Occupational Therapy Assistant (A.S.)
The Associate of Science in Occupational Therapy Assistant (OTA) Program at Middle Georgia State University requires a minimum of two years of study. Occupational Therapy Assistant courses are offered sequentially beginning in the Fall semester. Students must complete BIOL 1114K (Anatomy and Physiology I) and an additional 8 credit hours of the required core courses prior to acceptance into the OTA Program.
The Occupational Therapy Assistant Program prepares graduates to provide entry-level OT services under the supervision of an occupational therapist. These services include the use of occupation based activities to develop, maintain, or restore function for individuals whose daily occupations are impaired due to physical or psychosocial disabilities, developmental deficits, the aging process, poverty, or sociocultural differences.
The Occupational Therapy Assistant Program at Middle Georgia State University received initial accreditation in December 1996 from the Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE) of the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA), located at 4720 Montgomery Lane, Suite 200, Bethesda, MD 20814-3440. The program was most recently re-accredited for a 10 year period in April 2012. Graduates of the program will receive an Associate of Science degree in Occupational Therapy Assistant and are eligible to take the national certification examination for the Occupational Therapy Assistant, administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy (NBCOT), 800 S. Frederick Avenue, Suite 200, Gaithersburg, MD 20877-4150, (301) 990-7979. After successful completion of this exam, the individual will be a Certified Occupational Therapy Assistant (COTA). In addition, most states require COTAs to obtain a license in order to practice occupational therapy. However, the ability to receive a state license in Georgia is based on passing the NBCOT certification examination. PLEASE NOTE: A misdemeanor or felony conviction may affect a student's ability to complete the required fieldwork portions of the program and may affect a graduate's ability to sit for the NBCOT certification exam or attain state licensure. The OTA Program strongly recommends all candidates to the OTA Program contact NBCOT and complete the Early Determination process if they have ever been convicted of a felony to determine the ability to take the national certification exam prior to applying to the program. Contact NBCOT at (301) 990-7979 and the Georgia State Board of Occupational Therapy at (478) 207-2440 for more information.
OTA Program costs, in addition to regular MGA fees, include: (approximate - subject to change):
- Student Uniforms and Accessories (2 years) $ 150.00
- Textbooks - OTA Courses (2 years) $1,300.00
- Fieldwork Travel and Lodging up to $1,500.00
- Field Trip Travel up to $ 300.00
- Criminal Background Check up to $ 150.00 yearly
- Professional Liability Insurance $ 16.00 yearly
Drug Screen – approximately $45
- AOTA membership $ 90.00 yearly
- American Heart Association CPR certification up to $ 90.00
- Pinning ceremony expenses up to $ 50.00 in final year
- Lab fees associated with OTA courses with labs - vary according to semester
- Physical - $45.00
TB Test – approximately $30
- Immunizations - $710 max (if no immunizations prior to enrollment)
- Specific OTA supplies and/or equipment - $60.00
- Software - $10.00
- Certification Exam after graduation - $550.00
Some students may be required to complete additional drug screens or other tests as required by their fieldwork sites and will be responsible for any associated fees.
Admission Requirements for Occupational Therapy Assistant (OTA)
The OTA admission process is separate from the university admission process and is handled through the Department of Rehabilitation Science. Students must be accepted to the university before they are eligible to apply to the OTA Program. The OTA program has a maximum enrollment of 30 students per cohort, therefore admission to the program is competitive and not all applicants will be accepted. The most current criteria for admission to the OTA program can be found at the OTA home page at https://www.mga.edu/health-sciences/occupational-therapy/. The application for the OTA program is an online only application and can be found at https://www.mga.edu/health-sciences/occupational-therapy/application.php. Applications and all required documents must be received by May 15th of the calendar year for which the student is applying.
Specific OTA admission requirements include:
- Confirmed acceptance to Middle Georgia State University.
- Completion of any required university placement tests and learning support courses.
- Completion of BIOL 1114K (Anatomy and Physiology I) and an addition 8 credit hours of the required core courses with a minimum cumulative GPA of 2.75. Students must earn a letter grade of "C" or better in all required courses. Students with Academic Renewal must complete at least 12 semester hours before the AR-GPA is considered.
- Essential Competencies Policy: The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) ensures the qualified applicant with a disability has the opportunity to pursue program admission at public institutions. To determine whether an individual is a qualified applicant for programs or services, the ADA states that applicants must meet essential competency requirements. A list of essential competencies and explanations is available at the OTA home page at https://www.mga.edu/health-sciences/occupational-therapy/. Essential competencies include critical thinking, communication, interpersonal skills, mobility, visual, hearing, and tactile abilities. The ability to observe, collect data and treat a patient independently, while ensuring patient safety at all times is an expectation of the OTA Program at Middle Georgia State University for all students.
- Accommodations: All students will be held to the same standards and must be able to perform the essential competencies of the OTA Program with or without reasonable accommodation. The OTA program at MGA is unable to make accommodations that impose an undue burden, present a threat to the health or safety of the student or others, or fundamentally alters the nature of the curriculum including didactic components, laboratory sessions, and clinical affiliations. Questions about the accommodation process may be directed to the Coordinator of Disability Services at (478) 934-3023.
- A student who has had two unsuccessful attempts in any health science program will be ineligible for admission to the OTA program.
- All applicants not selected in a given year must reapply to be considered for future cohorts.
- Once accepted to the OTA program, the student must meet, and keep current, the following requirements:
- Certification in American Heart Association CPR, which shall not expire during any month the student is actively enrolled in OTA courses.
- Professional student liability insurance coverage in the amount of $1M single/$3M aggregate (offered through MGA)
- Health Insurance (available through MGA)
- Annual health evaluation, including immunizations, Hepatitis series and yearly TB testing as specified by the program and /or fieldwork sites
- Criminal background check
- Fieldwork sites may require additional tests such as but not limited to drug screens. It is the student’s responsibility to comply with these requirements and pay any additional fees. Student’s refused admittance to a fieldwork site due to the results of a criminal background check or drug screen will be dismissed from the OTA Program. OTA faculty will not be involved in the criminal background/drug screen process.
- Travel to clinical/fieldwork and field trip sites may be extensive. OTA fieldwork sites are throughout the state of Georgia and students need to be aware that they may have to travel or relocate in order to complete fieldwork requirements. Travel expenses, including living arrangements at distance sites are the responsibility of the student.
Occupational Therapy Assistant Academic Requirements
Once admitted to the OTA Program, students must meet the following requirements in order to complete the program:
- A minimum grade-point average (GPA) of 2.3 is required to remain in the OTA course sequence.
- A grade of C or better is required in all OTA program-related courses and core courses.
- Passing grades of 75% in all lecture, laboratory, and Level I fieldwork portions of the courses as well as the professional behavior assessment scale are required to pass the courses. Other course-specific competencies may be required to pass the course. Students who do not pass the professional behavior assessment or any other portion of the course will receive a maximum grade of D for the course.
- Students must complete all sections of all assignments of each course in order to pass the course.
- Students must pass all practical exams in OTA courses. Students will have only two attempts to pass each practical exam. Failure of the second attempt will result in failure of the course and students will receive a maximum grade of D for the course.
- Academic progression policy
- Some OTA courses and some general education courses are sequential. Students cannot enroll in an OTA course unless they have completed the required prerequisite OTA and general education courses with a grade of C or better. Students must complete BIOL 1114K (Anatomy and Physiology I) prior to entry into the OTA program. Students must enroll in PSYC 1101 prior to taking OCTA 1421. Students must successfully complete PSYC 1101 no later than first freshman spring semester.
- Students must complete all OTA core classes prior to Fall sophomore semester.
- Students must complete the OTA program including Level II Fieldwork within a three calendar year span of time.
- Students must pass all Level II Fieldwork courses within 12 months of completion of academic preparation in order to graduate from the program or by December of the third year, whichever occurs first. Students who fail a level II Fieldwork course must retake the course the next semester that the course is available. Students who are failing may request to withdraw from Level II fieldwork courses one time only.
- Students must complete all academic requirements and all OTA core courses prior to attending level II fieldwork.
- Students can have only one failure of any OTA course, including Level II fieldwork courses. More than one failure will result in dismissal from the OTA program. Continuation in the OTA program after failure of even one OTA course is at the discretion of the OTA faculty. The student must be eligible to return to the OTA program and to MGA.
- The grading system for all OTA courses is: A=90-100, B=80-89.99, C=75-79.99, D=60-74.99, F=below 60.
- Students who fail out of the OTA program will not be eligible to reenter the OTA program.
- Students who drop or fail OCTA 1300 must re-apply to the OTA program. Readmission is at the discretion of the OTA faculty.
- Students must provide proof of membership in AOTA (American Occupational Therapy Association) by the end of the second week of class of the Fall freshmen year. Students must maintain active AOTA membership until they graduate from the OTA program.
- Students must turn in all signed forms to the OTA administrative assistant by the end of the second week of class in the fall semester.
- During the final semester before Level II Fieldwork, students will perform a Pre-fieldwork Clinical Skills Assessment that will evaluate essential, safe, clinical practice skills. Results will be mailed to Level II Fieldwork sites with the student’s permission. Students must receive a minimum score of 75% on each section of the assessment. Students will have 1 retake attempt. Failure on the 2nd attempt will result in delay of Level II fieldwork by at least one semester. Students who fail the 2nd attempt must develop a written remediation plan for the next semester to be approved by the OTA faculty. Upon completion of remediation activities during the next semester, students will be allowed to test on the overall Pre-fieldwork Clinical Skills Assessment one last time. Students who pass the final Pre-fieldwork Clinical Skills Assessment will be rescheduled for the next available semester that Level II fieldwork experiences are offered. Fieldwork experiences will not be offered summer semester. Students who do not pass 75% of each section on the final attempt of the Pre-fieldwork Clinical Skills Assessment will be dropped from the OTA program and will not be readmitted.
- Freshman students must turn in all required documentation to the Fieldwork Coordinator by December 1st. Failure to do so will result in dismissal from the OTA program.
- Sophomore students must turn in all required documentation to the Fieldwork Coordinator by October 15th. Failure to do so will result in the student being dropped from any OTA practice classes in which they are enrolled, which will result in dismissal from the OTA program.
Curriculum for the Occupational Therapy Assistant (ASOTA) Program
Note: The Associate of Science in Occupational Therapy Assistant Program fulfills general education requirement for a career associate degree.
Critical Reading and Writing (Credit: 6 hours)
Natural Sciences/Mathematics Elective (Credit: 3 hours)
Choose one of the following courses:
Humanities/Fine Arts Elective (Credit: 3 hours)
Choose one of the following courses:
Social/Behavioral Sciences (Credit: 9 hours)
HIST 2111 | United States History to 1865 | 3 credits |
| OR | |
HIST 2112 | United States History since 1865 | 3 credits |
| OR | |
POLS 1101 | American Government | 3 credits |
| | |
PSYC 1101 | Introduction to Psychology | 3 credits |
PSYC 2103 | Introduction to Human Development | 3 credits |
Note: Students must satisfy the U.S. and Georgia history requirement with either the U.S. and Georgia History Exam or HIST 2111 or HIST 2112. Students must satisfy the U.S. and Georgia constitution requirement with either the U.S. and Georgia Constitution Exam or POLS 1101.
Major Field Courses (Credit: 51 hours)
Total Hours: 72