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Essential Functions & Technical Standards of Physical Therapy Education

The American Physical Therapy Association (APTA) and the American Council of Academic Physical Therapy (ACAPT) do not have set criteria but rather allow programs to define essential functions and technical standards to determine success within individual programs.

Harrisburg University of Science and Technology (HU) is open to all academically qualified candidates regardless of race, gender identity, sexual orientation, national origin, age, disability, or genetic disposition. The HU Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) Program intentionally developed the curriculum with Justice/Equity/Diversity/Inclusion (JEDI) in mind. Having candidates from various backgrounds and lived experiences requires intentionality to universal design principles to ensure multi-modal delivery for all students.

Observation Ability:

The learner must have the ability to observe a patient at a distance and up close. Observation requires a combination of vision and somatic sense functions and may necessitate the sense of smell.

Communication Ability:

The learner must have functional hearing to actively listen to patients’ past medical history and present complaints. Communication requires the ability to identify both verbal and non-verbal cues to qualify a patient’s mood, activity, and posture. The learner must demonstrate the ability to communicate sensitively, effectively, and efficiently in all forms (oral, written, and non-verbal) with patients and all members of the healthcare team.

Motor Ability:

The learner must be able to perform gross and fine motor movements competently to complete a physical examination using a variety of physical examination techniques. The learner must develop sufficient psychomotor skills necessary to perform physical therapy interventions, which includes the management and operation of therapeutic healthcare equipment in the general practice of a physical therapist. Gross and fine motor movements and psychomotor skills must be performed in a coordinated manner, without a loss of equilibrium. The learner must demonstrate physical and mental stamina to meet the demands associated with extended periods of sitting, standing, moving, lifting, and physical exertion required for patient care and classroom/laboratory settings.

Intellectual, Conceptual, Integrative, and Quantitative Abilities:

The learner must be able to develop and refine problem solving and reasoning skills required as a physical therapist. This includes gathering data, calculation, analysis, and synthesizing information for practical application and patient-focused care. The learner must demonstrate the ability to comprehend spatial relationships and applied physics in a three-dimensional space. The learner must have the ability to comprehend and integrate evidence from the literature to cognitively make decisions and reflect metacognitively on decisions to adapt and collaborate with patients and colleagues.

Behavioral and Social Attributes:

Flexibility, compassion, integrity, motivation, effective interpersonal skills, and a genuine concern for others are attributes required of the physical therapist. The learner must possess the emotional health and stability required for full utilization of intellectual abilities, the exercise of good judgment, timely completion of all responsibilities related to patient/client management, and development of mature, sensitive, and effective relationships with patients, support members, and other members of the healthcare team. Emotional health and stability optimize the learner’s ability to tolerate physically tiring loads and still perform under stress, demonstrate adaptability through uncertainty or changing environments, accept critical feedback to improve performance, and handle difficult interpersonal situations or conversations.

The essential abilities required to successfully complete the curriculum are in the following areas: observation, communication, motor, intellectual, conceptual, integrative, and quantitative abilities, and the behavioral and social attributes of a practicing physical therapist.

These abilities are mandatory for admission to, retention in, and completion of the HU DPT program. The program is committed to providing accommodations to qualified learners with disabilities in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. However, the program is unable to make accommodations that present a threat, compromise the safety or learning of others, or fundamentally alter the nature of the academic or clinical curriculum.

The HU DPT program requires mastery of all didactic knowledge and demonstration of entry-level competence with all clinical skills for successful completion of the program. Academic standards differ from essential functions or “technical standards,” which refer to the physical, cognitive, and behavioral abilities required to successfully complete all aspects of the curriculum and develop the skills and professional attributes of all students upon graduation.

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* Notice of Accreditation Status

Graduation from a physical therapist education program accredited by the Commission on Accreditation in Physical Therapy Education (CAPTE), 3030 Potomac Ave., Suite 100, Alexandria, Virginia 22305-3085; phone; 703-706-3245; accreditation@apta.org is necessary for eligibility to sit for the licensure examination, which is required in all states.

Candidacy is considered to be an accredited status, as such the credits and degree earned from a program with Candidacy status are considered, by CAPTE, to be from an accredited program. Therefore, students in the charter (first) class should be eligible to take the licensure exam even if CAPTE withholds accreditation at the end of the candidacy period. That said, it is up to each state licensing agency, not CAPTE, to determine who is eligible for licensure. Information on licensing requirements should be directed to the Federation of State Boards of Physical Therapy (FSBPT;www.fsbpt.org) or specific state boards (a list of state boards and contact information is available on FSBPT’s website.

Effective October 29, 2025, the Harrisburg University of Science and Technology DPT Program has been granted Candidate for Accreditation status by the Commission on Accreditation in Physical Therapy Education (3030 Potomac Ave., Suite 100, Alexandria, Virginia 22305-3085; phone: 703-706-3245; email: accreditation@apta.org). If needing to contact the program/institution directly, please call Tonya Y Miller PT, DPT, PhD (717-901-5100 ext. 1630) or email tmiller2@HarrisburgU.edu. Candidate for Accreditation is an accreditation status of affiliation with the Commission on Accreditation in Physical Therapy Education that indicates the program may matriculate students in technical/professional courses. Achievement of Candidate for Accreditation status does not assure that the program will be granted Initial Accreditation.