Certified Feldenkrais-Informed Movement Facilitator · Boston, MA
Feldenkrais Method training in Boston.
Train as a Certified Feldenkrais-Informed Movement Facilitator (CFMF) with Harmonika Institute in Boston, MA. Train as a Feldenkrais-informed movement facilitator — Awareness Through Movement and Functional Integration foundations.

Boston cohort details
- City
- Boston, MA
- Credential
- CFMF
- Tuition
- $3,800
- In-person training
- 12 days · 96h
- Live cohort calls
- 3 days · 12h
- Supervised practice
- 90h
- Immersion stage
- 4 days · 32h
- Portfolio + jury
- 50h
- Total
- 280h · ~35 day-eq.
- Cohort
- 10 students
- Format
- In person + live cohort calls
PDF — modules, hours, faculty notes, and a typical week's schedule.
Why Feldenkrais Method in Boston?
Boston's relationship with holistic practice is shaped by its concentration of universities and hospitals. Our students here tend to be researchers, healthcare workers, and educators — people who came to wellness training already capable of evaluating evidence and asking hard questions about scope. Cohort sizes stay small to keep the discussion-driven pedagogy that works in this city.
For students of Feldenkrais Method specifically, Boston's scene is a particularly good match: academic and medically literate practitioner community. high bar for evidence and scope of practice. The local cohort runs in venue partners around Cambridge, South End, Brookline, with public transit and parking accessible from across the metro.
Boston applicants are often 35-55, with backgrounds in academia (PhDs in cognitive science, psychology, or neuroscience are surprisingly common), medicine (MDs, NPs, PAs seeking complementary credentials), and education. They ask harder admissions questions than almost any other market, want to read primary sources, and value faculty who can speak honestly about evidence — including its limits. Our Boston cohorts tend to produce graduates who are unusually credible in clinical-adjacent settings.
What you'll be training in.
For a deeper introduction to Feldenkrais Method as a practice tradition, see the full program page.
The Feldenkrais Method is a somatic-education tradition developed by Moshé Feldenkrais (1904–1984), an Israeli physicist and judo black belt who began developing the work to address his own knee injury. Over the following four decades he refined a movement-based approach to learning that uses slow, exploratory, low-effort movement to expand the range of patterns available to the nervous system.
The Method has two main forms. Awareness Through Movement (ATM) is a group format: students lie on the floor or sit in chairs while the teacher verbally guides them through a sequence of slow, exploratory movements, typically lasting 45 to 60 minutes. Functional Integration (FI) is a one-on-one format: the practitioner works with a clothed client on a low table, using gentle hands-on movement and precise touch to communicate movement options to the client's nervous system. Both formats share an underlying pedagogy — teaching through experience rather than instruction, working with what is rather than what should be, and trusting the nervous system's own organizing intelligence.
The Feldenkrais Method curriculum, in 12 in-person days.
- Core principles of Awareness Through Movement
- Leading group ATM lessons confidently
- Foundations of Functional Integration on the table
- Reading and supporting student movement in real time
- Designing classes for varied populations and goals
- Building a movement-facilitation practice
When Feldenkrais Method cohorts run in Boston.
Boston cohorts adjust around the academic calendar: January and September starts align with university rhythms and produce strong attendance; May cohorts are smaller. Snow rarely cancels classes (the city handles winter well), but the schedule includes contingency days. Cohort meetings typically run on weekends with one weekday evening — many of our students hold university appointments and need flexibility.
Who this Boston cohort is for.
Yoga teachers, dancers, athletes, and bodyworkers who want a deep somatic-movement vocabulary they can teach in groups and one-on-one.
After graduation in Boston.
- Lead Awareness Through Movement classes as a CFMF
- Offer one-on-one sessions informed by Functional Integration
- Add somatic movement to a yoga, dance, or bodywork practice
- Specialize in older-adult mobility or athletic recovery
$3,800 for the full 35-day Feldenkrais Method program in Boston.
Same tuition whether you study in Boston or any of our other U.S. cities. Monthly payment plans without interest. A 25% deposit confirms your spot in the Boston cohort.
Tuition and financing details$3,800
280h total · 12 in-person days
Feldenkrais Method certification in other Harmonika cities.
Next step
Become a Certified Feldenkrais-Informed Movement Facilitator in Boston.
Talk with our admissions team about the next Feldenkrais Method cohort starting in Boston, MA. Free, online, one hour.