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Stratford Career Institute
Canadian Correspondence School
Funeral Director Training
Stratford Career Institute's Funeral Service Training prepares students for administrative positions in this unique and specialized field. The funeral director training program covers a wide variety of subjects including grief psychology, bereavement counseling, business fundamentals particular to this industry, and the history, theory and practice of embalming and restorative arts.
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Today’s student preparing for a career in funeral service must study subjects in three broad areas: a social science focus in which grief psychology and bereavement counseling form a major component; the traditional technical focus, including embalming, restorative art and related sciences; and a business management focus to begin preparation for ownership and management. Now, with the help of the Stratford Funeral Service Education Program, you can train at home, and gain the knowledge you need to become a funeral service professional.
You will find the training materials thorough, readable, and highly practical in nature. They have been written and prepared by some of the foremost authorities in the field of funeral service education, professionals with a wealth of practical experience and the gift for sharing their insights with students.
Students find the Stratford study method to be a positive and practical way to obtain important funeral service / director training. Through guided independent study, you proceed at your own pace, working in the comfort of your home, yet with a qualified instructor always just a toll-free phone call away.
Take up to two years to complete your course or earn your diploma in less than a year!
Stratford Career Institute is an innovative leader in the field of distance learning in Canada. With thousands of students world-wide, SCI has earned its reputation as a leading authority in career training.
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Stratford's funeral service school training program covers:
- A Response to Contemporary Funeral Practices
- Accounting
- Administration of the Funeral Home
- Anatomical Considerations
- Arrangements for Police, Firefighters, Military and Public Dignitaries
- Attitudes and Customs for Cremation
- Bereavement Aftercare:
- Burial
- Burial at Sea
- Care and Disposition of Human Remains
- Cavity Embalming
- Cemeteries Acts
- Children: Making Sense of Separation and Loss
- Circumstantial Factors Influencing Grief
- Communications with the Public, Coroner and Police
- Comparing and Contrasting Reactions to Loss
- Contemporary Issues Influencing Bereavement Aftercare
- Coordinating Resources and Organizations for the Dying Patient
- Coroners Acts
- Counseling Techniques for Helping the Bereaved
- Cremation
- Cultural Attitudes Toward Death
- Cultural Traditions and Religious Rites
- Death Awareness and Anxiety
- Death-Agonal and Pre-embalming Changes
- Delayed Embalming
- Discolorations
- Distribution and Diffusion of Arterial Solution
- Effect of Drugs on the Embalming Process
- Embalming Analysis
- Embalming Chemicals
- Embalming Vessel Sites and Selections
- Embalming for Delayed Viewing
- Embalming: Social, Psychological and Ethical Considerations
- Financial Statements and Other Financial Matters
- Fundamentals of Embalming
- Funeral Arrangements
- Funeral Directors and Establishments Acts
- Funeral Service Administration
- General Body Considerations
- History of Funeral Services
- Human Resource Management
- Injection and Drainage Techniques
- Interactions with the Bereaved
- Issues for the Client and the Death Care Professional
- Issues for the Death Care Professional
- Jewish Funerals
- Legal Implications for the Dying Patient and the Family
- Legal Requirements and Issues for Funeral Directors
- Management Functions and Decision-Making
- Management Issues
- Manifestations of Grief
- Marketing, Pricing and Promotion
- Methods of Final Disposition
- Models of Bereavement Aftercare
- Moisture Considerations
- Non-Religious Funeral Services
- North American Christian Funerals
- Other Religious Denominations
- Overview of the Theory and Practice of Embalming
- Paperwork
- Personal and Public Health Considerations
- Preparation of Autopsied Bodies
- Preparation of Organ and Tissue Donors
- Preparation of the Body After Arterial Injection
- Preparation of the Body Prior to Arterial Injection
- Processing the Death of a Loved One Through Life’s Transitions
- Providing Social, Emotional and Legal Support
- Psychosocial Aspects of Grief
- Psychosocial Functions of Funerals
- Quality Control
- Restorative Art and Mortuary Cosmetology
- Secondary Legislation
- Social Responses to Various Types of Death
- Technical Orientation of Embalming
- The Family: Grief Characteristics and Conflicts
- The Function of the Funeral Director
- The Multidisciplinary Support System
- The Origin and History of Embalming
- The Psychology of Death and Dying
- The Psychology of Dying
- Therapeutic Strategies for the Bereaved
- Transfers and Transportation
- Understanding the Basic Tasks of Grief
- Vascular Considerations
- Vital Statistics
- Why Some People Do Not Grieve
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