Coach Training EDU offers two different levels of certification. The first is an Associate Certified Coach. You qualify for this credential by successfully completing a 1.0 level coach training program. The following are the available credentials: Associate Certified Academic Life Coach Associate Certified Wellness Coach Associate Certified Executive Coach The second is a Life Coach Certification. You qualify for this credential by successfully completing any 1.0 level programs and the 2.0 Coach Training Program. The following are the available credentials: Certified Academic Life Coach Certified Wellness Coach Certified Executive Coach These levels of certification follow the ICF’s structure for certification and reflect the difference between an Associate Certified Coach (ACC) and a Professional Certified Coach (PCC). For more details on the requirements I’ve been in the ALC 1.0 course since January of this year, and the following is the most recent and most valuable lesson I’ve learned as an academic Life Coach Training: My judgments about the way adults parent their child get in the way of me coaching the child effectively. The mother of a student-client shared with me that over two, consecutive weekends; her husband had physically disciplined my client. As she described the incidents, I felt a shock go through my body, as if I were watching a disturbing scene in a movie. The mother assured me that she and her husband had called the police immediately after the punishments, and asked them to interview their son to be sure that they were within the state’s laws for parents’ rights around corporal punishment. The child had reported the first punishment to a teacher at school, and the social worker followed it up. My client’s mother has an M.A. in Social Work, so she knew exactly what to expect. She and her husband were transparent with the authorities, and it turns out that they didn’t break any laws.
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