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X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.alfredadler.edu
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Adler Graduate School
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DTSTART:20220101T000000
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220121T110000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20230317T123000
DTSTAMP:20260526T062928
CREATED:20211116T232422Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211116T232422Z
UID:3121-1642762800-1679056200@www.alfredadler.edu
SUMMARY:Self-Regulation Deficits in Mental Health & Substance Use Treatment Setting
DESCRIPTION:A 15-Part Con. Ed. Training Series for Mental Health. Register for a 12 session certificate at 10% discount now . Or each as they appear. \nAbout this event \nSelf-regulation is the capacity of a person to control their attention\, thoughts\, feelings\, and behaviors. \nEmerging during infancy and evolving across the lifespan\, self-regulation requires a person to monitor\, manage\, and control their cognitive\, affective\, and physical responses to the world as it evolves around them. \nThe critical nature of self-regulation is emphasized by the fact that it predicts both short- and long-term outcomes across the lifespan in diverse contexts ranging from social situations to school and work. When deficits arise in this critical area of functioning\, several consequences can result. As such\, it is imperative for professionals to understand this important and complex topic. \nDesigned for professionals who work with clients impacted by mental health and/or substance use disorders\, this comprehensive\, Zoom-based training series\, features 15 different\, evidence-based livestream training modules that cover different aspects of self-regulation. \nEach of the comprehensive training webinars is approximately two-hours in length and accompanied by PowerPoint slides\, handouts\, and access to other resources. A diverse array of topics will be covered throughout this continuing education training series. \nParticipants have the option of taking a specific training in the series to obtain a certificate of attendance or completing all training webinars to earn a series completion certificate. In order to obtain the series completion certificate\, participants must attend a minimum of 12 out of 15 trainings in this series. \nTrainings that encompass this continuing education series include: \n• Self-Regulation Deficits and Prenatal Trauma – 1/21/2022 \n• Self-Regulation Deficits Among Children – 2/25/2022 exception-4th Friday \n• Self-Regulation Deficits and Trauma-and-Stressor and Attachment-Related Disorders -3/18/2022 \n• Self-Regulation Deficits and Executive Dysfunction -4/22/2022 because of Good Friday \n• Self-Regulation Deficits and Sleep Disturbances – 5/20/2022 \n• Self-Regulation Deficits and Neurodevelopmental Disorders -6/17/2022 \n• Self-Regulation Deficits and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)-7/15/2022 \n• Self-Regulation Deficits and Challenging and Problematic Behaviors – 8/19/2022 \n• Self-Regulation Deficits and Intimate Partner Violence – 9/16/2022 \n• Self-Regulation Deficits and Child Maltreatment -10/21/2022 \n• Self-Regulation Deficits and Parenting Behaviors-11/18/2022 \n• Self-Regulation Deficits and Mental Health Disorders – 12/26/2022 \n• Self-Regulation Deficits and Addictive Behaviors and Disorders – 1/20/2023 \n• Self-Regulation Deficits and Health Risk Behaviors and Challenges -2/17/2023 \n• Self-Regulation-Informed Leadership\, Employee\, and Self-Care Practices -3/17/2023 \nAs evidenced by the following learning objectives\, attendance has the potential to improve short- and long-term outcomes for clients impacted by self-regulation deficits: \n1. Develop a working knowledge of self-regulation and its related constructs and its implications throughout the life span \n2. Identify possible causes and risk factors for self-regulation deficits \n3. Discuss developmental and neurobiological considerations in the manifestation of self-regulation deficits \n4. Review disorders and conditions that are commonly comorbid with self-regulation deficits \n5. Articulate the wide-ranging deleterious impact of self-regulation deficits on an individual’s behavioral\, emotional\, social\, and physical health \n6. Learn about the impact self-regulation deficits have on the entire family system \n7. Explore the challenges that helping professionals face when working with clients impacted by self-regulation deficits \n8. Review intervention and screening options for use with clients impacted by self-regulation deficits \n9. Learn about the impact self-regulation deficits have on various special population groups (e.g.\, ADHD\, ASD\, ID\, FASD\, SPMI\, and TBI) \n10. Examine relevant research findings \nYou are registering for a full 12 session certificate by choosing one of the tickets in the full certificate registration. As each session is offered thereafter \, there will be a special ticket for each full registrant from which you may choose to attend\, at no further cost\, until you have completed 12 sessions. Watch for individual session to also appear monthly. If you complete this registration you will have received a 10% discount for the series. Zoom Invitations will se emailed the Thursday before each event. \nJerrod Brown\, Ph.D.\, is an Assistant Professor\, Program Director\, and lead developer for the Master of Arts degree in Human Services with an emphasis in Forensic Behavioral Health for Concordia University\, St. Paul\, Minnesota. Jerrod has also been employed with Pathways Counseling Center in St. Paul\, Minnesota for the past seventeen years. Pathways provides programs and services benefitting individuals impacted by mental illness and addictions. Through his work at Pathways\, Jerrod has extensive experience working with clients diagnosed with neurodevelopmental disorders\, serious and persistent mental health (SPMI) conditions\, trauma and stressor related disorders\, substance use and other addictive disorders\, sleep disorders\, and criminal justice-involved populations. Jerrod is also the founder and CEO of the American Institute for the Advancement of Forensic Studies (AIAFS) and the Editor-in-Chief of Forensic Scholars Today (FST). Jerrod has completed four separate master’s degree programs and holds graduate certificates in Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)\, Other Health Disabilities (OHD)\, and Traumatic-Brain Injuries (TBI). Jerrod is also certified as a Brain Health Coach\, Trauma Professional\, Compassion Fatigue Professional\, Youth Firesetting Prevention/Intervention Specialist\, an Anger Resolution Therapist (CART)\, a Thinking for a Change (T4C) Facilitator\, a Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD) Trainer\, an Autism Specialist\, Digestive Health Specialist\, Gut Health Specialist\, Stress and Mindset Coach\, Holistic Health Coach\, Sleep Science Coach\, Sex Crimes & Relational Paraphilic Attachments (RPA)\, Mental Health Integrative Medicine Provider (CMHIMP)\, and a Problem Gambling Treatment Provider in the state of Minnesota. Jerrod has published numerous articles and book chapters. Email: Jerrod01234Brown@live.com
URL:https://www.alfredadler.edu/event/self-regulation-deficits-in-mental-health-substance-use-treatment-setting/
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ORGANIZER;CN="Ev Haas":MAILTO:ev@alfredadler.edu
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20230123T110000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20230224T140000
DTSTAMP:20260526T062928
CREATED:20221201T213247Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T213247Z
UID:5932-1674471600-1677247200@www.alfredadler.edu
SUMMARY:Clinical Supervision Training - Winter 2023
DESCRIPTION:This course provides 45 CE hours of clinical supervision training. \n\n\n\nThis course provides 45 hours of training in clinical supervision. The course meets the Minnesota Board of Behavioral Health and Therapy educational requirements for Professional Counselors (LPCs and LPCCs) and exceeds requirements for Alcohol & Drug Counselors who intend to seek the approved-supervisor credential. The course does NOT meet requirements for the AAMFT approved-supervisor credential\, as only courses provided directly by the AAMFT meet those requirements. This course meets on Zoom and includes additional assignments to be completed online. \nThe course covers major models of clinical supervision; development and maintenance of the supervisor-supervisee relationship; ethical and legal aspects in clinical supervision; cultural competence in clinical supervision; and structuring\, intervention\, and evaluation practices in clinical supervision. \nRequired Text to be Purchased BEFORE Starting the Course \nFundamentals of Clinical Supervision (6th Edition) (What’s New in Counseling) 6th Edition By Janine M. Bernard (Author)\, Rodney K. Goodyear (Author) · Publisher: Pearson; 6 edition (January 22\, 2018)· ISBN-13: 9780134790282· ISBN-13: 9780134752518 \n*Please note ticket sales are only available up to 1 week prior to event to allow time for the book to be ordered and arrive before class begins. Adler Graduate School has been approved by NBCC as an Approved Continuing Education Provider\, ACEP No. 6915. Programs that do not qualify for NBCC credit are clearly identified. Adler Graduate School is solely responsible for all aspects of the program. \nCertificates of completion will be awarded upon final evaluation of the course distributed by Adler. \nVirtual Classroom Sessions \nFridays January 27th\, February 3rd\, 10th\, 17th\, and 24th. Session held 11:00am-2:00pm Central time (including breaks). \nExpectations \nParticipants are expected to participate in small group discussions and outside of scheduled class time. Participants are expected to work with peers to find one-hour time slots that work for everyone in the small group. \nParticipants are expected to complete substantial reading assignments and online quizzes/surveys at the end of each scheduled course. \nParticipants must submit an APA Formatted Philosophy of Clinical Supervision Final Paper and prepare final Supervision Documents assignment following the last class session. \nParticipants must submit a final Supervision Documents assignment in preparation for developing clinical supervision documentation required for future best practice clinical supervision. \nHours Tasks/Activities \n15 Reading course texts/assigned articles \n5 Weekly Scheduled Course Quiz/Survey \n15 Weekly Scheduled Course Attendance & Active Participation \n4 Case Studies \n6 Assignments \n45 Total Hours \n  \nPlease note\, there will be a final APA formatted paper that complies the learned information throughout the course applied to each participant’s own clinical theoretical style related to clinical supervision philosophy. There will also be a final assignment to develop Supervision Documents that are required as part of future clinical supervision\, both assignments to be completed by midnight the final course date. \n  \n  \n45 CEs \n\n\n\n\nUpon successful completion of this course\, students will: \n1. Distinguish the central role of clinical supervision in providing superior clinical services through improving client welfare\, ensuring informed consent and honoring client rights. \n2. Distinguish factors that generate positive supervisory relationships from their inception\, including informed consent for supervision\, management of expectations\, and appropriate professional boundaries. \n3. Demonstrate understanding of the ethical\, legal\, advocacy and gatekeeping responsibilities of clinical supervisors. \n4. Assess power dynamics in the supervisory relationship and consider issues of diversity\, equity and inclusion. \n5. Demonstrate commitment to cross-cultural responsiveness in all supervisory relationships. \n6. Generate\, and demonstrate commitment to\, fulfillment of key supervisory responsibilities\, to include ensuring informed consent for supervision\, completing and referencing the supervision contract\, modeling ethics and boundaries\, and serving as a gatekeeper for the counseling profession. \n7. Articulate a personal model of clinical supervision\, drawn from existing models of supervision and preferred styles of therapy and supervision. \n  \n\n\n\n\nFaculty: \nBrittany Hamann\, PsyD\, LPCC (she/her) is a doctoral level psychologist and a licensed professional clinical counselor serving greater rural Minnesota in private practice. She received a doctorate degree in counseling psychology from Saint Mary’s University in Minneapolis\, MN and a master’s degree in clinical psychology from the Minnesota School of Professional Psychology at Argosy University. She has practiced counseling in many levels of care including inpatient psychiatric units\, residential treatment\, intensive outpatient care and rural health care. Dr. Hamann’s doctoral research titled “Dismissing a Supervisee: The experience of the clinical supervisor” examined the experiences of clinical supervisors who had dismissed a supervisee who was also a student. The focus of this work examined the decision-making process and their overall experiences. A Minnesota Board of Behavioral Health and Therapy Approved Clinical Supervisor\, Brittany has been involved in clinical supervision practice\, research\, and has taught graduate level courses in best practice clinical supervision. \n 
URL:https://www.alfredadler.edu/event/clinical-supervision-training-winter-2023/
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ORGANIZER;CN="Ev Haas":MAILTO:ev@alfredadler.edu
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