A school-based pediatric physical therapist job description includes the duties and responsibilities for someone looking to work with students to overcome physical challenges they face in reaching their full potential in an academic setting. The job description paints a picture of what a day in the life of a pediatric physical therapist entails.
As a pediatric physical therapist, your day will focus on helping students with disabilities or developmental delays overcome barriers and access their learning environment. The goal is to help them move to and from and participate in all school activities as safely and independently as possible. To do so, you'll help them build their balance, coordination, strength, and motor skills. Simply put, you help them move better so that they can learn better. Depending on the school district in which you work, you may be based at one school for your tenure. Or you may float from school to school within the district. Regardless, you'll be working as part of the student's support team, which includes other teachers, clinicians, and parents, to create a plan tailored to every student's ability, needs, and individualized education program (IEP) goals.
As noted above, every school district differs, so exact responsibilities will vary slightly. However, you can expect to be responsible for certain core pediatric physical therapist tasks.
Conduct assessments and prepare progress reports.
To effectively develop plans to help students, you'll need to conduct a thorough assessment of their physical skills and abilities. More specifically, you'll need to assess how their classroom performance and participation in daily school activities are impacted, and how you can help improve that. You'll then document this information in a written evaluation to help create a tailored therapy plan and support the IEP documentation.
Work directly and indirectly with students.
A core tenet of your responsibilities is to provide physical therapy services to students, both directly and indirectly.
Collaborate with a student's learning teams.
As a pediatric physical therapist, you'll be part of a student's support and IEP team. Consequently, you'll need to attend meetings to discuss progress, collaborate on setting annual goals for the student, and advocate for accommodations that provide inclusivity and student success. You'll also need to build a strong relationship with every student's family. This will help you understand the support level a student gets at home, and you'll be a critical component of helping parents understand how your services support their child's educational success.
Having the right foundation is essential to being a successful school-based pediatric physical therapist. Some basic qualifications include:
More and more school districts are seeing the benefit of using a company to hire their school-based therapists. If this pediatric physical therapist job description aligns with your career goals, consider joining our team at Pediatric Therapeutic Services. At Pediatric Therapeutic Services, we work with occupational therapists, speech-language pathologists, physical therapists, psychologists, mental health professionals, and other clinicians to help you find the right school-based placements. If you're interested in becoming a school-based pediatric physical therapist, learn more about joining our team. I'm interested