Recreational Therapy · Illinois
Recreational Therapy colleges in Illinois
Recreational Therapy program coverage in Illinois is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.
Recreational therapy trains you to prescribe leisure, arts, adaptive sports, and outdoor activities as clinical treatment that restores function for people with illness, injury, or disability.
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What you'll study in a Recreational Therapy program
- Foundations and history of therapeutic recreation as a clinical service
- Anatomy, physiology, and medical terminology for clinical practice
- Client assessment, treatment planning, and progress documentation
- Leisure education and therapeutic recreation counseling techniques
- Activity and program design adapted for special needs populations
- Therapeutic modalities including adaptive sports, arts, and animal-assisted programs
- Abnormal psychology and human growth and development across the lifespan
- Professional standards, ethics, and preparation for national certification
- Supervised clinical internship in a healthcare or community setting
Where a Recreational Therapy degree can lead
- Recreational Therapist
- Therapeutic Recreation Specialist
- Activity Director
- Rehabilitation Specialist
- Geriatric Recreation Therapist
- Adaptive Sports Coordinator
Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 recreational therapists median $60,280).
Recreational therapy, also called therapeutic recreation, teaches you to use purposeful play, movement, and leisure as a clinical tool rather than simple entertainment. Students learn how activities such as adaptive sports, art, music, games, animal-assisted programs, and community outings can be prescribed to rebuild physical strength, cognition, social skills, and emotional health. The coursework blends a clinical science base in anatomy, physiology, psychology, medical terminology, and human growth and development with applied skills in leisure education and counseling, activity and program planning, and the use of therapeutic recreation modalities. A core focus is assessing each client, setting measurable goals, choosing the right activity to meet a documented need, and observing and evaluating progress for special needs and clinical populations, all within professional standards and ethics. This sets the major apart from general recreation or sports management, which prepare you to run programs and facilities for the public, and from occupational therapy, which is a separate graduate-level health profession with its own licensure and scope.
A recreational therapist typically enters the field with a bachelor's degree built around supervised clinical training, and most programs require a substantial full-time internship, often a capstone field placement, in a healthcare or community setting before graduation. Practitioners commonly earn a national professional certification by qualifying through an approved degree and passing a certification exam; some states and employers also require licensure or registration, and program accreditation and any state credentialing requirements should be verified before enrolling. Graduates practice in places such as inpatient and outpatient rehabilitation centers, psychiatric and behavioral health facilities, hospitals, skilled nursing and long-term care, programs for veterans, schools and adaptive sports organizations, parks and community programs, and substance-use treatment settings, frequently working alongside physicians, nurses, physical and occupational therapists, and social workers as part of a treatment team.
In federal data for the closely related occupation of recreational therapists, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $60,280 and projects employment to grow about 3.3% from 2024 to 2034; a bachelor'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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