Course Investment
Simply put, our courses are very competitively priced.
If you’re comparing educational opportunities, you’ll very quickly find that our courses are extremely competitively priced.
College courses are delivered by a blended delivery method. They are very carefully designed to facilitate your learning. Theory is predominantly learnt via external mode, whilst your practical skills are developed by face-to-face instruction in a seminar style environment.
Learning in this way allows you to easily fit studies in with your lifestyle and develop at a pace that suits you.
Another benefit of this style of instruction is lower investment. The blended learning model allows the College to amortise costs across a larger student cohort, meaning that your investment is substantially lower. This is achieved whilst still maintaining very high training standards and support services.
We also have flexible investment methods to suit your needs. If you prefer to pay for your course upfront, you’ll enjoy a substantial discount on the normal price. If you’d prefer, you can spread your payments out monthly over 4, 12 or 15 months. Further savings apply if these monthly payments are made by credit card or direct debit. The College endeavours to keep the monthly repayments as affordable as possible; the amount depending on how many Advanced Study Majors you opt to undertake as part of your studies.
| Course* | Reduced Upfront Payment Option |
Reduced Monthly Credit Card Option |
|
Certificate in Counselling Therapies |
£595 | £119 x 6 mths |
ACT NOW and start pursuing your dream of becoming a Professional Counsellor or extending your counselling skills. Simply fill out the enrolment form and you’ll be underway in the next 72 hours. Your first step begins here.

A few years ago I reached the age of 40 and started questioning where I was going and what I was doing with my life. I had most things that I had ever wanted so why wasn't I completely satisfied? I had worked clerically in the medical field for 10 years and when I examined why I'd stayed in this field for so long, I realised that it was the patient contact and care that I really enjoyed and that working with people with terminal or chronic illness held a particular interest for me, but I wanted to do more for them. That was when I thought of counselling, and I very hesitantly made enquiries about the College's Diploma course which I commenced in November 2003.
I started the Diploma of Counselling when I was 19 in 2005. At the time I was working as a business representative for Optus and I became unhappy with sales. I always knew I wanted to be a psychologist from the age of 15 but because of some difficulties during my teenage years my high school marks didn't allow me to enter a Bachelor of Psychology.
At the end of January 2003 I began my journey with the College. Working full-time, I found the study packs a lot less onerous than I had anticipated and it was easy to pace myself. Each evening I was ‘staying in' I started studying at a set time and finished at a set time. I found that if I didn't set an end time as well that I would often get carried away into the night, which wasn't appreciated by my work colleagues the next day (Zzzzz)! I was excited and challenged at the same time and thoroughly enjoyed each unit.