Registration now open for our undergraduate course, OSOT 301: Introduction to Human Occupation

We are pleased to announce that our undergraduate course for UBC students, OSOT 301: Introduction to Human Occupation, is now open for registration!

This course aims to introduce students, particularly those who have an interest in pursuing a career in occupational therapy, to the concept of occupation as a tool for understanding behaviour, social roles and health. It is also designed for students who are more broadly interested in the science of everyday living.

Students around a table participating in a neurolab discussion
Students around a table participating in a neurolab discussion
Students around a table participating in a neurolab discussion

The course is NOT a prerequisite to the Master in Occupational Therapy (MOT) program, but instead, a chance for undergraduate students to explore the discipline of occupational science. We hope that students will be inspired to apply the lens of occupational science to the rest of their studies and that some students will consider pursuing a career in Occupational Therapy.

OSOT 301 was collaboratively designed and will be taught by Dr. Suzanne Huot, and is the only undergraduate course that our department has offered since the introduction of the MOT program.

We’re really looking forward to an engaging teaching and learning experience with students who are eager to better understand human occupation and its implications, and who are ready to discover a new perspective on the everyday.

Registration is now open, and the course will start in September for the 2025 Winter Session.


Course details

OSOT 301: Introduction to Human Occupation
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 9:30-11:00
UBC Vancouver, Point Grey campus

Course instructor

Profile portrait of Suzanne Huot

Dr. Suzanne Huot
Associate Professor, OSOT

Course description

OSOT 301 explores human occupation, conceptualized as all activities people do based on need, obligation, or preference.  As the core construct of the discipline of occupational science and practice of occupational therapy, human occupation is examined for its relation to personal and social determinants of health.

Course objectives

Students will develop an introductory understanding of human occupation, conceptualized as the myriad activities that people do based on need, obligation, or preference. As the science of everyday living, occupational science explores the complexity of occupations and their capacity to be transformative and underlies the practice of occupational therapy. This course examines a range of topics related to human occupation and its relationship to personal and social determinants of health.