The Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy: A Centennial Lesson

The Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy (P.S.O.T.) was one of five founding occupational therapy academic programs in the United States. The program was led by two powerful occupational therapists, Helen S. Willard and Clare S. Spackman, for nearly a half century. After 60 years, P.S.O.T. wa...

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Main Authors: Christine O. Peters, Peggy M. Martin, Wanda J. Mahoney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Eastern Kentucky University 2017-01-01
Series:Journal of Occupational Therapy Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26681/jote.2017.010108
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spelling doaj-1767b7ac75f5489bb48c800aa0c16a8e2020-11-24T22:18:41ZengEastern Kentucky UniversityJournal of Occupational Therapy Education2573-13782017-01-011110.26681/jote.2017.010108The Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy: A Centennial LessonChristine O. Peters0Peggy M. Martin1Wanda J. Mahoney2University of Southern CaliforniaUniversity of MinnesotaMidwestern University - Downers GroveThe Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy (P.S.O.T.) was one of five founding occupational therapy academic programs in the United States. The program was led by two powerful occupational therapists, Helen S. Willard and Clare S. Spackman, for nearly a half century. After 60 years, P.S.O.T. was closed. This article provides a historical overview of the progression of occupational therapy education in the United States over the last century, using the story of P.S.O.T as a case study. The historical legacy and lesson from P.S.O.T. is that excellence in today’s academy may not mean security. Historically relevant today, the interaction between education and societal demands is explored, starting from the founders of the National Society for the Promotion of Occupational Therapy in 1917, through the World Wars, and casting forward. Curricular expansion, the addition of accreditation requirements, financial concerns, and faculty research requirements are presented as influential to the history of occupational therapy education. Lessons for current occupational therapy educational programs are discussed.https://doi.org/10.26681/jote.2017.010108Occupational therapy education historyuniversity historymedical education history
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christine O. Peters
Peggy M. Martin
Wanda J. Mahoney
spellingShingle Christine O. Peters
Peggy M. Martin
Wanda J. Mahoney
The Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy: A Centennial Lesson
Journal of Occupational Therapy Education
Occupational therapy education history
university history
medical education history
author_facet Christine O. Peters
Peggy M. Martin
Wanda J. Mahoney
author_sort Christine O. Peters
title The Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy: A Centennial Lesson
title_short The Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy: A Centennial Lesson
title_full The Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy: A Centennial Lesson
title_fullStr The Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy: A Centennial Lesson
title_full_unstemmed The Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy: A Centennial Lesson
title_sort philadelphia school of occupational therapy: a centennial lesson
publisher Eastern Kentucky University
series Journal of Occupational Therapy Education
issn 2573-1378
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy (P.S.O.T.) was one of five founding occupational therapy academic programs in the United States. The program was led by two powerful occupational therapists, Helen S. Willard and Clare S. Spackman, for nearly a half century. After 60 years, P.S.O.T. was closed. This article provides a historical overview of the progression of occupational therapy education in the United States over the last century, using the story of P.S.O.T as a case study. The historical legacy and lesson from P.S.O.T. is that excellence in today’s academy may not mean security. Historically relevant today, the interaction between education and societal demands is explored, starting from the founders of the National Society for the Promotion of Occupational Therapy in 1917, through the World Wars, and casting forward. Curricular expansion, the addition of accreditation requirements, financial concerns, and faculty research requirements are presented as influential to the history of occupational therapy education. Lessons for current occupational therapy educational programs are discussed.
topic Occupational therapy education history
university history
medical education history
url https://doi.org/10.26681/jote.2017.010108
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