2024 - 2025 Graduate Catalog
Department of Occupational Therapy
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Return to: College of Health Sciences
Laura J Carpenter, OTR/L, Ph.D., Department Chair
Office: 440 Health Sciences Building
(615) 963-2152
lcarpen3@tnstate.edu
Major: Occupational Therapy (OCCT)
Degree: Master of Occupational Therapy (MOT)
Occupational therapy is the only profession that helps people across the lifespan to do the things they want and need to do through the therapeutic use of daily activities (occupations). Occupational therapy practitioners enable people of all ages to live life to its fullest by helping them promote health, and prevent or live better with injury, illness, or disability.
Common occupational therapy interventions include helping children with disabilities to participate fully in school and social situations, helping people recovering from an injury to regain skills, and providing supports for older adults experiencing physical and cognitive changes. Occupational therapy services typically include:
• individualized evaluation, during which the client/family and occupational therapist determine the person’s goals,
• customized intervention to improve the person’s ability to perform daily activities and reach the goals, and
• outcomes evaluation to ensure that the goals are being met and/or make changes to the intervention plan.
Occupational therapy practitioners have a holistic perspective, in which the focus is on adapting the environment and/or task to fit the person, and the person is an integral part of the therapy team. It is an evidence-based practice deeply rooted in science. More information is available on the American Occupational Therapy Association, Inc. (AOTA) website.
About Occupational Therapy Practitioners
Occupational Therapy practitioners are skilled healthcare providers whose education consists of didactic coursework related to human growth and development with specific emphasis on the social, emotional, and physiological effects of illness and injury. Interactive lab experiences in the classroom followed by fieldwork experiences in clinical environments reinforce the didactic coursework.
Currently, the occupational therapist enters the field with a master or doctoral degree. According to the American Occupational Therapy Association, Inc. (AOTA), OT practitioners work in a variety of areas including productive aging, rehabilitation and disability, children and youth, work and industry, and health and wellness. For more information about a career in Occupational Therapy, please refer to the AOTA’s website.
Upon completion of all requirements, students will be eligible to sit for the national certification examination offered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy (NBCOT). After successful completion of this examination, the individual will be an Occupational Therapist, Registered (OTR) and will meet the educational requirements for States licensure in the United States.
The Master of Occupational Therapy Program at Tennessee State University is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE) of the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) located at 7501 Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 510E, Bethesda, MD 20814. ACOTE’s telephone number, c/o AOTA, is (301) 652-AOTA, and its web address is www.acoteonline.org.
Graduate Faculty
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