For thermal imaging the vibration schools often do it as a one day class. Just look for vibration certification. Realistically this is more of an apprentice thing though. There are just too many false positives/false negatives that you learn on the job.
Every class you are asking for is basically apprentice training in a motor shop field service group. Might want to just sign up! Seriously we (large motor shop field service) do more medium voltage terminations than anyone in the area and most of what you are describing. All of those areas except motor controls are skills so you are on the right track as far as book learning vs. hands on. But it doesn't get exercised very often even in large petrochemical/paper/mine mills. Best to leave it to guys that do it all the time.
By way of example last weekend a large local paper mill in the Carolinas had roughly a 1000 HP synchronous motor. They felt they had a ground fault on the rotor. Since they didn't want us to troubleshoot not sure where the real issue was. They disconnected the fields and fired it up to test, TWICE. Anyone that has ever done this knows the rest of the story...the rings arc, bad. In this case the stress also took out a field coil. Oops...now it needs a rewind. Oh and by the way they did some improvements over time and built right over the top of it so now the equipment it drives and the sync motor have to be bull rigged out to change or repair it and it looks easily like a 3 day job just for rigging both ways.
All this happened because they got their own instrument techs trained and decided they could handle this one themselves.
Sent from my SM-T350 using Tapatalk