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  • ACSM Certification: What is Right For You?

    by David Barr | Apr 15, 2020

     

    Paul Gallo ACSM

    How to earn a certification that aligns well with your personal and professional goals.

    You’ve made up your mind and you’re ready to get your first health and fitness professional certification, but how do you determine which one is best for you? For starters, you want to earn a certification that aligns well with your personal and professional goals. If you’re thinking like one of my students, you’re probably also wondering which one’s going to help you get a job?

    In the latest issue of ACSM’s Health & Fitness Journal® (HFJ), Dr. Gallo provides valuable information related to the scope and role of four certifications within ACSM, which should be a good guide to help you make your final decision. Without going into too much detail, let’s cover a few main points.

    ACSM Certifications Vanessa Kercher

    The Four Core ACSM Certifications

    ACSM-CPT

    • Role: One-on-one training
    • Clients: Healthy individuals and those who are medically cleared to exercise 
    • Proficiency: Customizing exercise programs to achieve specific health or fitness goals and meet the unique needs or ability of a client

     

    ACSM-GEI

    • Role: Lead quality group exercise sessions
    • Clients: Healthy individuals and those who are medically cleared to exercise
    • Proficiency: Motivating clients toward a common fitness goal and modifying exercises within a class to meet the unique needs or ability of a client

     

    ACSM-EP

    • Role: Conduct physical assessments and prescribe personalized exercise programs
    • Clients: Medically controlled diseases and/or disabilities
    • Proficiency: Conducting and interpreting exercise/risk assessments to develop exercise prescriptions and provide client education

     

    ACSM-CEP

    • Role: Provide prevention of disease and management of risk factors associated with disease to improve, maintain or attenuate declines in fitness and health
    • Clients: Healthy and those with medically controlled diseases and/or disabilities
    • Proficiency: Conducting and interpreting exercise/risk assessments to develop individualized exercise prescriptions and provide client education 

     

    The demand for more qualified health and fitness professionals to promote positive health behaviors to help with disease prevention and management continues to grow! Learn more about the qualifications, salaries, and job forecasts for each certification by reading Dr. Gallo’s HFJ article, A Health Fitness Professional, Group Exercise Instructor, and Clinical Exercise Physiologist Walk into a Fitness Facility. After you figure out which certification is right for you, commit to a test date to help you reach your goal!



    "The demand for more qualified health and fitness professionals to promote positive health behaviors to help with disease prevention and management continues to grow!"


    Take Aways

    The increasing demand for more qualified health and fitness professionals to promote positive health behaviors to help with disease prevention and management continues to grow! Learn more about the qualifications, salaries and job forecasts for each certification by reading Dr. Gallo’s article, “A Health Fitness Professional, Group Exercise Instructor, and Clinical Exercise Physiologist Walk into a Fitness Facility” in the recent March/April issue of HFJ. After you figure out which certification is right for you, commit to a test date to help you reach your goal!

    Become an Alliance Member or Student Member to access the full ACSM's Health & Fitness Journal® library

    ACSM Education Opportunities March April 2020


    Article based on: 
    Gallo, P. A Health Fitness Professional, Group Exercise Instructor, and Clinical Exercise Physiologist Walk into a Fitness Facility. ACSMs Health Fit J. 2020; 24 (2): 40-2


    Author:

    Vanessa Kercher 
    Vanessa M. Kercher, Ph.D., SSC, M.Ed., ACSM-EP, BESS, is a Clinical Assistant Professor in the Kinesiology Department for the School of Public Health at Indiana University. Dr. Kercher's research passion focuses on helping individuals optimize their physical activity experiences to promote sustainable, positive health behaviors. She serves as the digital editor of ACSM’s Health & Fitness Journal®. 

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  • Wheat, Microbiome and Health | CEC Course

    by David Barr | Apr 14, 2020

    Microbiome Health CEC ACSM

    Dr. Whisner explores how to advise clients who are experiencing some of the difficult symptoms of food intolerance so they improve their quality of life and well-being.

    About the course:

    This course includes an online video from ACSM’s Health & Fitness Summit and a corresponding online quiz. All course content will be presented to you electronically upon completion of your purchase. This includes all videos, quizzes, and certificates (certificates awarded upon successful completion of the quizzes).

    Available ACSM CECs 3.0

    Overview of the course - Wheat, Microbiome and Health | The Science Behind Gut Health:

    Gluten sensitivity and Celiac Disease have been increasing in prevalence over the past 20 years. Numerous celebrities, talk show hosts, athletes and authors have touted the benefits of a gluten-free diet for the non-Celiac population touting benefits ranging from weight loss to curing heart disease and diabetes.

    For some, wheat and gluten-avoidance is a solution to life-long digestive woes. But, is this an approach that everyone with poor gut health should take? What other factors might be involved in the complicated relationship between food and digestive health?

    Purchase and earn CECs


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  • Inclusive Fitness Certification, Resources and Case Study

    by David Barr | Apr 09, 2020

    Inclusive Fitness ACSM Kelly Bonner Certification

    The Kelly Bonner story: How I got involved with inclusive exercise and what drives me today.


    Resources and Free CEC Courses Listed Below


    An average trainer creates a program they hope their client will enjoy. A good trainer gets to know their client, their likes, what they can do, and how far to push them without pushing them away. They create a program they know their client is going to love. The only thing you need to train someone with a disability is a good trainer.

     I grew up loving movement and the science behind it. While all my high school friends were taking marine biology so they could have class at the beach, I was sitting in a semidark classroom that reeked of formaldehyde, taking anatomy and physiology and loving every minute of it. In college, I knew exactly what I wanted to major in from day one, but I didn’t just want to learn about it; I wanted to practice it as well.

    As a college athlete, I gained my freshman 15 and then dropped it during two-a-days where trips to the restroom became an act of faith that something would be there to catch me as I fell because my quads were too shot to do the work themselves. Later, when it was time for my internship and as an athlete juggling classes, practices, and everything else that comes with college life, I signed up for the one closest to our campus, which just so happened to be at a gym for people with physical disabilities. I didn’t know the first thing about disabled people, but I figured I could always change locations the next semester when my sport was out of season if I felt like I was in over my head. Little did I know that walking in that door the first day would ignite a new passion.

    Kelly Bonner Inclusive Fitness Marathon ACSMDuring the first few days, I met an older gentleman missing a leg, a guy about my age who had recently acquired quadriplegia, a woman who was just starting to realize the effects of her ataxia, and a man who only had the use of one side of his body after experiencing a stroke. Everyone there had a different story. Some were born with their disabilities, some acquired them through more traumatic events, and others aged into them. And everyone there was just like every other client in every other gym. Some were there to lose weight, some were athletes looking to improve their game, and some just wanted to maintain their current level of independence or fitness. Some were there to exercise, some were there to socialize, and some, it seemed, were just there to complain.

    It’s been more than 20 years since that first day and, looking back, I can remember being intimidated the first time I had to work with someone one-on-one, unsure if I would know what to do. But I quickly realized all it took was for me to be a good trainer and to put into practice the things I was learning in school. But more than that initial intimidation or fear of the unknown, I remember those moments that forever changed me as a personal trainer.

    I remember working with someone who had been injured in the military and helping him see he could still be active with his kids. That was when I realized that what I do isn’t  just about what happens in the gym.

    Or the time I trained a woman to compete in her first 5K from a wheelchair and I realized that, for the most part, training for a 5K was the same seated or standing. The goal is simply to cross the finish line.

    Inclusive Exercise Kelly Bonner ACSM

    I also recall being new to the world of disability sports and excitedly telling a young guy with a new spinal cord injury about how he qualified to play. He quickly put me in my place and told me that wasn’t something he was excited about at the time. Thankfully that guy forgave my ignorance and is now my husband of 10 years, but I realized that day that not everyone is in the same place when it comes to how they feel about their disability.

    Finally, I remember the time I took a client outside to my SUV and helped her learn how to transfer into my car so that she could ride with anyone she wanted, including her son. I realized that when I stopped and listened long enough to the real needs of a client, I could create a program that not only made them strong enough to do everyday activities, but one that changed their life.

    I could go on and on. I didn’t think of my job as special or unique; I thought of everyone else’s as boring. I mean, how hard is it to design an exercise program for someone who can move all their limbs? Sarcasm aside, did you know 1 in 4 people in the U.S. has a disability? With those numbers it seems it would be hard not to serve individuals with a disability, not to mention a poor business decision.

    Kelly Bonner Inclusive Fitness FamilyAfter years of working at Lakeshore Foundation and loving it, I was approached by the associate director of the National Center on Health Physical Activity and Disability (NCHPAD) to come work for them. NCHPAD had just moved from Chicago, Illinois to our campus in Birmingham, Alabama, and I was skeptical at first. Not only did I love my job at Lakeshore, but I had never had a desk job and didn’t know how I would fare. After initially only agreeing to part-time work, I soon discovered I was hooked and wanted more.

    With NCHPAD, I was able to take what I had learned on the fitness floor for the previous 15 years and put it out on a national platform and help other trainers see that working with clients with a disability really wasn’t all that different. My years of being an adjunct professor at my alma mater, Samford University, also proved useful in this new position as I started taking on more and more training opportunities. Now I am the Project Coordinator of Training and Education for the National Center and lead all of our training projects, including the Inclusive Fitness Trainings that correspond with the ACSM/NCHPAD Certified Inclusive Fitness Trainer (ACSM/NCHPAD-CIFT) certification.

    I still wake up and love what I do every single day. I think the most important thing I have learned during the last 20 years is that a person with a disability is just a person  and to be able to train them just takes a good trainer. Be respectful and treat them like you would like to be treated. Is it really all that inspiring that they decided to come to the gym today or are they just like you and me? And don’t take their parking spot or their bathroom stall; we have options, they don’t. Now, go out and be a good trainer.

    If you would like to learn more about NCHPAD check out these links:

    What is NCHPAD: video

    NCHPAD: website

    Resources for Fitness Professionals: video and web-based

    CEC Courses:

    Disability Education | 1.0 CECs
    Fitness Professionals | 1.0 CECs
    Fitness Assessments for Individuals who use a Wheelchair | 1.0 CECs

    ACSM/NCHPAD Certified Inclusive Fitness Trainer


    Author:

    Kelly Bonner ACSM Story
    Kelly Bonner
    Project Coordinator of Training and Education, National Center on Health Physical Activity and Disability












    View ACSM Specialty Certifications
  • Autism Exercise Specialist | #2 Most Popular CEC Course

    by David Barr | Apr 07, 2020

    ACSM Autism Specialist Course

     

    About ACSM's #2 most popular CEC course:

    Become an ACSM/Exercise Connection Autism Exercise Specialist certificate holder: an exercise professional, physical or adapted physical education teacher, physical therapist, recreational therapist, or special education professional who understands the needs and strategies used with autism when implementing an individual or group exercise program in a gym, home, or classroom setting.

    This course includes a demographic survey, online videos, PowerPoints, journal articles, a corresponding online quiz and a course evaluation. All course content will be presented to you electronically upon completion of your purchase. This includes all viewing and reading material, quizzes, and certificates (certificates awarded upon successful completion of the quizzes).


    Available ACSM CECs 6.0


    Learning Objectives for the ACSM/EC Autism Exercise Specialist:

    • use standard health assessment tools and when available, school-based or private assessments, to develop the foundation of client's exercise program
    • develop exercise programs and demonstrate exercises by applying evidence-based teaching strategies for those with autism
    • lead and motivate individuals in both an individual and group setting
    • use various instructional (e.g., visual supports, videos, technology) strategies to promote physical activity
    • create a positive exercise experience and enhance social skills
    • communicate to autism parents, special educators and other professionals the value of exercise for the autism community

    Purchase and earn CECs


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  • 10 Fitness App Features | Download

    by David Barr | Apr 06, 2020

    10 Fitness App Features ACSM
    ACSM Download: 10 Fitness App Features | Infographic

    A simple and easy to use resource for optimizing app purchases or development.


    Download from our Resource Library

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