A funeral director is known as a mortician. Most people call them the undertaker. Their job is to entail the embalming, burial, or cremation of someone who has died. They also help the bereaving family plan the arrangements of the actual funeral and ceremony. Mortician may be asked to do the following: dressing the body in garments, casketing the body, and cossetting the person. All of these prepare the deceased body for its final viewing on Earth. A mortician is supposed to help the family in every way they can during their time of bereavement. They also are the ones to run the funeral on the actual day for the ceremony. A mortician job is never complete and may be able to become stressful. Many people look at different movies and books to think the career of mortician is simple, but that’s not the case. They …show more content…
Many people actually discontinue schooling for a career in mortician after the first few months. In order to become a mortician, you have to be at least the age of 21 years or older, a high school graduate, and some post-secondary schooling. One must also have at least one year of training in mortuary science and completion of an apprenticeship by a professional and licensed mortician. Once completing the state board license exam, one may be allowed to join a funeral home and their staff. Many states want different things for their student career. One may need the following: fifteen credits in natural science, thirteen in social sciences, thirteen in business, and fourteen in chemistry. The new curriculum for mortician consist of the following: Embalming, Restorative Art, Chemistry, Microbiology, Pathology, Anatomy, Small Business Management, Funeral Home management, merchandising, accounting, funeral home law, computers, history and sociology of funeral service, psychology of grief and grief counseling, oral and written communication, and funeral service