Dernières mises à jour en lien avec la COVID-19 disponibles ici.
Latest information about COVID-19 available here.
Note: This is the 2021–2022 eCalendar. Update the year in your browser's URL bar for the most recent version of this page, or .
History of the School of Physical and Occupational Therapy
In response to the marked need for rehabilitation specialists in Canada at the time of the Second World War, the School of Physiotherapy was started at ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ in 1943. It was the first Canadian school to be under the aegis of a Faculty of Medicine. Initially the School offered a two-year program in physiotherapy plus internship, upgraded to a three-year program in 1947.
In 1950, Occupational Therapy was introduced in a three-year combined Physical and Occupational Therapy diploma program, followed by two months of internship in each profession. The School was given its present name the following year. In 1954, ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ introduced Canada's first B.Sc. program in Physical and Occupational Therapy, together with separate diploma programs in Physical Therapy and in Occupational Therapy.
Due to the advancement of science and technology and to the increasing emphasis on health care needs in society, the programs have evolved, integrating a greater academic and scientific base over the ensuing decades. Thus the diploma programs were phased out, allowing for the creation of the B.Sc. degree in Physical Therapy in 1969, and the B.Sc. degree in Occupational Therapy in 1971.
At the graduate level, an M.Sc.A. program in Health Science (Rehabilitation) was initiated in 1972 and formally approved in 1976. To provide the foundation for the development of a doctorate degree, it was changed from an (Applied) to a thesis degree in 1982. The School now offers two non-professional M.Sc. programs (thesis and non-thesis) in Rehabilitation Science and, since 1988, a Ph.D. program in Rehabilitation Science, the first of its kind in Canada. In addition, an online graduate certificate program in driving rehabilitation was created in 2006 followed by a second online graduate certificate in chronic pain management in 2012 to provide specialized and in-depth knowledge and training in these respective fields to the clinical community. Also at the graduate level, as of 2008, the School offers Master-level degrees for entry into professional practice. Students can complete the ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ B.Sc. (Rehabilitation Science) Major in Occupational Therapy or Major in Physical Therapy and then proceed to the entry-level professional Master's in the same discipline, or can enter the Master's program through a preparatory year referred to as a Qualifying year.