Kerrie is a certified yoga teacher through YogaWorks and is E-RYT 500, YACEP certified with Yoga Alliance. Her teaching ranges from the very beginner to the most experienced yogi, any age. Her style is Hatha and Vinyasa Flow with a focus on alignment, yoga therapy and finding your own practice; knowing when to push, when to pull back.
She is located in Los Angeles, CA and has been teaching group classes since 2007 and teacher trainings since 2013. Kerrie worked as a full time group instructor as well as teacher trainer with Yogaworks the past decade. Born in Santa Cruz, CA but raised overseas Kerrie brings all of the experiences of her youth traveling the world into her teaching.
She is located in Los Angeles, CA and has been teaching group classes since 2007 and teacher trainings since 2013. Kerrie worked as a full time group instructor as well as teacher trainer with Yogaworks the past decade. Born in Santa Cruz, CA but raised overseas Kerrie brings all of the experiences of her youth traveling the world into her teaching.
Reviews (3)
Kevin James Karas
Jan 25, 2022
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I've been a member of the organization since 2016. I started as a registered yoga teacher (RYT) at the 200 hour level and spent many years working my way up to the experienced e-RYT 500 designation. The organization also provided me with the opportunity to open my own registered yoga school (RYS) at the 200 hour foundations level to begin training students to become teachers. This accreditation has helped me to grow my professional yoga career in a variety of ways. They've also provided me with a ton of member benefits such as online continuing through digital programs and opportunities to connect
Ruth Winstrom
Dec 14, 2021
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I echo what others have said. This "non-profit business" is a money racket. They demand money and do nothing to support teachers, studios, or yoga schools. They are supposed to be the managing entity for yoga, but I know for a fact that they don't check anything - from school efficacy or quality to the certificates that teachers upload to the number of hours that teachers log. They have started an "up-level" requirement for schools, and they don't even have it organized. So after schools have spent countless hours on their "up-level" program, they have decided to put a hold on that process because
Katherene Wedic
Dec 26, 2020
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