RMIT University in Victoria, Australia, is to launch a new online Master Of Wellness Program in June 2008.
The programme will include a ‘nested’ Graduate Certificate and Graduate Diploma and will offer post-graduate pathways for people wishing to develop a wide range of wellness skills.
Topics will include health enhancement, complementary medicine and business practices. To enter at Graduate Certificate level, students are required to have a Bachelor Degree or equivalent, or have an Advanced Diploma and three years of industry experience.
The programme will be open to international students and can be taken fully online, as it is only some elective modules that require attendance at face-to-face workshops.
Professor Marc Cohen, chief designer of the new programme, said: “This programme has been designed to cater for a wide range of interests with graduates gaining personal wellness skills as well as a professional qualification.”
Over the next two years, RMIT plans to add additional units on yoga teaching, detoxification, energy medicine and design.
RMIT University in Victoria, Australia, is to launch a new online Master Of Wellness Program in June 2008.
Strength training is evolving,
driven by changing consumer
preferences. Julie Cramer talks
to innovators about how their
products are meeting this demand
For every member with a tripod and a big following, there are others irritated at the way equipment is being hogged or wary they’ll be in the background on someone’s Insta feed. Do influencers offer valuable, free marketing or are they just a nuisance? Kath Hudson finds out how operators are responding
If the health service is to
survive, we must recognise
that it is a disease service
– and that wellbeing rests with
us, says the activity advocate
and healthy ageing champion.
He talks to Kate Cracknell
As the entrepreneur who started Wexer, Fresh Fitness, Fitness DK and Repeat, as well as being a former elite athlete, Rasmus Ingerslev’s life looked perfect from the outside, but onthe inside it was a different story. He talks to Kath Hudson about healing old wounds
CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an
on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right
client in under 10 seconds.
For decades, strength training equipment at commercial fitness facilities has remained
virtually unchanged: rows of pin-selected weight stacks, heavy plates, and racks of
dumbbells. i-Strength is here to change the game with its adaptive strength training system.
UK Active has announced the next phase of its Digital Futures programme, supporting organisations
across the physical activity sector to develop their digital capability.
RMIT University in Victoria, Australia, is to launch a new online Master Of Wellness Program in June 2008.
The programme will include a ‘nested’ Graduate Certificate and Graduate Diploma and will offer post-graduate pathways for people wishing to develop a wide range of wellness skills.
Topics will include health enhancement, complementary medicine and business practices. To enter at Graduate Certificate level, students are required to have a Bachelor Degree or equivalent, or have an Advanced Diploma and three years of industry experience.
The programme will be open to international students and can be taken fully online, as it is only some elective modules that require attendance at face-to-face workshops.
Professor Marc Cohen, chief designer of the new programme, said: “This programme has been designed to cater for a wide range of interests with graduates gaining personal wellness skills as well as a professional qualification.”
Over the next two years, RMIT plans to add additional units on yoga teaching, detoxification, energy medicine and design.
RMIT University in Victoria, Australia, is to launch a new online Master Of Wellness Program in June 2008.
Strength training is evolving,
driven by changing consumer
preferences. Julie Cramer talks
to innovators about how their
products are meeting this demand
For every member with a tripod and a big following, there are others irritated at the way equipment is being hogged or wary they’ll be in the background on someone’s Insta feed. Do influencers offer valuable, free marketing or are they just a nuisance? Kath Hudson finds out how operators are responding
If the health service is to
survive, we must recognise
that it is a disease service
– and that wellbeing rests with
us, says the activity advocate
and healthy ageing champion.
He talks to Kate Cracknell
As the entrepreneur who started Wexer, Fresh Fitness, Fitness DK and Repeat, as well as being a former elite athlete, Rasmus Ingerslev’s life looked perfect from the outside, but onthe inside it was a different story. He talks to Kath Hudson about healing old wounds
Collaborations with the medical profession and greater aspirations around wellbeing are creating a need for more experts in our sector. It’s time to reboot our thinking around the workforce
Record market penetration in the UK
fitness sector masks a deeper shift
around consumer engagement, according
to a report from Grant Thornton and
UK Active, as Liz Terry reports
With corporately-owned clubs,
franchise networks, investments
and proprietary tech, Viva Leisure’s
ecosystem is redefining how
gyms scale and generate revenue.
Its CEO speaks to Kate Cracknell
CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an
on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right
client in under 10 seconds.
For decades, strength training equipment at commercial fitness facilities has remained
virtually unchanged: rows of pin-selected weight stacks, heavy plates, and racks of
dumbbells. i-Strength is here to change the game with its adaptive strength training system.
UK Active has announced the next phase of its Digital Futures programme, supporting organisations
across the physical activity sector to develop their digital capability.