|
Complete On-Line
AIT CHECKLIST
The AIT Institute is
the most comprehensive
Berard AIT resource website for parents.
| |
Dr. Stan
and Karon Shear
Berard AIT Practitioners:
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Fee:
CAN $1,200
for Price
for 20 AIT Sessions (10 hours)
over 10 or 12 consecutive days.
Complete AIT CHECKLIST
View International AIT
Locations
PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATIONS AND ASSOCIATIONS
PROFESSIONAL
EXPERIENCE AND EDUCATION
-
Karon has
had considerable experience and success in treating a diversity of cases
since being trained in 1998 in
Berard AIT.
-
She
received her certificate from
Dr. Guy Berard when she attended the International Congress of Berard
Practitioners in Antwerp.
-
She has
had particular success in treating
autistic conditions and has
cooperated with many schools in their ADD and
Berard AIT
programs. She was a member of the executive of Autism Western Cape for two
years.
-
Karon
Shear has now established herself as an
Berard AIT
Practitioner in Vancouver, Canada and brings with her a wealth of experience
and knowledge to contribute to the promotion and development of
Berard AIT in
Canada.
-
Her
Berard AIT
practice is conducted in association with
Khymberleigh Herwill Levin under the
banner of “Learning to Listen”, which
Khymberleigh successfully started in
South Africa, and continued when she moved to Israel and then the United
States.
-
Karon is a
qualified Medical Diagnostic Radiographic Technician in South Africa.
-
She spent
time in medical practice and then worked for Kodak as National Sales Manager
– Diagnostic Imaging Markets.
-
She also
worked at General Electric in the ultrasound and x-ray generating equipment
department. Over the years she has been involved in many computer-related
activities as well.
-
Karon’s
husband, Dr. Stan Shear, is also a certified
Berard AIT
Practitioner and assists her in her practice.
Dr. Stan
Shear says:
"The technique of
Berard AIT as a
non-invasive procedure to assist in normalizing certain behavioral,
communicative, and anti-social problems resulting from the inability to process
auditory stimuli correctly."
| |
|