hi gman,
which course are you doing,
i take your point about the mismatched training that is out there and this is one of the reasons that state regulation would be a beneifit to the industry. however I think that some people make assumptions with out knowing other peoples history. I for example am nutritionally trained to level 5, have formal grammar school education toA level in 5 subjects, including the sciences. Iam fully qualified as a master butcher, hold catering qualifications which put me in the top2% of chefs in the country.(previous career)level 3 fitness industry advanced gym trainer. I hold advanced diplomas in sports nutrition and sports therapy, coaching quals in football,basketball, SAQ advanced trainer, FA referee. I coach at county level at present and looking to join up with england u16.17 coaching earlynext year, but at present am sidelined due to shoulder replacement.
Teaching qualifications from 3 industries.(previous career again).
Personal circumstances have prevented me taking the degree route but I feel that I am suitably qualified through the university of life and can bring positive contributions to my chosen career. I was due to further my career with a physio degree starting sept 05, then decided after advice to change back to my sports development and coaching starting last sept. This has been sidelined to accomodate an oppotunity that came my way in the summer, I do however continue with my education and have just enroled on C+G 7307 for the new year. I do have a busy life with 5 kids and 2 businesses jointly ran with my wife.
with regards to the AHG forum, from the information I have rec' it has been out of action for a couple of weeks since the site was updated and admin access was lost, attempts to get back online by end of novemeber are being made at present.
I had a meeting this week with a friend from CSP who informed me that 97% of this years physio graduates will not find work in physio this year, hence the reason I decided not to pursue that avenue. I have also found from personal experience that doing a 2/3/4 year degree in sports therapy is sometimes no better than an intensive short advanced diploma course, one of which is equivalent to foundation degree or higher diploma, and accepted by SSt at full member level.
I offer advice based on personal experience, and do not comment or give recommendation about courses I have not completed, I accept that others may disagree with my opinion but that is why this is such a good discussion forum from which to seek advice, there are lots of good quality posts here from a wealth of experience and backgrounds.
Best regards for your chosen career path ,
Gaz