What makes this “Advanced” different from Level 1 & 2?
The June weekend is for practitioners who already completed Dr. Garcia’s core Level 1 & 2 training and want deeper protocols, live demonstrations, and complex case thinking. Expect multi-hour practice blocks, live demos (including specialized scans), and sessions on topics such as muscle testing nuance, remote testing, Lyme-focused material, emotions, TBI protocols, and more—topics can change by cohort; your confirmed agenda arrives with partner enrollment.
Why Advanced exists (and who it serves)
After foundational training, many practitioners want more than repetition: they want sharper scanning judgment, exposure to complex case patterns, and live modeling from Dr. Garcia in a room full of experienced peers. Advanced weekends are built for that stage—people who already speak the language of the modality and now need depth, nuance, and supervised challenge.
This is not a second “beginner week.” If you still feel shaky on basic pair placement or session flow, you will likely get more value from reviewing foundation material, attending a Level 1 & 2 intensive, or scheduling mentorship-style support—then returning when prerequisites are clearly met.
Prerequisites in plain language
“Prerequisite” means Dr. Garcia’s team expects you to have completed their official Level 1 & 2 pathway by a published cutoff (often weeks before Advanced). Dates move year to year—do not rely on blog summaries alone. When you start enrollment through the partner seminar link, read the requirement text on the checkout page and save your confirmation email.
April foundation vs. June Advanced (same region, different purpose)
It is easy to confuse the two because both may appear on New Jersey schedules. April’s Level 1 & 2 intensive is a multi-day foundational immersion for people building core skills. June Advanced is a shorter, denser weekend for people who already met prerequisites and want depth. Tuition, deposits, and eligibility rules are not interchangeable—treat each enrollment page as its own contract.
If you are weighing which to book first, the rule is simple: foundation before Advanced. Skipping steps might sound efficient; in practice it creates frustration in the classroom and wastes travel money.

Key facts at a glance
- Dates: June 26–28, 2026 (three full days).
- Location: Kean University, North Avenue Academic Building, 6th Floor, Union, NJ 07083.
- Prerequisite: Complete Dr. Garcia’s Level 1 & 2 training by the deadline shown when you enroll through the partner seminar link (often early May—confirm each year).
- Investment: Public pricing has described a $1,600 fee with a $500 deposit and a balance due before the event.
Topics you may see in an Advanced cohort (illustrative)
Cohort agendas change, but Advanced seminars often spend more time on areas like refined muscle testing, strategic questioning, and protocol depth for difficult presentations—always framed as educational skill building, not medical treatment promises. You may also see extended demonstration blocks where Dr. Garcia walks through full sequences in front of the class.
Treat any topic list on third-party sites as illustrative only. Your authoritative outline is what arrives with official enrollment—not a blog summary.
How to participate so you learn faster
Advanced rooms reward students who take structured notes (timestamp concepts you want to review, write down questions as they arise, and mark demos you want to re-study on video if recordings are offered for your cohort—verify policies separately). Sit where you can see clearly; advanced work often involves watching footwork, hand angles, and sequencing at once.
Ask questions at appropriate times—raising your hand respects the group’s pace and keeps Dr. Garcia’s team able to finish the planned material. If you are shy, write questions during breaks; instructors usually expect engaged professionals, not silent observers.

Who should register?
This weekend is for practitioners who are serious about refining scans, studying strategic questioning, and watching Dr. Garcia model full protocols in front of the room. If you are still deciding whether biomagnetism is right for you, complete Level 1 & 2 via partner online training (see also our online guide) or attend a Level 1 & 2 live week first—then use the partner seminar link for Advanced once prerequisites are met.
How to prepare so the weekend pays off
Arrive rested, with magnets you already use in practice and any assigned reading completed. Advanced rooms move fast: you will get more from the demonstrations if your hands already know the basics cold. If you are rusty, schedule review time in the weeks before June—revisit foundation manuals, practice testing with a partner, and write down questions you want clarified live.
Save through our authorized partner offer
April, June Advanced, and other in-person cohorts share the same partner seminar affiliate URL—use it so discounted tuition stays attached end to end:
- Biomagnetism Seminar overview on this site
- Continue to partner seminar enrollment & payment (discount applied)
We intentionally do not link to non-partner Dr. Garcia checkout URLs from this article.
Travel and lodging
Union sits near Newark Liberty International Airport and major highways. Book early if you are flying in for the weekend, and allow buffer time for NYC-area traffic. After you register, use any accommodation list included in your confirmation, or search near Kean University and Newark airport.
For a three-day weekend, many attendees prefer a short commute over saving a few dollars per night—fatigue and traffic eat practice energy. If you fly into Newark, check ground transport to Union before you book non-refundable flights.
Weekend traffic patterns differ from weekday seminar weeks: Friday arrivals can clash with commuter peaks. If you drive, map parking options near campus in advance—urban universities sometimes rotate lots for events. Keep a photo of your parking receipt and venue door codes in offline storage in case phone signal is weak in basements or stairwells.
Three-day rhythm: what to expect energetically
Unlike a five-day foundation week, Advanced compresses a lot into three consecutive days. Expect early starts, minimal downtime, and evenings where you may want to review notes instead of sightseeing. That is not punishment—it is how depth fits into a working professional’s calendar.
Plan recovery: sleep matters more than nightlife. If you must work remotely during the trip, block calendar aggressively so Zoom meetings do not steal the focus you paid tuition to protect.

Still building your foundation?
Start with the April 2026 Level 1 & 2 seminar guide (same partner seminar link) or complete Level 1 & 2 online via the partner online training link —then return here to enroll in Advanced with the partner seminar URL above.
Reading this as a serious student (not a “sales skim”)
Good training pages should answer: what it is, who it is for, what you must complete first, and where to verify money and dates. We wrote this article to do exactly that—then link you to official enrollment through partner URLs so you can read the same terms Dr. Garcia’s system shows at checkout.
If something feels unclear, that is your cue to pause and ask: use our contact page, or follow up with the training organization directly. Advanced seminars involve travel and tuition; decisions should feel informed, not rushed.
