Part of what is missing in training today is that we have a whole host of courses that teach "what to think" instead of "how to think." You give a list of facts to memorize for a test, instead of learning the inner workings of how to actually clean at a
superior level.
When I taught my rug workshop for Jon-Don for several years - which was NOT the
IICRC class (came out beforehand, but I did help on that committee because I do think some "standard" needs to be out there to hit... and what they created was better than nothing, but not what I ever wanted to teach... I hope that makes sense) - anyway, I did not want anyone to worry about memorizing facts, I wanted them to understand how to become a great rug cleaner, at least on the basics.
I literally let them pull products and tools off of the shelves (Jon-Don was very cool about that...) and we got to literally see with rugs in class, what worked, and what sucked - so I did not have to say to them "this doesn't work" and just have them take my word ... they would see it for themselves. And we'd discuss why or why not.
From that angle, Lisa's points on pulling items from their vans makes sense - it's what they know, and they could compare with other items. But if I knew their choice sucked, I'd give them another option and make them see it sucked themselves. My job is to help them be the BEST cleaner possible, and not to just settle for what is most convenient to buy, or what they know. But I charged a lot for my course, so I attracted cleaners who were not robots just using things without thought - I wanted people who wanted to become specialists, and understand why they work and be able to constantly become better because they understood how to approach different situations.
That said - I was clear on certain things I believe strongly about, and products I loved, and methods I used - and instead of just telling them why, I showed them why. I know that is why many who happened to take my pricey course at that time are still cleaning rugs now. I made it make sense, and was not trying to be some instructor that believes they are "so smart." I'd rather have them leave saying that they learned so much, not that I was so smart.
Both need to be taught Jim. And REAL products need to be used. Always allowing for comparisons.
That is a failing with the rug course taught by many right now - you don't get to go see REAL rug plants and train there, so you only get trained in the pit methods, or the surface cleaning methods - and the teachers currently teaching the rug
IICRC courses then sell the pits and solutions they use, so it is a big infomercial.
I don't mind selling things - I love to sell - but when you know there are some better cleaning methods out there and you do not teach them "in action" - then you are doing a disservice to the students and their clients. And when you prevent others from teaching the course because you want to limit competition - well, that is simply unethical.
We sold a lot of product at Jon-Don, which was great ... but I let the students choose what to use, and choose what to buy, and added my two cents when appropriate, and mentioned products not sold by Jon-Don when appropriate as well - which they were always very good about also.
If I were Ruth, Jeff, or Aaron and had to sell during a class to make the real money, maybe I'd have a different perspective.. but I did not need to teach to sell to make my living, it was just what I did for fun on my own time, made some money at it but it was not my "livelihood" so I was free to do what I wanted based on my values rather than having my hands tied to one line.
That said, any course that truly teaches needs hands-on training, and the basics can be taught beforehand so they arrive with some know-how on chemistry, though some things are cool to see in action.
Thanks for the question... it's been interesting reading everyone's perspectives here.
Lisa