Arizona Real Estate Continuing Education and Professional Development
Due to Arizona State Regulations, students cannot receive credit for more than 9 hours of continuing education classes per day. This means you may take up to 9 hours of exams in a 24 hour period, but no more. You may start a new course within that 24 hour period beyond the 9 hours, but cannot take the test until the 24 hour hold time is up.
All Courses are provided by Online SchoolRoom/360training, with the exception of Disclosures . Disclosure is provided by Arizona Institute.
PLEASE NOTE: The above Requirements are subject to change.
Always check your state's requirements
24-Hour Arizona Real Estate CE Package 1
24-Hour Arizona Real Estate CE Package 2
Agency Law
Asset Management
Fair Housing
Property Management
Home Inspection
Real Estate Math
Titles and Records
Liens, Taxes and Foreclosures
Deeds
Estimating Gross Living Area
Relocation: Assisting Corporate Transferees
Commissioners Rules
Disclosure
Code of Ethics
Arizona Contract Law
Real Prop Ownership & Land Use
Real Estate Finance
Environmental Hazards
Contracts, Purchase & Sales
Real Estate Appraisal
Leases
Tax-Favorable Real Estate Transactions
Sales Negotiations Package 19.0
Gramm Leach Bliley Act 1.0
Creating Value Through Innovation 1.0
Workplace Violence 1.0
Consumer Protection Law 1.0
Managing Corporate Records 1.0
Evaluating Financial Performance 2.0
Dealing with Conflict and Confrontation 2.0
Dealing with Difficult People 2.0
Qualified Retirement Plans and IRAs 2.0
Anti-Money Laundering 2.0
Capital Budgeting Analysis 2.0
Qualified Retirement Plans and IRAs 2.0
The Management of Capital 2.0
RESPA 2.0
Understanding Economic Components 3.0
Asset Management 3.0
Commercial General Liability Insurance 3.0
Business Writing 3.0
Understanding an Appraiser's Role 3.0
Wills and Trusts 3.0
Appraisal Basics for Real Estate Agents 3.0
Estate Planning - Advanced 3.0
Estate Planning - Basic 3.0
Fair Housing 3.0
Introduction to Commercial Real Estate 3.0
Analyzing Financial Statements Advanced 3.0
Understanding Securities Trading 3.0
Annuities 3.0
Arbitration and Mediation 3.0
Corporate Pension Plans 3.0
Investment Analysis 3.0
Investment Risk and Policy 3.0
Life, Health, Disability and Long Term Care 4.0
Prospecting, Selling & Closing 4.0
1031 Exchanges 4.0
Margin Accounts 5.0
Understanding Different Types of Security Investments 5.0
Equities 5.0
Creating Value Through Financial Management 6.0
Introduction to Property and Casualty and the
Insurance Contract 6.0
Employment Law 6.0
Estimating the Gross Living Area 6.0
Agency Operations 6.0
Negotiations- Reading People 6.0
Understanding the Rules of NASD 6.0
Negotiations- Effective Communication 6.0
Negotiations- Negotiations 7.0
Property Insurance 8.0
Building a Real Estate Practice 30.0
Sample CE Course Descriptions
•Agency Law (3 Hours)
•Deeds (3 Hours)
•Gross Living Area (3 Hours)
•Arizona Contract Law (3 Hours)
•Real Life Real Estate: Disclosure Issues (3 Hours)
•Home Inspection Basic (3 hours)
•Titles and Records (3 hours)
•Commissioner's Rules (3 hours)
•Arizona Ethics (3 hours)
•Agency Law (3 hours)
•Deeds (3 hours)
•Arizona Contract Law (3 hours)
•Real Life Real Estate: Disclosure Issues (3 hours)
•Titles and Records (3 hours)
•Property Management (3 hours)
•Commissioner's Rules (3 hours)
This module is designed as a 3-hour course to educate students on ethics in the real estate industry and to better understand the NAR® Code of Ethics, its enforcement procedures, and practical use of the guidelines set forth therein. The student must pass a comprehensive final exam to receive credit for the module. Because real estate agents usually work and specialize in local communities, they tend to build rapport very quickly. To build reputable associations, agents should win the trust and respect of the people they work with by adhering to the highest morals and ethical practices, thus ensuring client loyalty. This course introduces you to some of the general ideas and theories that help apply the concept of ethical judgment. This provides a background for a detailed discussion of professional real estate ethics that is framed in terms of the NAR® Code of Ethics. In this module, we will frequently refer to the NAR® Code of Ethics as “the Code of Ethics” or simply “the Code”. As the student completes this module, he or she should try to develop a broad perspective of ethics in real estate and how this translates into the overall goal of professionalism. We will discuss the history of “the Code of Ethics,” the concepts included in the articles, the structure of “the Code,” the enforcement and hearing process, procuring cause, ethics and arbitration claims, mediation, arbitration, and NAR®’s “Pathway to Professionalism”.
(3 Hours) Course Approval Number: CD9490
This course covers Arizona real estate purchase contracts, standards, regulation forms as well as various other elements of a contract. In addition this course covers your role, rights and obligations as a licensee/broker as well as those of your clients. Learn how to fill out and explain one of the most common contracts and the answers to frequently asked questions. Meets 3 hour mandatory Contract Law requirement.
Course Category: General Real Estate (4 Hours)
Learn how to help your clients in buying and selling property on a tax-favorable basis. This course discusses the application of current tax advantages of using both qualified and non-qualified tax products. In addition, understand the key aspects of Internal Revenue Code Section 1031 and how to use it to enhance your clients' position in the real estate investment market.
Course Category: Real Estate Legal Issues
COURSE DESCRIPTION
This course explores the meaning of real property ownership and the differences between real estate and personal property. Although these terms are often used interchangeably in everyday conversation, there are different rights associated with these different commodities. It is important that licensees understand the differences between them and are able to explain the distinctions to their clients and customers. This course addresses the following topics:
•Personal and Real Property Ownership
•Land Description
•Controlling Development
•Real Estate Practice Lesson
Throughout this course, the student will learn how different commodities—land, real estate, and real property – transfer and relate to one another. In addition, the student will learn about land use theory and come to understand how our federal, state, municipal and private authorities govern and plan our communities. This course covers legal descriptions as well as informal descriptions, the development of these concepts and the role they play in the real estate industry.
This course’s final lesson presents real-world dilemmas and provides opportunities to apply the information covered in the rest of the course. As the student completes this course, he or she should try to develop a broad understanding of real property use and to place this understanding within the larger context of real estate practice as a whole. This final lesson aims to help the student achieve this goal using comprehensive content questions, practice examples and case studies.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Upon completion of this course, the student will be able to:
■Describe the difference between land, real estate and real property.
■Recognize the difference between real property and personal property.
■State the definition of a fixture.
■Explain the general character of surface, subsurface and air rights, as well as littoral and riparian rights.
■Outline the basic features of the metes and bounds survey method and the rectangular survey method.
■Distinguish the vertical method of land description from other survey methods.
■Name the basic public and private methods employed to control the use and development of land.
■Outline the “highest and best use” theory of land use
Course Category: General Real Estate
Agreement is an essential component in the legal transference of ownership. In real estate, contracts are the instruments by which agreements are reached for the conveyance of property. Whether a salesperson is promising to sell a property within a specified period of time, a prospective buyer is placing an offer on a house or a seller is considering an offer on property, some type of contract is involved.
In this Contracts course, the student learns about the types of general contracts as well as the different kinds of real estate contracts. The module begins by providing the student with an overview of the various types of contracts: bilateral, unilateral, implied, express, executed, executory, valid, void, voidable and unenforceable. Once the student is introduced to the different types of contracts, he or she learns what makes a contract legally enforceable, this being the five components that make a contract valid: mutual assent, legally competent parties, consideration, lawful objective and adherence to a statute of frauds.
This course will introduce the student to two of the three factors that create a contract: offers and acceptances. When there is an offer and acceptance, the parties can either perform their respective parts of the contract or breach the contract by not fulfilling their obligations. Then we will discuss the third component of a legally binding and enforceable contract—performance. There are four basic types of contracts in real estate: sales contracts, option agreements, contract for deeds and leases; these types of contracts being those that deal in the governance of the real estate industry which, as a real estate professional, the student should be familiar with.
Upon completion of this module, the student will be able to:
•Name and explain the various components of a valid contract.
•Identify the differences between a unilateral and bilateral contract.
•Describe the various types of contracts.
•Recognize the difference between a forbearance and performance agreement.
•Outline the features of a contract (and the contracting parties) that make a contract legally binding.
•Recognize the general features of a completed contract.
•Identify when a contract can be discharged.
•Recognize the different kinds of real estate contracts.
Arizona Real estate license continuing education-MCE
This information is designed to provide a summary of the minimum education, experience, and examination requirements established by the Arizona Real Estate Commission www.re.state.az.us. The information provided can be found on the Commission's website. You are advised to review the Arizona Real Estate Commission website for more detailed information and for any changes which may have occurred.
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Arizona Real estate continuing education, MCE online classes, arizona mortgage ce classes. Included are agency law,asset management,fair housing,property management,home inspection,real estate math,arizona contract law and fundamentals of mortgage lending