Affordable by design
The course is priced at $19.99 with the certificate included so practical education is easier to access.
A 4-hour education course focused on accountability, decision-making, impulse control, restitution planning, and preventing repeat theft behavior.
The course is priced at $19.99 with the certificate included so practical education is easier to access.
The course is framed as practical information and education about accountability, decision-making, impulse control, and repeat-prevention planning, with care informed by Ankur Fadia, MD's physician background, without presenting the course as therapy, treatment, or legal advice.
The certificate shows course name, length, completion date, posted price, certificate ID, and verification details.
Public course information and the core learning path are available in English and Spanish.
Students referred by a court, probation office, school, diversion program, attorney, or employer.
People who want a structured certificate course after a theft, shoplifting, or property-related incident.
Referral partners who need a low-cost online education option with clear certificate verification.
Certificate lists the course name, 4-hour length, completion date, student name, and verification details.
Students are told to confirm online-course acceptance before paying.
The course is education only and does not claim to replace counseling, treatment, restitution orders, probation terms, or any local program that is specifically required.
Start with a plain account of what happened, who was affected, and what accountability means after a theft-related incident.
Identify the thoughts that make theft feel acceptable in the moment and replace them with more accurate choices.
Separate real needs from wants and build safer responses to money pressure, embarrassment, or comparison.
Practice a short pause that creates enough time to leave, ask for help, or choose a lawful alternative.
Understand the difference between apology, restitution, compliance, and long-term trust repair.
Name the places, people, and routines that increase risk, then plan safer routes through them.
Use concise, respectful communication with attorneys, probation officers, schools, employers, and family members.
Bring the course together in a written plan that identifies triggers, exits, support, repair, and future choices.
If a court, officer, employer, school, attorney, or agency asked you to take a course, confirm that they accept an online certificate course before purchasing. This site does not promise universal acceptance.
Not legal advice, therapy, addiction treatment, domestic-violence programming, or supervised community service.
Not a promise that any court, probation office, school, employer, or agency will accept the certificate.
The goal is to keep the course low-cost and clear without confusing coupons or hidden certificate fees.