Therapeutic Recreation degree

A student in the Therapeutic Recreation program runs a physical therapy session

Remove barriers and facilitate meaningful experiences to help others

Mindfulness. Creative arts. Nature-based experiences. Fitness. There are many ways to help people enhance their quality of life, foster social connections, support independent living, and have fun too. Recreation therapists are health care providers who address emotional, physical, and social needs – and use leisure, recreation, and play to help people meet their goals, whatever they are.

Through your studies at Waterloo, you’ll gain high-caliber academic and practical experience to prepare you for a career in Therapeutic Recreation. That means learning how to develop formal, evidence-based programming and getting valuable hands-on experience through a required 105-hour practicum placement and a required 560-hour internship.

Throughout your degree, you can pursue the requirements for the academic pathway to certification through the National Council for Therapeutic Recreation Certification. Upon graduation, you’ll also be eligible for registration with Therapeutic Recreation Ontario.

Have your sight set on another professional health program? Therapeutic Recreation can also be your stepping stone to fields like occupational therapy.

What courses will you take in Therapeutic Recreation?

First-year courses

You'll take mostly Recreation and Leisure Studies courses to provide you with strong foundations for your upper-year classes. After first year, about half of the classes you’ll take will be Recreation and Leisure Studies courses.

September to December

January to April

  • REC 151 – Foundations of Therapeutic Recreation Practice
  • HEALTH 150 – Foundations of Human Anatomy and Physiology
    • Three electives

This is a sample schedule. Courses or when a course is offered may change depending on availability.

After first year

About half of the classes you’ll take will be Recreation and Leisure Studies courses. With your remaining classes, you can choose electives from many of the 100 subject areas at Waterloo.

You'll take REC 450, a mandatory 560-hour internship, where you get to practice what you're learning in the real world.

View all the courses required for your degree.

Sample upper-year courses

REC 251 – Therapeutic Recreation: Developmental and Emotional Disabilities
REC 252 – Therapeutic Recreation: Physical Disabilities
REC 253 – Practicum in Therapeutic Recreation
REC 351 – Therapeutic Recreation Facilitation Techniques

Customize your degree

Add areas of expertise to your degree by pursuing areas of focus within the program or by choosing a double major, joint honours, or the Event Management minor. You can add additional areas of interest by including one or more of the minors available to all Waterloo students. Popular choices include Addictions, Mental Health, and Policy; Gerontology; and Social Development Studies.

Remote video URL

Faculty:
Faculty of Health

Degree:
Bachelor of Arts in Therapeutic Recreation

Available as a co-op program?
Yes

Available as a regular program?
Yes

Available as a minor?
No

Build an awesome résumé. Get plenty of hands-on experience through practical courses, volunteer placements, and a required full-time internship in fourth year. Plus, we're the only such program in Ontario to offer multiple co-op terms.

15 electives = lots of choice. With 15 electives from disciplines that can include social work, psychology, and health, you’ll have the flexibility to shape your degree according to your specific interests.

Co-op = relevant paid work experience

Waterloo's co-op program, the largest in North America, is an amazing way to explore potential careers, learn to interview for jobs, graduate with up to two years of valuable experience — and make money!

Sample co-op job titles

  • Recreation therapist
  • Child and youth worker
  • Community recreation facilitator
  • Therapeutic recreation and community assistant
  • Research assistant

Co-op work-study sequence

Starting in second year, you'll normally alternate between school and work every four months, integrating your classroom learning with real-world experience. You can return to the same employer for a couple of work terms to gain greater knowledge and responsibility or work for different employers to get a broad range of experience.

Year September to December (Fall) January to April (Winter) May to August (Spring)
First Study Study Off
Second Study Co-op Study
Third Co-op Study Co-op
Fourth Study Co-op Study
Fifth Co-op Study -

Your first work term will be halfway through second year (January to April 2027).

Learn more about co-op →

What can you do with a degree in Therapeutic Recreation?

As a graduate, you can work with clients in settings ranging from long-term care facilities to local community agencies. You’ll also be eligible to apply for registration with Therapeutic Recreation Ontario and for certification with the National Council for Therapeutic Recreation Certification in the United States.

Recent graduates

  • Vocational instructor — Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences
  • Child life specialist — Hospital for Sick Children
  • Therapy assistant — Mackenzie Innovation Institute
  • Recreation therapist — West Park Healthcare Centre
  • Counsellor — Alzheimer Society of Peel
  • Outreach worker — St. Matthew’s House
  • Communications officer — Carey Outreach Ministries

Graduate stories

Learn about what recent graduates are doing with their degree

Learn more about the future of careers in health and helping professions.

Read profiles and view videos about the path Recreation graduates took to pursue their career.

Further education

While the full range of further education depends on your individual interests, graduates commonly pursue a master's, PhD, or other professional health-care program in occupational therapy, social work, and public health.

Tuition fees for programs in the Faculty of Health

First-year tuition

Type of fees Tuition (8 months of school)
Domestic (Ontario residents) $9,000
Domestic (Out of province students) $9,000
International (visa students) $50,000
     
  • Estimated amounts listed include incidental fees. Fees based on 2024-25 tuition rates.
  • Visit our financing page to learn about scholarships, estimate your total expenses, and see how co-op can help pay for your education.

Common questions about the program

Why do I apply for Recreation and Leisure Studies to study Therapeutic Recreation?

Recreation and Leisure Studies is the entry program - or gateway - to three distinct majors: Recreation, Leadership, and Health; Sport and Recreation Management; and Therapeutic Recreation. You'll apply to Recreation and Leisure Studies and pick Therapeutic Recreation as your major on your application. Once you confirm your Offer of Admission, we'll enroll you in Therapeutic Recreation.

Though each of the majors has a different focus, specialized courses, and unique identity, you'll be a part of the whole Recreation and Leisure Studies community and get to know students outside your major too!

What do recreation therapists actually do?

While this program can lead to a range of careers, many graduates choose to work as recreation therapists. Recreation therapists "use recreation, leisure, and play as treatment modalities to support purposeful and meaningful interventions that are based on individual strengths and values, and are guided by assessments." (Canadian Therapeutic Recreation Association)

What’s the difference between Therapeutic Recreation and similar programs at other universities?

Waterloo’s program includes an overview of the entire recreation and leisure sector and has developed a solid reputation amongst employers. We work with a large network of organizations for our 105-hour practicum and 560-hour internship requirements, and with additional experiential learning opportunities like co-op and our EDGE certificate program, you’ll have a distinct advantage when applying to careers or further studies.

As a Waterloo graduate, you can also be eligible for registration with Therapeutic Recreation Ontario (TRO) and certification with the National Council for Therapeutic Recreation Certification (NCTRC).

What’s the difference between a diploma and a degree in Therapeutic Recreation?

According to the Canadian Therapeutic Recreation Association, "recreation therapists need a bachelor’s degree, usually in a recreation therapy or related field such as recreation and leisure studies with an emphasis or concentration in recreational therapy/therapeutic recreation. The bachelor’s degree program usually includes the following programs along with an internship: assessment, foundations, interventions, human anatomy, psychology, and courses on specific demographics."

How long does it take to complete this program?

  • It takes four years to complete this program as a full-time student through the regular system of study in which you’ll take courses between September and April each year and have your summers off.
  • You can also choose the co-op system of study where you’ll alternate between full-time studies and full-time jobs relating to your program. A co-op program takes five years to complete — and you’ll graduate with nearly two years of paid work experience.
  • It could also be completed over a longer period as a part-time program.

Is this program available online?

No. While you may be able to take some courses online, most courses required for the degree are available through in-person classes only.

Admission requirements

Ontario students: six Grade 12 U and/or M courses including

  • Any Grade 12 U English (minimum final grade of 70% is required)

Admission average: Low 80s (co-op and regular)

Not studying in Ontario? Search our admission requirements for Recreation and Leisure Studies (RLS). You'll apply to RLS for the Therapeutic Recreation major.

How to apply

You'll apply to Recreation and Leisure Studies and choose Therapeutic Recreation as your major.

If you're admitted to the program, your Offer of Admission will be to Recreation and Leisure Studies. Once you accept your offer, you’ll be enrolled in Therapeutic Recreation and start that major in September.

Sign up for insider advice that can help you now and in the future.

Topics include how to choose a program, what it's like to be a Waterloo student, the differences between high school and university, and more.

Connect with a current student ambassador to learn about their experience in the program.

Ask them questions such as why they chose Therapeutic Recreation, what the classes are like, and how you can get involved on campus.

Connect with us

vivienne hang

Questions about courses, programs, requirements, or careers?

Please contact Vivienne Hang, our Faculty of Health recruitment co-ordinator who can answer any questions you have.

You can also learn more about Therapeutic Recreation by viewing our digital program brochure.

From the Missing Manual

Visit our Missing Manual website for tips and advice from Waterloo students and staff. Topics include

Two Waterloo students talking in the Recreation and Leisure Studies lounge

Powerful work terms in Therapeutic Recreation

Through a powerful work term at an important Canadian community organization, a Therapeutic Recreation student greatly improved her communication skills.

Students stretching with exercise balls

How to become a recreation therapist

If you’re interested in a health care or human service profession — and you’d like to improve the functioning and quality of life for others through recreation, leisure, and play — recreation therapy could be for you.

Student smiling

Therapeutic Recreation: Making fun more accessible

How do you get the most out of life? Well, that depends. Our ideas about recreation or leisure are personal, but what if there were some things that you didn’t have access to?