So you want to be a physical therapist

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Still, those who decide to make the switch into a physical therapist career say the rewards make it all worthwhile. “I love my new job,” says Michael Johnson, 46, who graduated from the


University of Michigan at Flint’s PT program in August, and now works at Memorial Healthcare in Owosso, Mich. “Yes, I have $90,000 worth of student debt. And yes, it’s meant that I don’t


have a college fund for my three teenage sons. But my wife and I are confident that this was the right thing to do. It’s so gratifying to have clients thank me for working with them. And


it’s satisfying to know that I’m solving health problems.” THE LONG ROAD TO A DEGREE A career engineer, Johnson had been toying with the idea of becoming a PT. “Then, when the company I


worked for was sold and I lost my job, it seemed like a sign.” On his first try, he got shot down. So he spent the next year working an IT job, volunteering at clinics, and retooling his


application. When he finally got his acceptance email, “I set a record for being the fastest one to accept. It’s literally down the block and around the corner—I think I was there in 5


minutes.” Others choose to work their way up the professional ladder while in school. Nancy Laird, 46, left her job as an office manager for the state of Delaware to become a physical


therapist. “I wanted something more rewarding,” she says, and PT seemed like the best fit. She began working as a physical therapy aide (itself a fast-growing profession with no credentials


needed) while going to physical therapist school to become a physical therapy assistant, which requires an associate’s degree. (Again, the BLS lists this as a major opportunity, with a


median salary of $50,000 per year.) “The job is at a smaller clinic, and I felt at home right away,” she recalls. She finished her associate’s degree in two years. “But as an assistant,


there are limits to what you can do. I wanted to put all the pieces together, from beginning to the end.” She spent 18 months finishing her bachelor’s degree, and then applied to the PT


program at Neumann University, a 45-minute drive from her home in Bear, Delaware. While it allows her to continue working three days a week, the physical therapist education is intense:


She’s in class from 7 am to 5:30 every Saturday and Sunday; there’s lots of homework, online tests and quizzes, and study groups. She expects to graduate when she will be almost 50.