Student OT Club Hosts Veterans Appreciation Bash
More than 100 students, faculty, and staff at 海角直播 (SMU) crowded into a classroom 鈥 and then overflowed into the hallway 鈥 to attend a Veteran鈥檚 Appreciation Day event hosted by the Student Occupational Therapy Association (S.O.T.A.) on Friday, Nov. 11.
Lt. Col. Isaac Bristow, a campus operations manager at SMU鈥檚 Sacramento Campus, told the audience he was grateful for the SMU students who would one day be tasked with treating veterans.
鈥淥ne thing about the military is they train you how to fight,鈥 Bristow said, 鈥渂ut they don鈥檛 train you how to come back. So you鈥檙e the ones who will someday work in hospitals, helping us learn how to walk again, teaching us how to improve our speech and integrate with our families.鈥
The link between occupational therapy and military service is strong, said student Alondra Ammon, president of SOTA and an Air Force veteran.
鈥淎s OT鈥檚, it will be our job to help people function as independently as possible,鈥 Ammon said. 鈥淲e鈥檒l be there to help veterans integrate into civilian life and live their life to the fullest.鈥
The University has become well-known for its resource programs available to students with a military history, said Dennis McReynolds, an Army combat veteran and SMU鈥檚 veterans resource coordinator.
Five year ago, there were 12 veteran students at SMU, McReynolds said. Today, there are 36, including 11 staff and faculty, and the University is recognized as a Yellow Ribbon campus that provides special educational opportunities for veterans.
The Yellow Ribbon Program allows institutions of higher learning to enter into dollar-for-dollar matching agreements with the federal government to pay for veterans鈥 educational costs that exceed those covered by the GI Bill benefit.
The event also included remarks from OT Professor Guy McCormack, who served in the Navy during the Vietnam.
McCormack said he was surprised, and thankful, to see such a large turnout to recognize those who鈥檝e served in the military. When McCormack left the Navy in the 1970s, he said veterans were not as appreciated by fellow Americans as the unpopular war raged on.
鈥淚 have to be honest, I鈥檓 a little bit envious now,鈥 McCormack said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great to see those who鈥檝e served get the recognition they deserve.鈥