There is an important difference between recreational nitrox and technical nitrox classes, and that difference translates into how the classes are taught.
Recreational nitrox limits divers to 40%, and that limit does not provide any real problems for the recreational diver--40% us all you need at the depths at which it can be used, and the NDLs for air at the shallower depths are so long that nitrox provides little real benefit. The benefit of the higher percentages allowed in technical nitrox courses is to be found in its use during decompression dives. That means the diver will need to carry at least one additional tank for that higher mix. So that is the main instructional difference. The recreational nitrox user will have only one tank, will not be making and gas switches, and will not be doing mandatory decompression stops. That makes doing any dives unnecessary; you learn nothing by doing them. In contrast, all of that will be new to the technical nitrox student, so there is a significant skill portion to the class.
The academic portions of the classes, though, are not that much different. The academic material related to nitrox in an Advanced Nitrox class is not much different from a recreational nitrox class. The TDI program allows the Advanced Nitrox course and the Decompression Procedures course to be taught as if they were one course, and in my view, it is almost foolish to do it otherwise. The courses are much better when the instructor is allowed to bring decompression skills from the DP course into the earlier dives for the AN course. I have never had to teach the AN class by itself, and I think I would feel hamstrung in my planning by such a limitation.
With PADI, the instructor MUST merge the advanced nitrox instruction and the decompression instruction. There is no Advanced Nitrox course by itself in the PADI program--learning to use (and being certified for) higher oxygen mixes is integrated into the Tec 40, 45, and 50 decompression diving courses. The students start using higher mixes right away in Tec 40 and then can use 100% oxygen for deco in Tec 45. They move on to using two decompression gases in Tec 50.