Certificate Programs

Equine Therapeutics Certificate Questionnaire

The goal of this questionnaire is to determine your specific interests and experiences coming into the Equine Therapeutics Certificate program.Share your interest >

Blue Hens gain hands-on experience in equine therapeutics: youtube.com/watch?v=g4BvvWiukBQ

Equine therapeutics certificate



The University of Delaware is proud to offer an Equine Therapeutics Certificate. UD's Equine Therapeutics Certificate provides students with the education and experience to become Certified Therapeutic Riding Instructors (CTRI) and/or Equine Specialists in Mental Health and Learning (ES). Upon completion of the program, students will have the tools and background to fulfill all CTRI and/or ES application requirements by meeting and even exceeding job and industry standards as delineated by PATH Intl.

Course highlights

The CTRI internship enables students to complete the required hours of teaching therapeutic riding lessons under the supervision of a PATH Intl. CTRI. The internship can be done completed with a PATH-Intl member or partner like Southern Delaware Therapeutic Riding. Students can take this for credit or not; the hours needed will vary based on past experience.
The CTRI practicum offers students the opportunity to explore teaching and communication in a therapeutic lesson setting and accrue volunteer hours if needed. Volunteer hours can be completed with a PATH-Intl member or partner like Southern Delaware Therapeutic Riding.
Students apply the principles of nutrition, health care, behavior, reproduction, and farm management to the discipline of horse management.
The ES practicum includes opportunites to complete required volunteer hours, participate in a PATH Intl. ESMHL workshop, and take the ES Horsemanship Skills Test.
The course focuses on people with developmental disabilities in the context of their family and culture from a multidisciplinary perspective. Professors cover disabilities and their causes; changing needs across the lifespan, gender, cross-cultural and legal issues; and information about prevention and intervention, employment, inclusion, and empowerment.
Introduction to Equine Therapeutics offers students of all disciplines an experiential and academic opportunity to explore the growing field of Equine Assisted Services (EAS). The course focuses on the benefits of and best practices for providing EAS to individuals with special needs including physical, cognitive, and emotional challenges. Students meet once a week at UD for the classroom component of the course and once a week at Carousel Park and Equestrian Center to apply what they have learned to hands-on experiences with horses.
Students receive an overview of equine science which focuses on the unique equine biology, function and husbandry of the horse.
Students study the basis for special education and physical and psychological characteristics of exceptional children. Professors discuss past and emerging educational practices for exceptional children with emphasis on teaching commonalities.
Students example characteristics of exceptional adolescents and the historical, legal and philosophical bases for special education. You will learn to teach students with special needs within general education settings using research-based instructional strategies, classroom management, and related services.
Elyssa Doner

Instructor, Department of Animal and Food Sciences
 

Health, Physical Activity, and Disability

Students study and implement individualized physical activities for people with various disabilities in a variety of settings that promote health and wellness.