Music Therapist

Community Music Center of Boston

Job Description

CMCB, an arts education nonprofit with a mission to transform lives by providing equitable access to excellent music education and arts experiences, is seeking a motivated, creative, passionate, and community-oriented part-time Music Therapist to join our music therapy team beginning August/September 2024!

This is a part-time hourly (8-12 hours a week) and exempt role that will work in-person, Monday-Friday, between 8:30-6:30 (varies by site and client requests) with room for growth

Compensation begins at $63/hour, and benefits include commuter benefits (transit and parking), paid time off (sick, bereavement); employer-contributory 403(b) retirement plan; employee assistance program; discounts on music instruction at CMCB; and paid professional development opportunities.

The Music Therapist will lead weekly group music therapy sessions for populations such as adults with developmental disabilities and work cross-departmentally providing adaptive music lessons and/or music education classes at community partner sites and at the Community Music School. CMCB offers the unique opportunity to work with nearly all age groups in clinical, community, and school settings. This position is a great fit for clinicians who are committed to providing community music therapy services or clinicians who are looking to explore working with new populations. Like all roles at CMCB, there is significant investment in professional development training, mentorship from senior staff, including supervision by a Board-Certified Music Therapist, and opportunity for future promotion within the organization.

To apply and view the full job description. please visit https://cmcb.isolvedhire.com/jobs/1258502.

Community Music Center of Boston is committed to recruiting and fostering a diverse community of staff and students and is proud to be an Equal Opportunity Employer. BIPOC individuals, LGBTQIA+ individuals, and members of other historically disenfranchised and marginalized populations are strongly encouraged to apply.