“…Literature has instead explored mechanisms of teaching such as utilising models of practice (Ashby & Chandler, 2010;Towns & Ashby, 2014); the means by which occupation and occupation-centred approaches can be introduced into curriculum (Hooper et al, 2015;Krishnagiri, Hooper, Price, Taff & Bilics, 2017;Pierce, 1999) and how teaching an occupational perspective can enhance specific areas of practice such as work rehabilitation (Burwash, 1999). Increasingly research papers, commentaries and viewpoints which consider occupation in curriculum design and as a threshold concept have featured in the Australian literature or been written by Australian academics (Fortune & Kennedy-Jones, 2014;Rodger, Turpin & O'Brien, 2015;Tanner, 2011). A 2016 study found that occupational therapy graduates lacked confidence, and in some cases, were unwilling to implement occupation-based approaches in practice (Di Tommaso, Isbel, Scarvell & Wicks, 2016).…”