- What is an Optician?
- The Parts of the Eye
- Refractive Errors
- Strabismus and Amblyopia
- Other Common Ocular Conditions
- Frame Basics
- Frame Styling
- Aligning Frames
Optician Certification Training
Optician Certification Training
- Course Code: GES126
- Course Hours: 150
- Allotted Time to Complete Course: 6 Months
- Prerequisites: None
Instructor
Dr. Beverly Smith is a Doctor of Optometry and has been in private practice for more than 24 years. She also holds a Master of Business Administration and founded a consulting firm that helps new practitioners start and manage their own eye care practices. Throughout her career, Smith has taught many future opticians, certified paraoptometrics, and fellow optometrists. Her work has been published in the professional journals New O.D. and Women in Optometry.
Course Objectives
- Prepare to take and pass the American Board of Opticianry (ABO) exam
- Learn how to understand and assign prescriptions to customers
- Develop an understanding of the human eye and its functions
- Understand corrective eye care solutions available for patients
- Learn how prisms and lenses work
Course Curriculum
- Adjusting Frames
- A Quick Look at Light
- Reading a Prescription
- More About Prescriptions and Lens Types
- Lens Materials
- Prism Basics
- Fresnel Prisms
- Optical Effects of Lens Curvature
- Multifocal Lens Considerations
- The Manual Lensometer
- More About Opticianry Measurements and Calculations
- Simple Math and Algebra
- Soft Contact Lenses
- Gas-Permeable Contact Lenses
- Legal Responsibilities and Ethics
- Preparing for the ABO Exam
Optician FAQ
What do Opticians do?
Opticians use data from prescriptions made by Optometrists or Ophthalmologists to help patients and customers fit glasses or contact lenses. They may take measurements of the ocular area, recommend appropriate frames or contact lenses and help fit and adjust frames or lenses as needed.
Is certification necessary for Opticians?
Many US states require certification for opticians. In those that do not, many clinics, eye health facilities and professionals require certification as a condition of optician employment. ABO certification generally meets both requirements. However, we do recommend researching the state requirements prior to pursuing a career as an optician.
What does the ABO exam involve?
The ABO exam covers ophthalmic science and a combination of ocular anatomy, principles of ophthalmic products and instruments, dispensing procedures and legal considerations for opticians.
What skills are important for Opticians?
Opticians need to be able to read and fill prescriptions, calculate formulas, use ophthalmic equipment, keep up with eyewear styles and trends, relate to patients, and understand human eyes and the difficulties and diseases they encounter.
Continuing Education
Global Initiatives' Continuing Education offers and administers a variety of credit and non-credit programs that broaden the traditional Miami classroom experience for learners of all ages.
Contact Us
214 MacMillan Hall
531 E Spring St.
Oxford, OH 45056
513-529-8600
513-529-8608 (fax)
global@MiamiOH.edu