|
|
|
Do I need to
take a training course?
Aromatherapy
is no different to many other subjects in that it is only worth
paying for a course if the teachers know their subject.
Sadly this is rarely the case in aromatherapy.
I have
been contacted by dissatisfied students of UK colleges of further
education. They told me that their teachers are still not giving
referenced information on safety issues. Huge amounts of what
they teach are still based on the popular books (I call them
novels-see reviews). The majority of these
books are packed with errors, misinformation, corrupted science
and sometimes dangerous advice.
This
situation of courses run by teachers who know little about their
therapy themselves, is common throughout aromatherapy. This
is an appalling indictment of the UK Department of Education
and their lack of ability to monitor the quality of information
provision in our Colleges. Their
Civil Servants only listen to what trade association representatives
tell them. These Civil Servants have this strange idea that
trade interests know best how to set standards in their own
trades and what is best to protect the publics interests! That
crazy concept has been shown time and time again to be quiet
contrary to protecting the public from rogues in any trade.
|
|
The
fact a course is "approved" by a so called leading
trade association is almost meaningless. None of these organisations
- apart from IATA in Canada - have ever undertaken an evaluation
of the accuracy of what their members are teaching.
Various aromatherapy
newsgroups have discussed these issues on many occasions, but
despite it often being proven how fault ridden the "approved"
courses are, little has changed. There
are too many people making cash out of a gullible public to
force change in this trade.
|
|
A
‘good’ training course in aromatherapy should help improve therapists
skills. It should maximise the effects they can achieve by using
essential oils in a safe and effective manner. However, getting
a good course is clearly not so easy.
If
you want to use massage,
then training is advisable because there are medical conditions
where massage should not be used. However, it is vital to remember
that massage is one therapy, and the use of essential oils is
another. A short course on massage is always worthwhile - in
the UK there are many of those. In the USA the courses
tend to be very expensive and lengthy, only worth doing if you
want to become a professional.
In the USA and
Canada, there are so called "advanced" courses that
can cost several thousand Dollars. The instruction on essential
oils is mainly based on inaccurate aromatherapy books. These
courses pack their lessons with peripheral issues such as anatomy,
chemistry, etc. etc. simply because their knowledge on the important
issues of essential oil use is so weak. Therefore, you are paying
a high price for information that could be learnt better from
other more expert sources. Some masquerade as teaching information
based on the French aromatherapy system. A system that itself
is packed with major errors and poor science. To
this day much of their information is based around theoretical
considerations based on the major components found in the oils,
NOT on research based on the whole oils. So paying thousands
of Dollars for aromatherapy education can be a waste of money,
but of course some think it gives them more credibility in the
trade, no so!
If
you are an essential oil supplier,
or natural product maker, then you should gain
a deeper insight into what you are doing rather than just reading
the popular books. This is particularly important in regard
to the safe and legal use of essential oils in products.
If
you want to take a course simply to enable you to better use
the therapy for your Family and friends, then a good short term
course may be worthwhile.
If
you want to study anything as a career then you should always
keep pace with developments in your trade and continue learning
for very many years. I can never
hope to learn all there is to know about this huge subject of
essential oils in my lifetime.
|
You
must also consider why you want to take a course:
If
you want to become a professional therapist, then you should
consider if after spending all that cash, "can I make a
living"?
In
the UK, few can now make a living as a full time aromatherapist.
This is because the market has become saturated with badly trained
part timers. These people are still being churned out
every year like a sausage machine. The trade organisations have
never made any attempt to restrict the numbers being trained,
this has resulted in professional full time work being all but
eliminated.
There
are still opportunities for those in the medical profession
to utilise aromatherapy within conventional health care systems.
In
many other countries such as the USA and the Far East, there
are still opportunities for full time work. However, overseas
readers must be careful in assuming that a school or teacher
being approved by a trade organisation means their course must
be good, it does NOT.
Many
people in the Far East in particular, have been misled into
thinking that certain beauty therapy companies are in
fact approved examination councils. In
reality they are private companies whose prime motive is making
money, not in providing sound education.
So try not to be fooled by people who claim their courses are:
"approved by standard setting organisations". These
organisations officials often know nothing about the trades
they are setting standards on. All they are interested in is
procedures and protocols, not that the students get sound knowledge
on their trade.
Overseas
readers also need to be aware that certain UK based aromatherapy
organisations continually lie about the true status of their
organisation to their overseas clients. For example, I found
out that publications in the Far East were carrying information
saying that "the IFPA had merged with the IFA" this
was one year after that merger failed!
|
Important:
If on a training course you have been provided with copies of my essential
oils monographs by anyone not on the list below, it is without my knowledge.
The materials that I license for teaching students are far more comprehensive
than the simplified monographs intended for general publication. The
only exception being the main database monographs and few schools could
afford to supply those to students.
Please
do not send me emails asking if one course is better than another as
I will not reply. I can only recommend those schools below that I believe
to be to be among the best around.
UK - See
course page on http://www.aromamedical.com
CANADA
All I.A.T.A. approved schools and teachers.
Mississauga
school of aromatherapy
200A Sheridan Corporate Centre
2155 Leanne Blvd. Mississauga
Ontario
L5K 2K8
1-800-326-9491
(905)822-5094 Toronto Area (905)822-0856 Fax
Email Me
USA
Atlantic
Institute of Aromatherapy
16018, Saddlestring Drive
Tampa
FL. 33618.
Phone/fax
813 265 2222
Email Me
http://Atlanticinstitute.com
Back
to top
|