I just visited SouthBay Massage College today and talked with their business director, Brian.
I think this is the program for me. Here are my reasons...
1) Accessible. I don't have to come up with thousands of dollars out of pocket, or via student loans, and commit myself to a 8-12 month program. Their basic program is only $1600 (plus $25 for the anatomy book and $25 for a bolster, plus your own linens to bring with you), and it runs only about 6 weeks). I'll have saved about $1000 up front when classes begin, and I'll pay the rest a few weeks into the program. Not having to take out loans is important to me. I just declared bankruptcy last year, and even if I qualify for credit, it'll have a bad rate.
2) Experience. I'll get 150 hours of internship experience, plus about 50 hours of hands-on work in the classes. If I take their Deep Tissue courses early in my internship, I can do up to 50 (out of the 150) hours of DT massages at the spa.
3) Accessible. Again, the initial program is accessible like I said above, but I can also take advanced courses at my own pace, as fast as I can pay for them with money from my "day job".
4) Preparation for the National Exam. Not everyone at this school is looking for that, but they'll help tailor your personal program toward meeting the requirements, and do all the documentation you'll need.
5) Small classes. Basic classes are under 10-12 students max. Advanced classes are usually 8-10 students.
6) Job resource. I saw their job postings. They claim they get about 5 inquiries per week. Some of the jobs were advertising $30/hour. I don't know if that's W-2 or 1099, but even if 1099, it's more than I earn now at my computer tech support job ($17/hour W-2).
Apparently, they have many graduates working at spas in the area... so it sounds like they've got a decent reputation. Their focus seems to be on producing good quality MTs, and not just churning out program grads, raking in the Title IV funds, like some of the technical colleges do.