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Low Vision Therapists, Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and Vision Rehabilitation Therapists

Occupation · SOC 29-1122.01

Provide therapy to patients with visual impairments to improve their functioning in daily life activities. May train patients in activities such as computer use, communication skills, or home management skills.

Also called: Certified Orientation and Mobility Specialist (COMS) · Orientation and Mobility Specialist (O and M Specialist) · Vision Rehabilitation Therapist (VRT) · Visually Impaired Teacher (TVI) · Certified Low Vision Therapist (CLVT) · Mobility Specialist · Orientation and Mobility Instructor (O and M Instructor) · Rehabilitation Teacher · Rehabilitation Therapist · Students with Visual Impairments Teacher (TVI) · Blind Orientation and Mobility Therapist (Blind O and M Therapist) · Certified Vision Rehabilitation Therapist (CVRT)

Job family: Healthcare Practitioners and Technical Occupations

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Download .md

A source-stamped Markdown brief of this occupation — paste it into an agent, or fetch /roles/role-29-1122-01/context.md directly.

AI work map

A fast read on where AI already shows up in this occupation, where it stays a copilot, where humans remain in the loop, and what the labor market is doing. Built from observed Claude.ai conversations mapped to O*NET tasks and from published research — measures of usage and exposure, not advice or predictions that the job is going away.

Use as a copilot

Task areas where people work with AI — iterating, learning, or checking — staying in the loop rather than handing the task off.

  • Provide consultation, support, or education to groups such as parents and teachers. · 1.6%
  • Refer clients to services, such as eye care, health care, rehabilitation, and counseling, to enhance visual and life functioning or when condition exceeds scope of practice. · 0.3%
See collaboration patterns →

Keep a human in the loop

Task areas where a human was still judged necessary in a large share of observed conversations — not a safety ruling, an observed-need signal.

  • Provide consultation, support, or education to groups such as parents and teachers. · 97.4% need a human
  • Refer clients to services, such as eye care, health care, rehabilitation, and counseling, to enhance visual and life functioning or when condition exceeds scope of practice. · 97.1% need a human
See the boundary tasks →

39th-percentile task overlap — yet about 10,200 openings a year (+13.8% projected, BLS), and observed AI use leans 5714% copilot, not hand-off (AEI) . What exposure means →

AI & job outlook

What today's research says about this occupation's exposure to AI, how AI is actually being used in it, and where employment is headed. These are positions within published studies — measures of exposure and usage, not predictions that this job will disappear.

Exposure to current AI

Each study uses its own scale, so the raw scores are not comparable across rows — the percentile (this job's rank among all U.S. occupations with data) is the comparable figure, and sizes the bars.

Measure Rank vs all occupations Percentile Score
Overall AI exposure (Felten et al.) Moderate 51st 0.1
LLM task exposure, γ (OpenAI / Eloundou) Moderate 41st 0.5
AI assistant applicability (Microsoft) Low 32nd 0.1

OpenAI's exposure study scores tasks three ways: with a language model alone (α 0.1), with simple added tooling (β 0.3), and including AI-powered software (γ 0.5). Higher means more of the job's tasks could be done at least twice as fast — not that they will be automated away.

This job mostly cannot be done remotely (Dingel–Neiman) — its hands-on tasks sit outside what software-based AI reaches.

Historical automation estimate (2013)

A pre-LLM (2013) estimate of how automatable this job is by computerization and robotics. Shown for historical context only — it is not part of any current AI ranking.

Frey–Osborne probability 0.0 · 1st percentile among occupations · Low

How AI is actually used in this job

Among measured AI assistant conversations mapped to this occupation (Anthropic Economic Index, 2026-01-15), these task types came up most. These are shares of observed AI conversations — not shares of the job, of worker time, or of what could be automated.

Provide consultation, support, or education to groups such as parents and teachers. 3.8%
Refer clients to services, such as eye care, health care, rehabilitation, and counseling, to enhance visual and life functioning or when condition exceeds scope of practice. 0.5%
Write reports or complete forms to document assessments, training, progress, or follow-up outcomes. 0.3%
Develop rehabilitation or instructional plans collaboratively with clients, based on results of assessments, needs, and goals. 0.2%

Job outlook

Independent U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics employment projection for 2024–2034 — a labor-market forecast, not an AI-impact forecast.

Outlook Growing fast · +13.8% by 2034
Projected annual openings 10,200
Employment 2024 → 2034 160,000 → 182,100

“Annual openings” counts new jobs plus replacements for workers who leave the occupation, so it can be large even when growth is modest.

Where this work sits on the global GenAI gradient

The ILO's 2025 global study scores generative-AI exposure on the international ISCO-08 occupation system, not US SOC. Bridged through the published (and approximate, many-to-many) IBS O*NET-SOC ↔ ISCO-08 crosswalk, this US occupation corresponds to the international occupation below. Exposure here means how much of the work's tasks today's AI can attempt — task overlap, not automation, adoption, or jobs lost.

20% mean task exposure (2025)
32nd percentile of 427 placed occupations
+3 pts shift 2023 → 2025
International occupation (ISCO-08) Task exposure (2025) Most tasks fall in
Health Professionals Not Elsewhere Classified · 2269 20% Not exposed

Read the whole six-band gradient on the GenAI exposure gradient page. The crosswalk is approximate: a US occupation can map to several international ones, and the ILO scores describe the international occupation, not this exact US role.

Working with AI in this job

How people actually apply AI to this occupation's tasks, from Claude.ai (Free and Pro) conversations in the Anthropic Economic Index, 2026-01-15. This is one AI assistant's consumer sample — not all AI, not the whole workforce. Autonomy and the collaboration mix are model-rated estimates; figures below the sample floor are hidden.

Augmentation vs. automation 57.1% working with AI · 28.6% handed to AI
Most common way people use AI here Iteration · you and AI go back and forth
Typical AI autonomy 4.0 / 5 · higher = AI acts more independently
Used for work (vs. personal / coursework) 45.0%

What people delegate to AI

The role's most common tasks in AI conversations, each tagged with how people work with the AI on it. “Usage” is the share of observed conversations, not of the job.

Task How Usage
Provide consultation, support, or education to groups such as parents and teachers. Iteration 1.6%
Refer clients to services, such as eye care, health care, rehabilitation, and counseling, to enhance visual and life functioning or when condition exceeds scope of practice. Learning 0.3%

Where a human is still needed

Tasks where the model most often judged that a person remained necessary — a useful read on the current boundary, not a guarantee.

Provide consultation, support, or education to groups such as parents and teachers. 97.4%
Refer clients to services, such as eye care, health care, rehabilitation, and counseling, to enhance visual and life functioning or when condition exceeds scope of practice. 97.1%

What people most often hand AI here

Example prompts phrased from the tasks people most often delegate to AI in this occupation (Anthropic Economic Index). Each shows the underlying measured task and its share of observed AI use. They are suggested phrasings of real tasks — starting points, not endorsed instructions.

  • Help me provide consultation, support, or education to groups such as parents and teachers.

    From: Provide consultation, support, or education to groups such as parents and teachers. · 1.6% of measured AI use · task iteration

  • Help me refer clients to services, such as eye care, health care, rehabilitation, and counseling, to enhance visual and life functioning or when condition exceeds scope of practice.

    From: Refer clients to services, such as eye care, health care, rehabilitation, and counseling, to enhance visual and life functioning or when condition exceeds scope of practice. · 0.3% of measured AI use · learning

Tasks

All 21 tasks O*NET lists for this occupation, ordered by importance. Each links to its own page with AI-exposure and observed-use detail.

Work activities

Knowledge, skills & abilities

O*NET importance rating, from 1 (not important) to 5 (extremely important).

Knowledge

English Language 4.3
Education and Training 4.2
Psychology 3.8
Transportation 3.7
Customer and Personal Service 3.6
Therapy and Counseling 3.5
Public Safety and Security 3.4

Abilities

Oral Expression 4.1
Oral Comprehension 4.0
Written Comprehension 4.0
Problem Sensitivity 4.0
Written Expression 3.9
Speech Clarity 3.8
Deductive Reasoning 3.6
Speech Recognition 3.6
Fluency of Ideas 3.4
Inductive Reasoning 3.4
Information Ordering 3.4
Category Flexibility 3.4
Originality 3.3
Near Vision 3.1
Far Vision 3.1

Essential skills

Active Listening 4.0
Speaking 4.0
Learning Strategies 4.0
Reading Comprehension 3.9
Writing 3.8
Active Learning 3.8
Monitoring 3.8
Critical Thinking 3.5

Transferable skills

Social Perceptiveness 3.9
Instructing 3.9
Service Orientation 3.9
Complex Problem Solving 3.5
Judgment and Decision Making 3.4
Persuasion 3.1
Coordination 3.0
Negotiation 3.0
Systems Analysis 3.0
Systems Evaluation 3.0

Skills in demand

Skills employers ask for in job postings for this occupation (Lightcast), with whether each is a common or specialized skill.

Tools & technology

Example Category
Amazon Web Services AWS software Data base user interface and query software Hot technology
Microsoft Access Data base user interface and query software Hot technology
Microsoft Excel Spreadsheet software Hot technology
Microsoft Office software Office suite software Hot technology
Microsoft Outlook Electronic mail software Hot technology
Microsoft PowerPoint Presentation software Hot technology
Microsoft Visio Process mapping and design software Hot technology
Microsoft Word Word processing software Hot technology
Oracle Database Data base user interface and query software Hot technology
Oracle Java Object or component oriented development software Hot technology
Oracle PeopleSoft Enterprise resource planning ERP software Hot technology
Python Object or component oriented development software Hot technology
Ruby Development environment software Hot technology
SAP software Enterprise resource planning ERP software Hot technology
Workday software Enterprise resource planning ERP software Hot technology
Ai Squared ZoomText Device drivers or system software
American Printing House for the Blind Learn Keys Device drivers or system software
American Printing House for the Blind Talking Typer Computer based training software
Arkenstone Atlas Speaks Analytical or scientific software
Axistive BigShot Screen Magnifier Device drivers or system software
Dolphin Lunar Device drivers or system software
Freedom Scientific MAGic Device drivers or system software
Oracle Hyperion Data base reporting software
Oracle NetSuite Enterprise resource planning ERP software
ZoomWare Screen Magnifier Device drivers or system software

Work context

How characteristic each condition is of the job, on O*NET's 1–5 context scale (higher = more present in day-to-day work). Each condition links to how it varies across all occupations.

E-Mail 4.7
Freedom to Make Decisions 4.7
Face-to-Face Discussions with Individuals and Within Teams 4.7
Determine Tasks, Priorities and Goals 4.7
Physical Proximity 4.4
Contact With Others 4.3
Telephone Conversations 4.3
In an Enclosed Vehicle or Operate Enclosed Equipment 4.0
Outdoors, Exposed to All Weather Conditions 4.0
Work With or Contribute to a Work Group or Team 3.7
Deal With External Customers or the Public in General 3.6
Frequency of Decision Making 3.6
Spend Time Standing 3.6
Spend Time Walking or Running 3.6
Impact of Decisions on Co-workers or Company Results 3.6
Indoors, Environmentally Controlled 3.5
Written Letters and Memos 3.5
Importance of Being Exact or Accurate 3.3
Exposed to Sounds, Noise Levels that are Distracting or Uncomfortable 3.2
Consequence of Error 3.0
Exposed to Very Hot or Cold Temperatures 3.0
Time Pressure 3.0
Coordinate or Lead Others in Accomplishing Work Activities 2.9
Health and Safety of Other Workers 2.9
Exposed to Extremely Bright or Inadequate Lighting Conditions 2.8
Indoors, Not Environmentally Controlled 2.6
Exposed to Contaminants 2.6
Dealing With Unpleasant, Angry, or Discourteous People 2.4
Spend Time Using Your Hands to Handle, Control, or Feel Objects, Tools, or Controls 2.4
Exposed to Hazardous Equipment 2.4
Work Outcomes and Results of Other Workers 2.3
Outdoors, Under Cover 2.3
Spend Time Sitting 2.3
Public Speaking 2.2
Conflict Situations 2.1
Level of Competition 2.1
Importance of Repeating Same Tasks 2.0
Exposed to Disease or Infections 2.0
Spend Time Bending or Twisting Your Body 2.0
Spend Time Making Repetitive Motions 2.0

How to get in

Job zone
Zone 5 — Job Zone Five: Extensive Preparation Needed
Education
Most of these occupations require graduate school. For example, they may require a master's degree, and some require a Ph.D., M.D., or J.D. (law degree).
Typical entry-level education
Master's degree · BLS, the typical path — not a requirement
Related experience
Extensive skill, knowledge, and experience are needed for these occupations. Many require more than five years of experience. For example, surgeons must complete four years of college and an additional five to seven years of specialized medical training to be able to do their job.
Preparation level
SVP (8.0 and above) — total schooling plus on-the-job experience.

What to study: Health Professions and Related Programs . Fields of study crosswalked to this occupation (NCES CIP–SOC), not a requirement.

Education of current workers

Share of people in this occupation at each level of education.

Master's Degree 56.5%
Post-Baccalaureate Certificate 21.7%
Bachelor's Degree 17.4%
Post-Master's Certificate 4.3%

Interests & work styles

The interests and personal qualities O*NET associates with people who do this work.

Work styles

Dependability 9.0
Attention to Detail 8.0
Integrity 7.0
Cooperation 6.0
Social Orientation 5.0
Empathy 4.0

Career interests (Holland / RIASEC)

Social 6.5
Realistic 3.9
Investigative 3.9
Artistic 3.2

Interest areas

Social Service 6.2
Teaching/Education 5.9
Health Care Service 5.3
Professional Advising 5.2
Personal Service 5.0
Social Science 3.3

Wages & employment

U.S. · annual wages (BLS OEWS)

$67k10th$80k25th$98kMedian$110k75th$130k90th
Annual wages by percentile — U.S. (BLS OEWS). The light band spans the 10th–90th percentile; the darker band is the middle half (25th–75th); the line is the median.
160k2024182k2034 (proj.)+13.8% · Growing fast
Projected U.S. employment, 2024–2034 (BLS Employment Projections). A labor-market forecast for the occupation, not an AI-impact forecast.
10th percentile $67,090
25th percentile $80,490
Median (50th) $98,340
75th percentile $110,460
90th percentile $129,830
People employed 152,280

Wages and employment are reported by BLS for the broader occupation group this specialty belongs to (SOC 29-1122), not for the specialty alone.

Industries that employ this occupation

Where these workers are employed, by number of jobs (national, BLS OEWS). Pay shown is the occupation's national median, not industry-specific.

Industry Workers National median pay
Health Care and Social Assistance · Sector 125,010 $99,190
Offices of Physical, Occupational and Speech Therapists, and Audiologists · National industry 42,330 $96,380
Educational Services · Sector 20,390 $83,890
Administrative and Support and Waste Management and Remediation Services · Sector 2,490 $87,430
Services for the Elderly and Persons with Disabilities · National industry 2,060 $84,010
Temporary Help Services · National industry 1,970 $92,260
Offices of Mental Health Practitioners (except Physicians) · National industry 640 $85,750
Management of Companies and Enterprises · Sector 500 $97,760
Residential Intellectual and Developmental Disability Facilities · National industry 380 $94,750
Offices of Optometrists · National industry 310 $42,150
Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services · Sector 280 $60,550
Outpatient Mental Health and Substance Abuse Centers · National industry 200 $80,670

Where this work is most concentrated

Industries where this occupation is far more common than in the economy as a whole. The location quotient is how many times more concentrated it is here (a value of 5 means five times its economy-wide share).

Industry Concentration Workers
Offices of Physical, Occupational and Speech Therapists, and Audiologists · National industry 89.93× 42,330
Health Care and Social Assistance · Sector 5.48× 125,010
Offices of Mental Health Practitioners (except Physicians) · National industry 2.68× 640
Offices of Optometrists · National industry 2.06× 310
Educational Services · Sector 1.51× 20,390
Residential Intellectual and Developmental Disability Facilities · National industry 0.99× 380
Services for the Elderly and Persons with Disabilities · National industry 0.87× 2,060
Residential Mental Health and Substance Abuse Facilities · National industry 0.78× 200

Part of the Healthcare & Human Services career cluster.

Exposure quadrant: AI task-overlap percentile vs Median pay Low Vision Therapists, Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and Vision Rehabilitation Therapists sits at the 39th percentile of AI task-overlap and the 81st percentile of median pay, placed here against 10 adjacent occupations on the same two axes. Lower overlap · higher pay Higher overlap · higher pay Higher overlap · lower pay Lower overlap · lower pay Low Vision Therapists, Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and Vision Rehabilitation Therapists Physical Therapist Aides Occupational Therapy Aides Psychiatric Technicians Occupational Therapy Assistants Recreational Therapists Rehabilitation Counselors AI task-overlap percentile → ↑ Median pay
AI task-overlap percentile (horizontal) vs. median-pay percentile (vertical), across all scored occupations. This occupation is highlighted; related occupations are plotted alongside it. Overlap measures shared tasks with AI, not automation.

Side-by-side comparisons place two occupations’ pay, preparation, skills, and AI exposure on the same page — same data, same scale, no forecast.

What you can do with this

Options the data surfaces for Low Vision Therapists, Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and Vision Rehabilitation Therapists — not advice or a forecast. Each is a real cross-link you can follow into the evidence.

Skills that travel

Capabilities this work builds that are used across many other occupations.

Paths in

How people typically prepare for this work.

Zoom out

On the global GenAI exposure gradient this work sits around the 32nd percentile of 427 international occupations.

Write a report on thisheadline · factoids · citation

Low Vision Therapists, Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and Vision Rehabilitation Therapists show 39th-percentile AI task overlap — and about 10,200 annual U.S. openings

  • Low Vision Therapists, Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and Vision Rehabilitation Therapists rank in the 39th percentile (Moderate band) for AI task overlap across U.S. occupations — a measure of how much of the work today's AI can attempt, not how much is automated.Eloundou et al. (GPTs are GPTs) + Felten AIOE
  • The occupation is projected to see about 10,200 U.S. job openings per year (2024–34), counting growth and replacement — a labor-demand projection made independently of AI.BLS Employment Projections 2024–34
  • BLS projects employment to be growing fast (+13.8%) from 2024 to 2034.BLS Employment Projections 2024–34
  • Median annual pay is $98,340, across about 152,280 U.S. workers.BLS OEWS (May 2024)
  • Of the AI use actually observed for this work, 57% looks like augmentation (drafting, iterating, checking) rather than hands-off automation — from a Claude.ai usage sample, not a census.2026-01-15-v4-plus-2025-03-27-v2
Copy the whole kit
Low Vision Therapists, Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and Vision Rehabilitation Therapists show 39th-percentile AI task overlap — and about 10,200 annual U.S. openings

• Low Vision Therapists, Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and Vision Rehabilitation Therapists rank in the 39th percentile (Moderate band) for AI task overlap across U.S. occupations — a measure of how much of the work today's AI can attempt, not how much is automated. (Eloundou et al. (GPTs are GPTs) + Felten AIOE)
• The occupation is projected to see about 10,200 U.S. job openings per year (2024–34), counting growth and replacement — a labor-demand projection made independently of AI. (BLS Employment Projections 2024–34)
• BLS projects employment to be growing fast (+13.8%) from 2024 to 2034. (BLS Employment Projections 2024–34)
• Median annual pay is $98,340, across about 152,280 U.S. workers. (BLS OEWS (May 2024))
• Of the AI use actually observed for this work, 57% looks like augmentation (drafting, iterating, checking) rather than hands-off automation — from a Claude.ai usage sample, not a census. (2026-01-15-v4-plus-2025-03-27-v2)

Source: Singulariki — "Low Vision Therapists, Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and Vision Rehabilitation Therapists". https://singulariki.com/roles/role-29-1122-01
Note: AI task overlap measures what today's AI can attempt, not automation, job loss, or a forecast.

AssetsShare imageMethodology & sourcesPress & newsroomThe newsroom

Every line is built only from figures this page already shows and cites. AI task overlap means what today's AI can attempt — not automation, job loss, or a forecast.

Sources for this page

Every figure above traces to a named public dataset and the exact release below — not hand-written opinion. See the full methodology for what each measure does and does not mean.

Data compiled June 2, 2026. Figures are estimates, not advice.

Cite this page
Plain

Singulariki. "Low Vision Therapists, Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and Vision Rehabilitation Therapists." Singulariki: a source-backed encyclopedia of work. Built from O*NET 30.3; BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) May 2024; BLS Employment Projections 2024–2034; Anthropic Economic Index v4 (2026-01-15) + v2 (2025-03-27); Microsoft “Working with AI” working-with-ai; “GPTs are GPTs” (Eloundou et al.) arXiv 2303.10130; AI Occupational Exposure (AIOE) Felten, Raj & Seamans; ILO / Gmyrek et al. GenAI exposure gradient 2025; IBS O*NET-SOC ↔ ISCO-08 occupation crosswalk 2022; Frey & Osborne (2013) frey-osborne-automation; Dingel & Neiman (2020) dingel-neiman-workathome. Accessed June 7, 2026. https://singulariki.com/roles/role-29-1122-01

APA

Singulariki. (2026). Low Vision Therapists, Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and Vision Rehabilitation Therapists. Singulariki: a source-backed encyclopedia of work. Retrieved June 7, 2026, from https://singulariki.com/roles/role-29-1122-01

BibTeX
@misc{singulariki-role-29-1122-01,
  title  = {Low Vision Therapists, Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and Vision Rehabilitation Therapists},
  author = {{Singulariki}},
  year   = {2026},
  note   = {O*NET 30.3; BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) May 2024; BLS Employment Projections 2024–2034; Anthropic Economic Index v4 (2026-01-15) + v2 (2025-03-27); Microsoft “Working with AI” working-with-ai; “GPTs are GPTs” (Eloundou et al.) arXiv 2303.10130; AI Occupational Exposure (AIOE) Felten, Raj & Seamans; ILO / Gmyrek et al. GenAI exposure gradient 2025; IBS O*NET-SOC ↔ ISCO-08 occupation crosswalk 2022; Frey & Osborne (2013) frey-osborne-automation; Dingel & Neiman (2020) dingel-neiman-workathome. Accessed June 7, 2026},
  url    = {https://singulariki.com/roles/role-29-1122-01}
}

Citations name the underlying public dataset releases — they reflect what this page is built from, not just the URL.

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