Bates Technical College
- 1101 S Yakima Ave Tacoma, WA 98405
- (253) 680-7000
- Graduation rate: 43.4%
- Programs offered: 70
- Annual completions: 1263
- Online programs available
Source: ACCSC IPEDS College Scorecard
Select a program of interest to explore trade schools that match your goals.
The best occupational therapy assistant programs near Salem, Oregon pair accredited training with a state median wage of about $76,850 a year (BLS OEWS, May 2025). This guide ranks nearby schools by proximity and shows local labor-market context so you can compare program length, cost, and credentials.
Sources: BLS OEWS, May 2025; BLS Employment Projections, 2024-2034; IPEDS, 2023.
Schools below are sorted by distance from Salem, Oregon. Compare each program’s length, schedule, cost, and credential.
We first gather the schools closest to the city or state page you are viewing, then rank that local group by BOC Score, with the highest at the top. The BOC Score is computed from federal IPEDS and College Scorecard data; schools without enough data to score appear last.
Schools without enough federal outcome data appear after ranked schools, without a score. Advertising never affects these rankings. Read the full methodology.
Source: ACCSC IPEDS College Scorecard
Source: ACCSC IPEDS College Scorecard
Source: ACCSC IPEDS College Scorecard
Source: ACCSC IPEDS College Scorecard
Source: ACCSC IPEDS College Scorecard
| Percentile | Annual wage |
|---|---|
| 10th | $51,490 |
| 25th | $61,710 |
| 50th (median) | $72,300 |
| 75th | $79,160 |
| 90th | $89,780 |
| Year | Employment |
|---|---|
| 2024 | 49,200 |
| 2034 projected | 58,700 |
| Percent change | +19.2% |
This occupation reported a Oregon median annual wage of about $76,850 (BLS OEWS, May 2025). Figures reflect all workers in the occupation, not graduates of any single program.
| Percentile | Annual wage |
|---|---|
| 10th | $51,490 |
| 25th | $61,710 |
| 50th (median) | $72,300 |
| 75th | $79,160 |
| 90th | $89,780 |
| Year | Employment |
|---|---|
| 2024 | 49,200 |
| 2034 projected | 58,700 |
| Percent change | +19.2% |
Becoming an occupational therapy assistant in Oregon generally follows these steps. Licensing and required hours vary by occupation and locality — confirm specifics with your state board before enrolling.
Some occupational therapy assistant roles can be entered through a registered apprenticeship or supervised hours that combine paid work with related instruction. Required hour totals differ by program and occupation; confirm exact totals with the sponsoring employer or the state board before committing.
A typical occupational therapy assistant program blends classroom theory with hands-on labs or supervised practice. Coursework usually covers safety, core technical skills, tools and equipment, and preparation for any required certification exam. Course lists vary by school — review each program’s catalog.
Start with accreditation, then compare program length, schedule (day/evening/online), total cost, and whether the credential matches what local employers hire for. Use the proximity-sorted list above and the Salem labor-market figures to weigh your options.
Occupational Therapy Assistant certificate programs near Salem typically take 6 to 12 months of full-time study, while associate degree programs generally run about 2 years. Many students also enter the field through a registered apprenticeship or supervised clinical hours. Actual completion time depends on schedule (full-time vs. part-time) and any prerequisite coursework. Confirm exact program lengths with each school.
According to BLS OEWS (May 2025), this occupation earned a median annual wage of approximately $76,850 in Oregon. Pay varies with experience, certification, and employer. The 10th to 90th percentile range was approximately $65,190 to $86,010 (BLS OEWS, May 2025).
Requirements vary by role and employer. Many positions value industry certifications and supervised hours, and some occupations require a state license. Always confirm current requirements with your state board or licensing authority before enrolling.
Start with accreditation, then compare program length, schedule, total cost, and whether the credential aligns with what local employers hire for. Use the proximity-sorted school list above to weigh nearby options against the local labor market figures on this page.
About this guide: Researched and written by the TradeCareerPath Editorial Team. Our editorial team researches and sources every trade school and career guide using federal labor and education data, including BLS OEWS and Employment Projections, DOL apprenticeship records, IPEDS, College Scorecard, and state licensing boards. We follow the editorial standards documented at /editorial-policy/.
Figures on this page are sourced from the federal and state datasets below. Methodology: how we rank and source data.
| Data | Provider | Vintage |
|---|---|---|
| Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) | U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics | May 2025 |
| Employment Projections | U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics | 2024-2034 |
| Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System | National Center for Education Statistics (IPEDS) | 2024 |
| College Scorecard (school-level outcomes) | U.S. Department of Education | latest release |
| College Scorecard (field-of-study earnings) | U.S. Department of Education | latest release (updated 2026-06-12) |
| Occupational licensing requirements | CareerOneStop (U.S. Department of Labor) | latest release (updated 2026-02-22) |
| Registered apprenticeship programs | CareerOneStop / Apprenticeship.gov (U.S. Department of Labor) | latest release (updated 2025-10-25) |