Do I need to be Certified to be a Fitness Professional?

If you are interested to know the answer to this question, congratulation, you are at the right place! This article will cover this topic and more. Such as what does it mean to be certified, why is it important to us and how it will help you in terms of your chosen career.

More importantly, the question we asked ourselves is, how worth it for us to invest our time and money in certification and certificates? What significance would it bring to you in relation with your business and to your client? Hopefully, by going this article, your answers will be answered.

1. What is a Certification?

The primary focus of a professional certification is to provide an assessment of the knowledge, skills, and/or abilities required for competent performance within an occupational or professional role or in performing specific work-related tasks and responsibilities. When the certification is awarded, it designates that the individual has demonstrated the requisite, work-related knowledge, skills, or abilities required to work professionally within that field.

2. Why Certification (Certified)?

A certification (or being certified) aims to protect the public from harm by assessing whether the professional meets the established levels of mastery or competence in the knowledge, skills and abilities necessary to perform the job in a safe, effective and competent manner. Certification is also intended to ensure standardized practice by professionals within the field who perform within a defined scope of practice.

3. Certified vs Ability. How do you translate “certification into ability”?

Being ‘certified’ means the candidate has met or exceeds established levels of competency deemed necessary and appropriate to work as a professional personal trainer with minimum or no supervision. The certification assessment is a valid process involving an examination and completed assignments that reflect the job demands and responsibilities of the personal trainer and takes place after the individual has had the opportunity to acquire the targeted knowledge, skills and/or abilities. The assessment is conducted in a standardized manner in a secure, proctored environment.

‘Ability’ refers to the physical capability to execute said knowledge, skills and/or abilities in the real world to meet the needs and expectations of the client in a safe and effective manner. The process of translating ‘certification into ability’ only occurs through practice and experience, which should be an integral component if the certification preparation process.

4. Why Continuing Education? Certification vs Certificate.

Certification is also intended to measure or enhance continued mastery and competence through a recertification or renewal requirement. This implies that the certification is time limited (i.e., it will lapse or expire at the end of a predetermined time period if the recertification or renewal requirements are not met). In order to maintain the credential, the candidate must engage in, and complete specified activities designed to measure or enhance continued competence.

This differs significantly from a certificate which only reflects the accomplishment of intended learning outcomes from a course or program. The certificate provides education and training of additional skills to grow and develop professionally. When a certificate is awarded, it simply designates that the individual has completed the required education or training and it is not subject to any renewal or recertification process.

5. What is Accreditation? Why is it Important?

Accreditation is a validation process whereby the certification process (i.e., materials, educational curriculum, etc) meet defined standards of excellence for a specific job practice. It is meant to provide assurance and confidence to the public and employers. However, it is important to recognize that accreditation standards are limited to the process of identifying the job-related knowledge, skills and abilities, how scope of practice is defined and how the certification preparation and examination process are conducted. It does not regulate the educational content nor the teaching curriculum of preparing the future professional for certification. This helps explain why some courses are considered better than others.

6. Who Performs the Accreditation?

Various internal, third-part agencies have been established by governments or trade organizations to ensure the competency of professionals within a specific field. In the Unites States for example, the Institute for Credentialing Excellence, operating under the National Commission for Certifying Agencies (NCCA) is the primary accreditation agency for allied health professions operating within the US which includes personal training. US Reps is a registry for any professional holding an US-accredited certification.

However, the standards used within the US or other nations do not necessarily reflect standards or scope of practice for practicing professionals in other nations (e.g., Malaysia). Subsequently, FEA is built on the NCCA standards, but then customized to fit the unique needs and practices of Asian nations, making it more relevant and appropriate for practices professionals within that region.

 

7. Are FEA Courses Accredited?

Although the FEA CFP certification courses are not accredited by the NCCA because they are not intended for the US market, they do follow the same design, development and delivery programs as US-accredited certification agencies. Because of this, FEA offers a 3-day bridging course for all CFP graduates to prepare the individual to sit for US-based, NCCA-accredited personal training certification. This bridging course is unique to FEA because of how closely its certification preparation process aligns with the accredited US certifications.

8. How are Certifications and the Fitness Industry Regulated?

In some more developed countries, certifications and the fitness industry are self-regulated, by organizations rather than the government like the Registry of Exercise Professionals (REPS). To date however, no countries in Asia have any established organization or government agency to regulate certifications or the fitness industry. What this means is that the opportunity for many inferior products, practices and programs exists which must be avoided. In the absence of independent regulation, FEA has developed its own standards of self-regulation by following established the same policies as US agencies and is now recognized as a premier certification and continuing education organization.

9. What is Recognition? Why is it Important?

Recognition is the equivalent to an acknowledgement within an industry or field. In the context of whether the certification or the certificate is recognized, it is referring to its acceptance and validity by educational organizations, employers and countries.

This is important because it reflects the value of the education or course which is critical in both practice and the hiring process.

Sometimes the term “international recognition” is used for marketing purposes, but it is also important to note that this term can be ambiguous because it depends upon the individual employer’s or country’s acceptance. For example, the American Council on Exercise (ACE) is well recognised in U.S and throughout most of Asia, but not necessarily in the UAE and Australia. In this case, the term “recognition” may simply mean “heard of” which does not imply value.

10. Are FEA Courses Approved and Recognised?

Yes, as part of our commitment to excellence and providing best-in-class
education throughout Asia and its neighbouring regions, our continuing education courses are all ACE-approved as continuing education units (CEUs). To become ACE-approved, our content and our instructors meet the ACE’s standards that are set by the International Association for Continuing Education and Training (IACET), an independent organization that developed the original Continuing Education Unit (CEU). This ensures the validity and reliability of the educational content.

Because of this achievement, many employers throughout Asia recognise FEA certification and certificates as bonafide and legimitate.

It is the hope of FEA that you understand the importance of being a certified fitness professional, not only for yourself and your clients but to the fitness industry as a whole.

Jerrican Tan, the founder of Fitness Edutraining Asia, believes fitness professionals in Asia have a huge potential to grow due to their attitude towards clients and their passion for fitness. This has inspired him to make learning and education applied, relevant and fun to fitness professionals through Fitness Edutraining.

Through Fitness Edutraining, candidates show better capability in managing clients, demonstrate stronger ability to comprehend content expressed in textbooks and continuing education while enjoying higher pass rates in international standard fitness certifications like ACE, ACSM and NSCA.

Check out the video below from the man himself, to understand the difference between certification and certificate.