Month: December 2024

Advancing Supervisory Skills in Responding to Children and Families in Crisis

9 am – 12 pm
Instructor: Jennifer Berton, PhD, LICSW, CADC-II

This workshop seeks to help social work supervisors to support staff working with children and families in crisis using various supervision models. Supervisors will learn to guide their staff in assessing the diverse needs, strengths, and limitations of their clients. The workshop will also explore techniques to support staff in ethical practice and effective communication with children, family members and family groups.

Learning Objectives (Supervisory Best Practices):

  1. Support supervisees in understanding and recognizing signs and symptoms of mental illness in children and adolescents
  2. Teach supervisees to comprehensively assess the needs of children and their families in crisis
  3. Engage supervisees in collaborating with inter-professional teams to engage appropriate systems in response to clients’ needs
  4. Guide supervisees in developing effective communication with children and their families
  5. Support supervisees to use culturally informed, ethical, and equitable approaches to working with children and their families
  6. Assist supervisees in navigating complex issues of confidentiality and mandated reporting in service to children and families

Control-mastery Theory: How to Become an Exceptional Therapist

All therapists want to be exceptional, and this workshop can show you how

Across all helping professions, research shows that techniques don’t lead to better outcomes. Have you ever wondered why the DSM doesn’t guide treatment more effectively? And, what explains why some therapists are better than others if it isn’t the theory they’re using?

Control-mastery Theory, emerging from decades of elegant research, can help answer these questions and provides ways to understand how therapy works across techniques, practitioners and clients. This perspective may be the best way to learn to be a better therapist.

In this introductory workshop you will learn the basics of this approach which you can begin to apply to your work right away. There is actually no evidence supporting the idea that one technique is superior over another. But there is strong research evidence for the therapist’s increased effectiveness when responding to an individual client’s particular problems and goals. This means to be effective and truly helpful therapists need to understand what the individual client wants and how they will use therapy to achieve those goals.

Control-mastery is more a stance than a list of techniques based on an empirically derived method of case formulation, called the Plan Formulation. This approach provides a learnable framework for understanding a client’s conscious and unconscious goals, the beliefs and obstacles that prevent the client from pursuing their reasonable goals toward a more satisfying and functional life, traumatic experiences that contributed to the development of those obstacles, and what the most helpful stance is that the therapist can take. This theory helps you understand not only what to do, but how to be a particular client’s therapist.

This workshop will provide participants with the Control-mastery case formulation method and how to use it, an understanding of how trauma shapes beliefs, both conscious and unconscious, how the therapist attitude can help to change those beliefs, and be more flexible, creative and case specific with clients.

Using lecture, discussion, and in-depth case examples demonstrating the application of this stance, participants will:

  • Learn the fundamentals of Control-mastery Theory
  • Understand how this theory advocates for an individual “client-driven” approach
  • Develop an appreciation for how necessary countertransference is and how to utilize it to deepen their understanding of what the client is trying to resolve
  • Understand the Control-mastery perspective on trauma
  • Practice application of the principles of the theory on clinical cases