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Occupational therapy

Occupational therapy is a rewarding profession for those who would like to work with people and enhance the quality of life of others. Occupational therapists work with people of all ages and from all walks of life, who may be experiencing some form of loss of participation in everyday activities, leisure activities or work. Participation may be impeded by physical, mental, social or environmental situations.

Watch these short films about occuaptional therapy

Watch these short films about occupational therapy, and find out how occupational therapists make a real difference to people's lives.

The profession

Occupational therapists work with individuals and their families to identify where change is needed. The individual might not be able to feed or dress himself independently if he can only use one hand following a stroke, or they may be too depressed to get out of bed to go to work. Occupational therapists try to discover what the impediments are, and how the person might be able to resolve them practically.

This often involves demonstrating new techniques that allow the individual to undertake everyday activities independently again. Alternatively, occupational therapists might introduce new activities, such as cooking or pottery, for the individual to find enjoyment or improve their self-confidence.

Occupational therapists believe that humans are creative beings who thrive when engaged in a balanced range of enjoyable activities. We seek to understand peoples' motivations and needs and try to match activities to a person's existing skills.

'Activity analysis' exposes that although the things people do may seem deceptively simple, human occupations are actually incredibly complicated. Occupational therapy is the study of what people do, how they do things, the effect these activities have on human health, and the reasons why people choose to do what they do (the meaning behind the doing).

Occupational therapists work in an ever-widening range of mental health and physical disability settings including acute hospitals, long-term rehabilitation, social care, local communities, schools, factories, residential homes, institutions for older or more profoundly disabled people, voluntary organisations and prisons.

The programmes

Our school has occupational therapy educational programmes at several levels.

Two courses prepare people for occupational therapy practice:

We also offer the following post-registration programmes:

Educational philosophy - problem-based learning

Our educational philosophy mirrors the philosophy of occupational therapy. We believe that an individual's positive engagement in (learning) activity leads to advanced productivity, increased perception of self worth, improved quality of life and enjoyment (of the course).

Our occupational therapy courses use Problem-based learning (PBL), a technique recommended by authorities around the world. All subjects covered are integrated around problem-solving within a real life situation. We find that learning in this way significantly increases our student's engagement with the subjects.

Find out more about our educational philosophy and PBL

Excellence in teaching and learning is the prime concern for the occupational therapy course team. Sessions are designed deliberately to stimulate deep approaches to learning, associated with optimal human experience and personal growth. Our Health through Occupation MSc course and part-time Occupational Therapy BSc(Hons) course are fully problem-based, which encourages reflection both clinically and academically, activating theory/practice integration. Problem-based learning (PBL) is considered to be the most educationally sound learning process, recommended by major authorities around the world. Sessions are held in small-groups, they are interactive, integrated, self-directed, and focus on problem-solving, using real-life situations as the focus of learning. The use of PBL is considered crucial to students' fast attainment of master's level standards, and for critical evaluation.

Other learning experiences are arranged according to the need of the problem; these may be lectures, practical sessions, skills classes, debates or seminars. Most importantly, all subjects are integrated around the problems.

Our postgraduate programmes are taught by a wide variety of methods - small active learning groups, seminars, action learning sets, PBL, lectures, self-directed literature searches.

The School of Health Professions offers an exciting and dynamic learning environment, with dedicated staff who have a wealth of experience in their field.

 

Occupational therapy