Crystal
Littleon,#2UPDATE Employee
Sun, November 29, 2009
Here is the thing, when you sign the agreement you are told that there is a cancellation that is possible. What most people fail to listen to is the fact that you are signing an agreement, a financial obligation to a company, not far from any other. Some are given a discount when signing up, depending when you sign up will determine your discount rate. It states in your contract that you have read all the areas and you must initial by them that they are read too.
Every instructor is taught every part of the contract and can answer the questions that arise and if they cannot they are taught where to go in order to get the information. The instructors are never taught to gloss over a potential student, they are taught to answer any and all questions fully and honestly.
The issue is that as part of the contract that you sign you agree that if you want to end your agreement, you may do so. With a 30-day written notice and you must pay back any and all discounts previously applied. Sometimes it is easier and cheaper to just finish out the contract than it is to cancel it. That is just the plain honest fact, but you as an individual agreed to it when you signed the contract.
There are several different options available to a new or continuing student I would read the contract before signing it, much as I would before signing any contract. Honestly would you sing a contract for buying a car without reading it? This is the same thing, just a difference service.