This is the specifically identified result of a planned therapy intervention.
What is an outcome?
Family dinners, reunions, or bar mitzvahs are examples of these symbolic, emotional routines.
What are family rituals?
This worldview influenced the development of many occupational theories.
What is the Western worldview?
OT officially began in this year and place.
What is March 1917 in Clifton Springs, NY?
This model frames disability as the individual’s responsibility to overcome.
What is the medical model?
Habits, routines, roles, and rituals are grouped as this in the OTPF-4.
What are performance patterns?
Goals in OT should be written in this style to emphasize client action.
Answer: What is behavioral/client-centered?
In this culture, group harmony is valued and clients may passively follow instructions.
What is Japanese culture?
Which concept describes systematic discrimination that blocks participation in meaningful occupation?
What is occupational apartheid?
This OT paradigm (1930s–70s) minimized the role of occupation.
What is reductionism?
This model instead sees disability as a product of the environment and society.
What is the social model?
This OT research foundation supports advancing knowledge and evidence
What is AOTF (American Occupational Therapy Foundation)?
Using occupation to remediate an impairment is considered this.
What is occupation as a means?
Why should OTs avoid assumptions of heteronormativity when working with clients?
Because LGBTQIA+ experiences are diverse (intersectionality matters).
This concept highlights how people can be oppressed if their bodies don’t conform to social norms.
What is embodied occupational justice?
This was the historical era when OT first emerged (1900–1919).
What is the Progressive Era?
This approach focuses on adapting and compensating for limitations.
What is the rehabilitative model?
This science framework moves from identifying problems to building interventions and knowledge.
What is the translational science framework?
The approach used to restore or improve function.
What is remediation?
Some members of this culture may reject the label of “disabled” while still valuing rights awareness.
What is disability culture?
This connects OT philosophy to practice.
What is theory?
Founded in 1952, this group connects OTs internationally.
What is WFOT (World Federation of Occupational Therapists)?
Changing the environment instead of the child is an example of this intervention type.
What is context-focused intervention?
This research theory accounts for multiple sources of error beyond classical test theory.
What is generalizability theory?
Using occupation itself as the therapy goal is called this.
What is occupation as an end?
This concept means judging other cultures using one’s own cultural lens.
What is ethnocentrism?
Reilly argued that occupation fulfills this fundamental human need.
What is a biological/survival need?
All OT students who join AOTA are automatically members of this group.
What is the ASD (Assembly of Student Delegates)?
Home automation with technology is called this.
What is domotics?
This concept describes how all systems of oppression are interconnected.
What is intersectionality?