Occupational Therapy Assistant · New York

Occupational Therapy Assistant colleges in New York

Occupational Therapy Assistant program coverage in New York is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.

Occupational therapy assistants carry out therapy plans set by a supervising therapist, helping patients regain everyday skills, a hands-on patient-care path without the graduate degree.

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What you'll study in a Occupational Therapy Assistant program

  • Functional anatomy, kinesiology, and human development across the lifespan
  • Occupational therapy principles and practice under therapist supervision
  • Leading therapeutic, skill-building, and motivational patient activities
  • Activity analysis and adaptation of daily-living tasks
  • Therapeutic intervention techniques and treatment-plan implementation
  • Splinting, orthotic, and adaptive-equipment fabrication
  • Patient and family education and engagement methods
  • Clinical record-keeping, documentation, and professional ethics
  • Supervised clinical fieldwork across rehabilitation settings

Where a Occupational Therapy Assistant degree can lead

  • Occupational Therapy Assistant
  • Rehabilitation Aide
  • Pediatric Occupational Therapy Assistant
  • Geriatric Occupational Therapy Assistant
  • Hand Therapy Assistant
  • School-Based Occupational Therapy Assistant

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 occupational therapy assistants median $68,340).

Occupational therapy assistants are the practitioners who deliver day-to-day therapy at the bedside, in the gym, or at the kitchen table, working under the direction of a licensed occupational therapist. Where the supervising therapist evaluates a patient and writes the plan, the assistant carries it out: guiding people through skill-building, learning, and motivational activities that help them regain the ability to dress, cook, write, work, or play after injury, illness, or disability. Students learn how the body and mind support purposeful activity across the human lifespan, then study how to lead therapeutic tasks, adapt an activity or tool so a patient can succeed, teach patients and families, watch for and report changes in progress, and keep accurate treatment records. The coursework blends functional anatomy and human development with therapeutic activity, splinting and adaptive-equipment fabrication, and the documentation and ethics that govern care delivered under supervision. This is distinct from the occupational therapy degree itself, which is a graduate credential that qualifies someone to evaluate patients and design the plan of care, and it is more clinically trained than a rehabilitation aide, who handles setup and support tasks rather than directing patient participation in treatment.

In the United States this is an associate-degree path rather than a graduate one, which is part of its appeal for students who want patient contact sooner. Programs pair classroom science with hands-on labs, where students rehearse therapeutic activities and build adaptive equipment, and with supervised fieldwork placements that put them in real clinical settings before they finish. States generally regulate the occupational therapy assistant role, which usually means earning a national credential by examination and then obtaining a state license or certification before treating patients; programmatic accreditation and licensure rules vary by state and should be verified for any specific program and the place you intend to work. Graduates work in skilled nursing and long-term care facilities, hospitals and rehabilitation units, outpatient and pediatric clinics, school systems, mental-health programs, and home health, and many concentrate over time in areas such as pediatric, geriatric, hand-therapy, or school-based practice.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of occupational therapy assistants, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $68,340 and projects employment to grow about 19.2% from 2024 to 2034; an associate's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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