Guest guest Posted January 21, 2010 Report Share Posted January 21, 2010 Tina, you have asked a question that was covered many times on the old group,but we lost most of the answers. It is very difficult to ascertain what is a quality education program. On my site there are articles which give many of the things people should look out for. I guess one of the top questions has to be " where do you reference your information and can you provide a sample " . If the references on anything supplied are to the popular aromatherapy novels then my advice is steer clear. If the reference is to a scientific study then check for yourself it it is relevant to essential oils or herbs, or to its use in aromatherapy massage or to internal use. If the research is to a study in rats, then it may have little relevance to the use of the same oil in massage. I can tell you there are many teachers who cannot tolerate being questioned and students are expected to parrot anything they are taught. As a matter of interest, if a student parrots on my course they get slapped on the wrist and marked down for it. I only want people who are prepared to think, not something modern education systems promote especially on University courses Martin ATFE , " Tina Paxton " <Frecs wrote: > > After reading Martin's website and the aforementioned thread, I again am > pondering the question: > > How does one distinguish a quality program in aromatherapy? > > I'm debating between an " official " program or simply the > buy-quality-books-and-teach-myself approach. The same program seems to exist > for herbalism as well as EO's both of which I'm interested in. > > Any thoughts? > > Tina Paxton, MS > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2010 Report Share Posted January 21, 2010 Martin, Thanks for the response. It seems that from the outside, it is difficult to determine a quality program...it requires putting the money out and registering to even get a clear idea of what they are teaching. Oh, they list a litany of topics but just how they teach those topics is a matter of conjecture until one is actually in the course. Quite frustrating. Through my coursework at the Univ. of Bridgeport (Nutrition Institute) I had plenty of practice reading and assessing scientific research. So, I am not easily impressed by a bibliography of " proof " until I actually review that studies behind that bibliography. People love to pull together such lists based on nothing more than the titles of the study which doesn't mean the study was really about what they think it was about or that the study was well conducted. I've never been very good at parroting even when I know that is what the teacher/professor wants. Nor am I a fan of " read this textbook, take this test, and pay me a lot of money to give you 'credit' or a 'title' " . I can read and study on my own without paying someone an extortion fee for confirming that I read and could answer questions on an open book test. But, while I know that I can study on my own and start calling myself an aromatherapist or Master Herbalist whenever I want, I feel like I need some level of competency before I presume to call myself by such titles. People expect, and deserve, a certain level of knowledge from someone claiming such titles and I refuse to give them less than that. What I really want is a Master Herbalist/Aromatherapist to mentor me through the process of self-study and learning to apply what I'm learning to actual cases. But, that seems an elusive goal.... Tina Paxton, MS ATFE [ATFE ] On Behalf Of Martin Thursday, January 21, 2010 5:29 AM ATFE How to distingush a quality program WAS: Re: EO and pregnancy. Tina, you have asked a question that was covered many times on the old group,but we lost most of the answers. It is very difficult to ascertain what is a quality education program. On my site there are articles which give many of the things people should look out for. I guess one of the top questions has to be " where do you reference your information and can you provide a sample " . If the references on anything supplied are to the popular aromatherapy novels then my advice is steer clear. If the reference is to a scientific study then check for yourself it it is relevant to essential oils or herbs, or to its use in aromatherapy massage or to internal use. If the research is to a study in rats, then it may have little relevance to the use of the same oil in massage. I can tell you there are many teachers who cannot tolerate being questioned and students are expected to parrot anything they are taught. As a matter of interest, if a student parrots on my course they get slapped on the wrist and marked down for it. I only want people who are prepared to think, not something modern education systems promote especially on University courses Martin ATFE , " Tina Paxton " <Frecs wrote: > > After reading Martin's website and the aforementioned thread, I again am > pondering the question: > > How does one distinguish a quality program in aromatherapy? > > I'm debating between an " official " program or simply the > buy-quality-books-and-teach-myself approach. The same program seems to exist > for herbalism as well as EO's both of which I'm interested in. > > Any thoughts? > > Tina Paxton, MS > --- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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