Posts Tagged ‘training’

Teacher Training Scholarships

If you’ve always wanted to become a yoga teacher but the stars haven’t aligned to make it possible, this might be the opportunity you’ve been waiting for.

Yoga Works, the yoga studio chain with 23 studios in California and New York, and Zobha, the yoga clothing company, are offering a need-based yoga teacher training scholarship in January 2010. This pilot program will be for the Yoga Works 200-hour teacher training at the new Walnut Creek, California location (that’s near San Francisco, for those of you who aren’t familiar). “ The scholarship
will be available to individuals who are excellent candidates for the program,
but may not have the means to make it a reality,” said a recent press release.
When I learn more about the application process, I’ll be sure to let you know.

Other teacher training scholarships (Click the links for more info.):
YogaBasics.com awards a teacher training scholarship for $600 twice a year.
Scholarships are available for Yoga Journal conferences.

Economy Got You Down? Head for the Hills.

If we’ve learned anything from this recession, it’s that yoga is not a “luxury” expenditure but an important necessity for many who have found ways to stretch their (already thin) dollars to make it yoga class. In fact, many studios are noticing an increase in attendance! Yoga students see layoffs as their perfect opportunity to finally enroll in a teacher training.

Now, the NY Times is reporting that unemployed yogis are finding a way to immerse themselves in their practice without breaking the bank–by moving into an ashram for a residency work-exchange program. That’s right. Their former employers (and the crummy economy) gave these yogis the freedom to leave their homes and everyday lives. The ashrams, in exchange for a little karma yoga washing dishes or preparing food, gave them the opportunity to study for cheap.

However, as Yehnemsah Oneha of Ananda Ashram in New York warns, the ashram’s immersion program is intended for deep spiritual study and contemplation, not hiding out from the world. “If you’re applying because you can’t deal with life, that’s not a good motivation,” she said.

What do you think? Is a long visit to an ashram a good idea for the unemployed?

Read the whole story on:http://blogs.yogajournal.com/yogabuzz/

All Together Now

It’s not news that states are cracking down on yoga teacher training programs and asking (in some instances demanding) that yoga schools pay the same licensing fees vocational schools like hairdressing and massage therapy schools pay. After Michigan gave yoga schools two weeks to pay up back in March, Virginia and New York quickly followed suit. Obviously studio owners take exception to the licensing fee, and some have even had to close their doors because they couldn’t afford it.

However, studio owners and teachers in New York have decided to fight back, according to a recent article in the NY Times. Nearly 100 teachers and studio owners from all different styles of yoga have formed the Yoga Association of New York. “Within days, Joseph P. Frey, an associate commissioner with the [NY] State Education Department,
said in an interview that the department would suspend the licensing
effort, allow the classes to continue and instead lobby for legislation
adding yoga to a list of activities that are exempt from regulation,” reported the Times.

Read the whole story on:http://blogs.yogajournal.com/yogabuzz/

Yoga Robotics

This video made me chuckle, so I decided to share it with you. It looks like it was produced to give It’s Yoga in Utah some publicity for it’s Teacher Training Program. Would a video like this make you consider signing on for a teacher training?

Read the whole story on:http://blogs.yogajournal.com/yogabuzz/

Mindfulness Techniques Relieve Stress

A study at West Virginia University found mindfulness training exercises such as yoga, controlled breathing, meditation, and tai chi can help people handle stressful situations, according to an article on CNN.com.

The study followed 103 participants, half of which were given written instructions on how to manage stress while the other half practiced mindfulness techniques. Lead investigator Kimberly Williams said they found those who received the mindfulness training “had significantly less daily hassles, psychological distress and significantly fewer medical symptoms” —like lower blood pressure and fewer aches and pains—than those who were handed a pamphlet.

The story doesn’t say what was written on that pamphlet, but I think most yoga practitioners agree that yoga, pranayama, and meditation help manage stress. Do you agree?

Read the whole story on:http://blogs.yogajournal.com/yogabuzz/