Bellarmine University’s new Master of Science in Athletic Training (MSAT) is now fully accredited by the Commission on the Accreditation of Athletic
Training Education (CAATE). Accreditation is required in order for graduates of the
program to sit for the credentialing examination for athletic trainers and to be
eligible for licensure in most states. Bellarmine added the MSAT, which is housed
in the School of Movement and Rehabilitation Sciences in the College of Health Professions, in 2017 after CAATE announced that the entry-level
degree for athletic trainers would transition to the master’s by 2022. Bellarmine
is one of five universities in Kentucky offering the master’s program and one of only
two that is accredited and in good standing. Bellarmine’s first
cohort graduated earlier this year. “We have also secured affiliation agreements
with the University of Louisville and Louisville City FC,” said Dr. Myra Stockdale,
associate professor, chair and director of the MSAT program. “These will be great
opportunities for our
students.” MSAT students must complete a clinical rotation. The university’s 5,500-square-foot
Bradford T. Ray Sports Performance Center,
where Bellarmine’s four athletic trainers work with athletes from the school’s 22
collegiate sports, provides one venue. Bellarmine MSAT students have also worked in
Jefferson County Public Schools and private high schools in the area,
as well as in non-athletic settings such as Norton Healthcare hospitals. “We have
received some terrific feedback from preceptors about the level of skills our students
bring to their respective clinical sites,” Stockdale said. Athletic trainers collaborate
with physicians to provide emergency care and rehabilitation for athletes across the
spectrum -- from youth leagues to professional sports to “weekend warriors” -- and
work with athletes on conditioning to help
prevent injuries. Trainers also work in industrial settings and with the U.S. military,
particularly in conjunction with basic training. Athletic training is a rapidly growing
field. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 13,100 trainers were employed
nationally in 2004; by 2016, the number had grown to 27,800. The Bureau predicts the
employment of athletic trainers will grow
23 percent over the next decade, much faster than the average for other professions. In
addition to offering the traditional two-year postgraduate program, Bellarmine offers
undergraduates majoring in exercise science/sport performance early admission, allowing
them to complete both a bachelor’s degree and the MSAT in five years. Article by Carla Carlton, Director of Development Communications in Bellarmine's Office
of Enrollment, Marketing and Communication
Bellarmine News
Master of Science in Athletic Training receives full accreditation
September 27, 2019
