Observation: Continuing Education requirements, in the field of Massage Therapy, are like
BBQ.
- The requirements and ingredients depend on where you are located
- Sometimes the requirements/recipes are fancy, and sometimes "less is more"
- Every group has its die-hard fans and its persistent detractors
It's interesting that we have such, uh, well, diversity in the CEUs and licensing requirements from state to state. Our national certification isn't national. . . blah, blah, blah.
Since I'm "nationally certified" and also certified by the Virginia Board of Nursing, it seems like I am on a
million mailing lists for Continuing Ed classes. Almost every day, I get tons of emails describing one modality after the other. And tons of snail mail. . . some of it comes to my home, some comes to the office, sometimes by carrier pigeon.
I'm holding out for the singing telegrams.
There's no shortage of choices. Webinars! Study at home! Get your CEUs before the deadline! Is your license up for renewal? Save your career with my technique! Workshops in DC! Workshops in Norfolk! Workshops in Hawaii!
(Hey, wait, don't throw that one away)
But I know you've also noticed. . . there is a
huge variety when it comes to the quality and value of the classes. And the commitment. Remember in high school, when everyone knew what classes were good for an "Easy A"? Do we have "Easy A" massage courses? Do those classes really serve our profession?
I recall a massage school classmate declaring,
"I'm only taking the classes that will make me a better therapist." Great statement; but a few weeks later, this classmate was removed from the school for inappropriate behavior. Guess they didn't think the ethics class was important.