
Learning Center
Do You Have to Be a Mental Health Professional to Teach AOM Classes?
One of the most common questions we hear from new users is some version of: "Am I qualified to lead a class about mental health?" It's a super fair question. Mental health is high-stakes territory. And here’s the thing… you absolutely should be a mental health professional if you’re planning to do things like provide concrete advice, diagnosis conditions, or recommend medication. The design of every AOM class solves this in three ways. A ton of AOM instructors are, in fact, mental health professionals — counselors, clinicians, social workers, psychologists. And when they facilitate an AOM class, they're doing something different from therapy. AOM classes are educational spaces, and even people who provide clinical care in other parts of their day value having a format that's built for exploration and conversation rather than treatment. Before you run your first class, you'll complete a short orientation (30 to 60 minutes) that walks you through the platform, lets you experience a film firsthand, and gives you a feel for what facilitation looks like. It's designed to turn the nervous energy of "can I actually do this?" into the grounded feeling of "okay, I can see how this works." By the end, you'll understand what you're doing and why — which, when it comes to mental health education, matters just as much as any credential.
But that’s not what this is. Art Opening Minds classes are spaces to gently and openly explore topics connected to our mental health. They are built so that anyone who cares about the topic can facilitate a meaningful conversation about it.How this works
Who uses AOM
Beyond clinicians, AOM instructors come from all over campus: residence life coordinators, academic advisors, student affairs professionals, orientation leaders, Greek life advisors, peer support coordinators, faculty, athletic staff. The thing everyone has in common is that they care about the people they work with and they are looking for meaningful ways to talk about wellbeing. That instinct — the desire to create space for these conversations — is exactly what AOM is built for.The orientation helps
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