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Hello. Just finished my "national certification examinations" in the USA, and thought I'd share a little thought or two...
The US, like the UK does not regulate Aromatherapy. 38 states regulates massage therapy, so the Aromatherapy courses do avoid the sense of teaching massage, although most would give a routine for the use of massage with aromatherapy.
However, in an attempt to "Raise the bar" and start a process of maybe having national, or a patchwork of states regulating the professions, the National Association of Holistic Aromatherapy (NAHA) a voluntary professional body, instituted the Aromatherapy Registration Council (ARC), which administers a national certification exam. Passing that allows one to use the title "Registered Aromatherapist" for a period of 5 years, after which, you'd have to requalify.
It was a 4 hour, 250 multiple choice question exam, drawing on the question bank of a number of the aromatherapy schools.
I always wondered how they would assess people on the uses of oils - after all, as we all know, the books all differ in terms of what the therapeutic functions of the oils are. Even bigger problem was - which oils? NAHA had stipulated which oils must be studied for Level I training, but not for Level II, and you needed to do Level II before you could sit for the ARC.
Well - when I got into the hall, and saw the paper, I realised how. They basically ducked the issue, but only assessing obvious uses. Or mis-uses. Questions were like, "Which of the oils are by tradition, LEAST likely to be helpful to someone who has high blood pressure..." one of which was Rosemary. There were questions about genus and families of various oils. Questions about general storage and administration abounded.
All in all, did it make me feel a better aromatherapist as compared to when I graduated from college from my 340 hour course?
I don't think so. But what it does is to have an external test of your knowledge, and lend a little more credibility than an internal examination would.
I wonder if the AOC will also think about instituting a separate examination, on top of the examinations of each of our own sponsoring bodies. It will be a way for it to fund itself, but how many of us want to re-prove ourselves again?
The US, like the UK does not regulate Aromatherapy. 38 states regulates massage therapy, so the Aromatherapy courses do avoid the sense of teaching massage, although most would give a routine for the use of massage with aromatherapy.
However, in an attempt to "Raise the bar" and start a process of maybe having national, or a patchwork of states regulating the professions, the National Association of Holistic Aromatherapy (NAHA) a voluntary professional body, instituted the Aromatherapy Registration Council (ARC), which administers a national certification exam. Passing that allows one to use the title "Registered Aromatherapist" for a period of 5 years, after which, you'd have to requalify.
It was a 4 hour, 250 multiple choice question exam, drawing on the question bank of a number of the aromatherapy schools.
I always wondered how they would assess people on the uses of oils - after all, as we all know, the books all differ in terms of what the therapeutic functions of the oils are. Even bigger problem was - which oils? NAHA had stipulated which oils must be studied for Level I training, but not for Level II, and you needed to do Level II before you could sit for the ARC.
Well - when I got into the hall, and saw the paper, I realised how. They basically ducked the issue, but only assessing obvious uses. Or mis-uses. Questions were like, "Which of the oils are by tradition, LEAST likely to be helpful to someone who has high blood pressure..." one of which was Rosemary. There were questions about genus and families of various oils. Questions about general storage and administration abounded.
All in all, did it make me feel a better aromatherapist as compared to when I graduated from college from my 340 hour course?
I don't think so. But what it does is to have an external test of your knowledge, and lend a little more credibility than an internal examination would.
I wonder if the AOC will also think about instituting a separate examination, on top of the examinations of each of our own sponsoring bodies. It will be a way for it to fund itself, but how many of us want to re-prove ourselves again?