Certified for Training From Home?

I am very interested in completeing a Personal Training/ Fitness / Nutrional Certification from an online or at home course. Does anyone have any ingormation about any that are credible?

I received information from US Career Institute that will cover Certified Personal Fitness Trainer & Nutritional Specialist in the online/dvd/ home manual course for $500. I am intersted but do not want to waste money on a possibly meaningless certificate.


My long term goal is to work part time at a health club/ Chiropractors/ Training Facility while my kids are in school.


Any information would be appreciated. THANK YOU !
 
Hey Amylynn :)
Im in the same shoes as you...kinda anyway. I want to become a PT and know that a degree would be the best course of action and that an online-only course would probably one of the lowest quality course of action IMO. So I decided to go somewhere in between and have been doing heavy research for over 2 mos now and have narrowed down to a few diff. ones that I will probably end up going with for my PT certificate course.

AFAA - which stands for Aerobics & Fitness Assoc. of America

These guys have been around for a while and seem to be very well founded from what I have read and heard about them. The only thing I have not been to impressed about them is that it is very hard to get in touch with a live person/rep...it took about 5 days for them to return a call to me. If I was gonna just be an aerobics instructor then I would definately sign up w/afaa but as it goes they are top running for me as it is.
Total cost w/books and 3 day class is like $600+/-

ACE - which stands for American Council on Exercise

These guys also come highly recommended and also probably the highest paying CPT's in my area are from the classiest gym that requires their trainers to have this certification training to work at their gym as a PT.

some others that sound good are






HTH :)
 
hey guys!
If you are in the U.S. look into WITS

It is a 6 week course that is offered at many colleges in the states. Within the 6 weeks, you get 15 hours of lecture and 15 hours of practical instruction. There is a written and practical exam to ensure you are competant and ready to work with actual people!

They also offer/require a 20 hour internship.

Very respectable cart anf plenty of actual experience!

Just a thought!
Wes
 
I wouldn't bother with anything but NASM or the NSCA. NASM has an excellent methodology for client eval and exercise progression, and the NSCA is a continuous leader in research and practical information in strength and conditioning. The ACSM used to be very good, but I'm not too sure that I'd recommend it anymore for a "general" personal trainer (I'd still go to them for special populations work and exercise physiologist in acute-care settings). None of the others are terribly good at preparing an individual for training (the majority of them just copy what the ACSM says, anyway...I've seen the materials!). For either of those exams (NASM, NSCA) you can order the materials and prepare at home. You don't need to go through coursework, although it is offerred (for additional costs).

Of course, in the end a certification is a piece of paper that says that you passed a test. It says nothing about your ability to motivate and safely prescribe exercise. I've known some trainers with excellent academic backgrounds in ex sci and impressive certs that were horrible trainers, and I've also known trainers with little academic background and "average" certs (ACE) that are outstanding trainers. It is what you make of it...but I promise you that if you look for the "easy" way (home testing, etc, etc), you won't be very good. Learn, practice, read and research, and you'll be better than the rest.
 
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It is what you make of it...but I promise you that if you look for the "easy" way (home testing, etc, etc), you won't be very good. Learn, practice, read and research, and you'll be better than the rest.

I know you probably didnt mean to, but this statement can sound very contradicting. I think if someone really wants something they can get it in more ways than one. Im sure your very knowledgeable and probably more knowledgeable than me cuz your certified already, however I noticed that the certs that you recommended are basically the ones that you are certified in. Just trying to point out, how do you know that you dont like brocolli if you have never ate it before :) Whats your opinion on the AFAA? Or have you ever researched them before?

HEY Wes,
I notice that you are CSCS but yet you recommend the WITS...where you not satisfied with your CSCS training?
 
I know you probably didnt mean to, but this statement can sound very contradicting. I think if someone really wants something they can get it in more ways than one.
Right, that's what I was saying...I went on to say that just because you can get something the 'easy way,' that doesn't mean that you should. The sad fact is that many gyms will hire uncertified trainers (my friend works at such a gym right now, a major chain, and he's disgusted by it), so if the OP really wanted to, I'm sure that she could walk right into a gym and be hired without going through the 'trouble' of getting certified at all! That was my point: going for the 'easy way' will not produce very good results, regardless of whether or not you actually can do it that way. I'm sorry, I don't understand what was contradicting about that.

Im sure your very knowledgeable and probably more knowledgeable than me cuz your certified already
In this field, never assume that certification = knowledge...although I appreciate the vote of confidence ;)

however I noticed that the certs that you recommended are basically the ones that you are certified in.
I recommended the NSCA, which I am certified in, yes. I said that I did not recommend the ACSM, which I am certified in. I recommended the NASM, which I am not certified in, and I made no mention of USAW, which I hold a certification through (although that is a specialty certfification). I don't see that 25% of the possibilities that I spoke of as being "basically the ones that [I am] certified in"...Further, why do you think that I would choose to be certified by an organization if I didn't feel comfortable in recommending it out to others? I chose the certifications that I did for specific reasons: at the time of my first certification, the ACSM was regarded as one of the top certs in the field and came highly recommended by the gym that I was working at (the truth is, the ACSM still is one of the top certs, but I personally don't agree with many of their recommendations anymore, and find that their requirements for certification have become less stringent now that they have moved away from a live practical and into computer-based testing...as I mentioned, they are still the first choice in clinical training, IMO). I became certified through USAW when I began training athletes and team sports more regularly to become more proficient with instructing the Olympic lifts, and I sat for my CSCS when my primary responsibilites became athletic development, as well as for preparing for grad school (for which the CSCS is a known and respected entity).

Just trying to point out, how do you know that you dont like brocolli if you have never ate it before :)
Because I looked at the broccoli and found it to be spoiled and moldy ;) In all seriousness, I have looked at the study materials for a number of other certs, including the ISSA, WITS (I actually served as a clinical internship instructor for a WITS 'grad' as well, and I was not terribly impressed with the level of knowledge that was required for the exam/cert. Most of it is based on the ACSM or even worse, ACE), ACE and AFAA. I have personally known and observed trainers certified through ACE, ACSM, NSCA, ISSA, AFAA, WITS, NASM, and probably quite a few others that I'm forgetting, as well as having looked through the study materials/requirements of those certs, and the only ones that I have been consistently impressed with (read: didn't hurt their clients or regurgitate the latest Flex magazine article nonsense) was the NSCA and the NASM. Again, most ACSM certs that I have known have been good, but not terribly progressive, either...which is basically the way that the ACSM thinks, anyway.

Whats your opinion on the AFAA? Or have you ever researched them before?
Again, not impressed...although again, the individual makes the difference, not the cert. But in general, I have not been impressed by the few that I have seen.

Understand that this is not an end-all-be-all analysis of the industry or of certifications...but I have been in the industry for nearly eight years now (and have been involved in training athletes for 12, since college), and have seen a LOT of stuff in that time...these are my impressions, not fact, but I would also point out that I speak from a certain amount of experience and knowledge of the subject, too, beyond a casual observer's vantage point...
 
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Scubadude,
CSCS, in my opinion, is the best cert out there, right along side of ACSM.
I mentioned WITS because you do not need a degree (you need a BS to sit for the CSCS), yet you will get classroom lecture that follows along with the ACSM text and hands on experience before you get your cert.

If I was gonna send my mom to a trainer and it was their first client, I'd sure as heck want them to have worked with an actual person before!

:)
 
CSCS is the gold standard in the industry. Try to write for any credible magazines and they will not even consider you unless you have those magic for numbers.

ACSM has become irrelavent in my opinion. I went to their world fitness summit for 4 years in a row and finally gave up on them. I completely disagree with their philosophic approach. For example, they do not recommend ANY loaded lumbar moves (RDLs, Goodmornings, etc). In covering their asses from liabilities and assuming that their trainers they are putting out are complete nimrods with barely enough intelligence to hold their heads upright, they have created the most pussified protocols I have ever seen.

THere ARE NO BAD EXERCISES... ONLY BAD STRENGTH COACHES. If you are not competent enough to screen your client and surmise that they have a probitive back injury then you shouldn't be training.

If you can't figure out WHY they have a bad back (glutes not firing, weak hams or whatever), and follow up with progressive moves that they can do till they can safely execute those moves, then you aren't worth spending $10 on, unless you're a hot female trainer who likes to train with her hands all over the client.

Yes, most trainers suck. We get that. Don't weigh all of us down with chains and cannonballs (a la Kurt Vonnegut) just because the masses of fitness wannabes might give someone a boo-boo because they have no idea how to f*cking train someone properly, don't lump me in with them and ruin a bunch of really good exercises.

ASCM has made a horrible mistake with the direction they've taken lately, and the real trainers in the field like Cosgrove, Robertson, Cressey, and Fass will be leaving them in the dust! By the time they figure out what's happened, it will be too late to ever catch up.

So at the end of your ACSM training you can be train old people in a gym full of machines (open chain movements), and make them do them "super slow", because that will really help them develop the fast twitch tissue they're losing faster than Louisiana is losing landmass. You'll know how to periodize leg extensions! You'll know how to confuse your clients energy systems by having them do 20 minutes of cardio before they lift weights. Ah... The ACSM.

I just got my updated guidelines from them. Crap. Outside of that, what does a pero-nulceide perfusion ideal treatment protocol going to teach me about how to read my client's abilities and weaknesses.

[/rant]

whew... Sorry. :)
 
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I think if someone really wants something they can get it in more ways than one. Im sure your very knowledgeable and probably more knowledgeable than me cuz your certified already, however I noticed that the certs that you recommended are basically the ones that you are certified in.
 
You noticed that? Hm... Where did you notice or even see any of my certs to qualify that statement?

I have a cert, but none of the above. I own a gym and hire and train trainers, and have been for over 15 years, so I have some perspective that may be worth listening to. But don't listen to me... Just get out and do your own thing.
 
You noticed that? Hm... Where did you notice or even see any of my certs to qualify that statement?

I have a cert, but none of the above. I own a gym and hire and train trainers, and have been for over 15 years, so I have some perspective that may be worth listening to. But don't listen to me... Just get out and do your own thing.

Lol, she just copied scubadudes posts from a couple of months back, she's just spamming every thread on the site right now, I wouldn't take it personally :yelrotflmao:
 
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