | Term 1 (Online) |
12.5 |
REHB90010 | Research and Evidence in Practice |
Term 2 (Online)
Term 4 (Online)
|
12.5 |
Electives
Code | Name | Study period | Credit Points |
---|---|---|---|
REHB90003 | Evaluation of Rehabilitation Practice | Term 4 (Online) |
12.5 |
REHB90006 | Rehabilitation for Women's Health | Term 2 (Online) |
12.5 |
REHB90005 | Rehabilitation for Paediatrics | Term 1 (Online) |
12.5 |
REHB90008 | Rehabilitation in Neurology | Term 3 (Online) |
12.5 |
REHB90011 | Rehabilitation in Global Health | No longer available | |
REHB90002 | Rehabilitation Activity and Exercise |
Term 2 (Online)
Term 4 (Online)
|
12.5 |
REHB90009 | Innovation and Emerging Technologies | Term 3 (Online) |
12.5 |
RADI90024 | Neuromusculoskeletal Radiology | Term 4 (Online) |
12.5 |
PSYC90108 | Sport Psychology | Term 2 (Online) |
12.5 |
Capstone options
Code | Name | Study period | Credit Points |
---|---|---|---|
REHB90012 | Rehabilitation Professional Project |
Semester 1 (Extended) (Online)
Semester 2 (Extended) (Online)
|
25 |
REHB90013 | Research Project |
Semester 1 (Extended) (Online)
Semester 2 (Extended) (Online)
|
25 |
Further study
The Physiotherapy Department also offers other Masters by Coursework in other specialist fields and Research Higher Degrees at PhD and Masters level.
Last updated: 12 May 2023