Degree: Bachelor of Science (B.S.) with a major in Art Therapy
(a minimum of 120 credit hours) Requirements are subject to change.
Students selecting this major also major in Education and seek licensure as a teacher of visual arts (PreK-8, 5-12). The art major offers students an opportunity for the unique development of their talents in a wide range of visual arts courses and concentrations. A full spectrum of studio courses affords students the development of their personal talents in the visual arts. An assortment of methods, techniques, materials, and philosophies challenge art majors to express themselves to their fullest potential. It is the underlying philosophy of this major that students maturing as artists have a responsibility to share and lead in developing a better and more meaningful society. This commitment to artistic and social responsibility by the Visual and Performing Arts Department, its faculty, and its students is the essence of the Springfield College humanics philosophy.
Graduates in this major have the professional preparation necessary to work with people of all ages with varying degrees of functional or organic impairment, as well as in public or alternative schools. Through art therapy, the therapist provides an opportunity for nonverbal expression and communication, which can promote a reconciliation of emotional conflicts and foster self-awareness and personal growth.
Graduates are prepared for work in a variety of settings, including public schools, hospitals and clinics, community mental health centers, geriatric centers, nursing homes, and halfway houses. Some may choose to work in private or public schools and institutions for emotional problems, learning differences, developmental delays, brain damage, deafness, vision impairments, physically challenged, and disabled children.
The curriculum prepares students for a career as a teacher of visual arts. Additionally, the curriculum is designed to prepare students for graduate study in the art therapy field. Students wishing to become registered art therapists by the American Art Therapy Association must obtain a graduate degree.
Information about the program can be obtained by contacting Dr. Simone Alter-Muri of the Visual and Performing Arts Department, at (413) 748-3752. For general information about the art major, contact Professor Martin Shell at (413) 748-3443 or the Admissions Office at (800) 343-1257.
For more information about the undergraduate art therapy major contact Dr. Mary Ellen Hluska at (413) 748-4734 or the Admissions Office at (800) 343-1257.