Radiation Therapy · Massachusetts

Radiation Therapy colleges in Massachusetts

Radiation Therapy program coverage in Massachusetts is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.

Radiation Therapy trains you to deliver prescribed radiation treatments to cancer patients, operate the treatment machines, and support people through a course of care.

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What you'll study in a Radiation Therapy program

  • Operation of linear accelerators and radiation treatment equipment
  • Patient positioning, immobilization, and daily treatment setup verification
  • Radiation oncology procedures, techniques, and treatment delivery
  • Oncologic pathology and the staging and behavior of tumors
  • Radiation biology and the effects of radiation on healthy and tumor tissue
  • Radiation dosimetry, treatment planning, and tumor localization
  • Radiation safety, protection, and quality assurance in the treatment suite
  • Patient assessment, side-effect management, and communication during a course of care
  • Supervised clinical rotations in a radiation oncology department

Where a Radiation Therapy degree can lead

  • Radiation Therapist
  • Medical Dosimetrist
  • Radiation Oncology Clinical Specialist
  • Treatment Planning Technologist
  • Radiologic Technologist
  • Radiation Therapy Clinical Educator

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 radiation therapists median $101,990).

Radiation Therapy is a hands-on health-science field focused on delivering the precise courses of radiation that oncologists prescribe to treat cancer and certain other conditions. Students learn to operate linear accelerators and related treatment equipment, position and immobilize patients so the beam targets the tumor while sparing healthy tissue, and verify each setup against the treatment plan from one session to the next. The coursework blends applied anatomy and physiology with oncologic pathology, radiation biology, and radiation physics, alongside radiation oncology procedures and techniques, treatment planning, tumor localization, radiation dosimetry, and the patient communication and record-keeping that hold a multi-week treatment together. Where a radiologic technologist captures diagnostic images to help find disease, this field focuses on the therapeutic side, delivering measured doses of radiation to treat a diagnosed cancer over a planned series of sessions.

Radiation therapy programs are commonly offered at the associate or bachelor's level, and they pair classroom and laboratory science with extensive supervised clinical rotations in real radiation oncology departments, where students practice setup, treatment delivery, and patient management on actual cases under supervision. Completing a program may require finishing a set number of clinical competencies and passing a national certification examination, and many states require a license or permit to operate radiation-producing equipment, so prospective students should confirm program accreditation and their state's rules. Graduates typically work in hospital radiation oncology departments, cancer centers, and outpatient treatment clinics, with some moving over time into roles such as dosimetry, treatment planning, or clinical education. A program is preparation, not a guaranteed job, and pay and demand vary by employer, region, and experience.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of radiation therapists, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $101,990 and projects employment to grow about 1.9% 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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