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I don't think it is necessary. There wasn't any study to see if it was needed. The only questionairres I ever saw already made the assumption that it was needed. That is how the whole thing started in the first place - without any evidence it was needed. I think they need to go back to the drawing board and do some research as to what is needed.
Julie
I'm not sure that entry-level licensing and certification nation-wide is robust enough yet so launching into a program of 'advanced certification' is premature. Whether the advanced certification is even needed is another question, which Julie has raised.
As for the proposal of leaving advanced certification to CEU providers, my opinion is that would result in a real mess. I think the variable quality of CE offerings is highlighted by the NCBTMB starting to review the CE Provider and course approval process. That certainly needs a clean-up first.
Yes, I think you are spot-on on both points. Entry-level is so ill-defined in the States that anything that builds on it cannot rely on it as a firm foundation. And if everyone invents their own "advanced certification", it will be like the story of the Tower of BabeI.
I think it is needed in the long term, but that is only my opinion--as Julie points out, the study this was based on just went ahead and assumed it. But even though I think it is needed, if done incorrectly, it will only amplify existing problems.
Matthew Stewart said:
I'm not sure that entry-level licensing and certification nation-wide is robust enough yet so launching into a program of 'advanced certification' is premature. Whether the advanced certification is even needed is another question, which Julie has raised.
As for the proposal of leaving advanced certification to CEU providers, my opinion is that would result in a real mess. I think the variable quality of CE offerings is highlighted by the NCBTMB starting to review the CE Provider and course approval process. That certainly needs a clean-up first.
Since the MBLEX came out and took the states by storm the NCBTMB has kept trying to reinvent itself and branch out, probably to get back the massive amount of revenue it has lost due to the MBLEX being so effective and popular, this just seems to be it's latest attempt.
I agree with many that in the long run it can be a good thing but I do not think we are at a point where we need it, or it would do much good. I would much rather have a specialist or an organization devoted to a specific type of massage say I am advanced in their technique then an overall certification board that is not specialized.
With the NCBMTB's latest announcement that I saw about advanced certification it makes me wonder if they are going to divide their CEU approval status into two tiers and the only way to be in the higher tier as a provider is for you to have passed it as well as the only students who can take the higher tier classes, are those who have passed it.
I am going to be the first person to take it (really, they're letting me be numero uno). And I will of course let everyone know what I think of it after I do.
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