Full Course Description


SESSION 1: Introduction To ARC - A Comprehensive Approach to Trauma Treatment For Kids and Caregivers

Treating a child in isolation doesn't work. Without addressing trauma with both the child and caregiver system your efforts will fail to reach their greatest therapeutic effectiveness.

Co-developed by Dr. Margaret Blaustein, ARC (Attachment, Regulation and Competency) is a flexible framework proven to enhance effective trauma treatment by intervening with both the child and the caregiver system; allowing you to foster the supportive environment necessary for healthy development and lasting change.

THIS COURSE IS YOUR CHANCE TO LEARN THE ARC FRAMEWORK FROM DR. BLAUSTEIN HERSELF!

Watch and discover what over 300 agencies and child-serving systems already know. ARC gives you a roadmap to cultivate attachment in traumatized kids, build the self-regulatory skills they need to identify and manage powerful emotions, and establish a positive sense of identity that will set the stage for a healthy and fulfilling adult life.

This offer may not come your way again! Don't miss out on this rare opportunity to transform your treatment of childhood trauma and achieve sustainable positive outcomes for this most vulnerable population

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Analyze the meaning of complex trauma and communicate three consequences of early complex trauma exposure.
  2. Analyze the role of routines in the caregiving system to enhance a child’s felt safety and stability, and specify why this is important in treatment.
  3. Characterize how the core attachment targets of ARC apply to the participant and/or providers within the participant’s system.
  4. Articulate at least one aspect of self and identity that may be impacted in trauma-exposed youth.
  5. Determine how caregiver ability to identify their own responses to trauma reactions is critical to the recovery process in children who have experienced trauma.
  6. Employ techniques that enable caregivers to depersonalize trauma-driven behaviors and reframe responses to trauma reactions.
  7. Characterize at least two patterns of youth dysregulation, including function of the adaptation.
  8. Employ strategies for teaching children to identify physiological responses to stress to help them understand and regulate the arousal response.
  9. Employ exercises to help traumatized children identify safe resources and develop effective communication skills.
  10. Support how consistent emotional responses from caregivers can help establish secure attachment.
  11. Determine how self-identity can be developed through exercises that establish positive self-recognition and a future orientation.
  12. Specify how activities that target executive function can be incorporated into trauma treatment to improve impulse control and build problem solving and negotiating skills.

Outline

THE ARC TREATMENT FRAMEWORK
Build a Foundation for Treatment

  • Tune into engagement
    • Factors that affect engagement in trauma treatment
    • Strategies to support child, caregiver, and provider engagement
  • The role of education
    • Tune in to the role of education in thoughtful trauma intervention
  • Use of routines and rhythms to build safety and support goals
    • Strategies to increase felt safety through predictability
    • Build self-regulation with daily routines
    • Use of structures to support treatment goals
How to Foster Attachment: Work with the Caregiver System to Build a Safe-Enough Container
  • Manage caregiver responses to trauma reactions
    • The cycle of dysregulation between child and caregiver
    • Tools to help caregivers to recognize their own emotions
    • Address feelings of helplessness, inadequacy and rejection
    • Approaches and techniques to teach caregivers to:
      • Identify their triggers
      • Depersonalize trauma driven behaviors
      • Cognitively reframe responses to trauma reactions
      • Use self-talk to counter self-blame
      • Handle “button-pushing” behavior
  • Attunement strategies for positive attachment
    • Learn the emotional language of kids who have experienced trauma
    • Become a “Feeling Detective” to read emotional cues
    • Identify child’s trauma triggers and responses
    • 5 steps to master reflective listening – help kids feel heard
  • The power of building effective responses in establishing secure attachment
    • Use attunement skills to understand behaviors
    • Identify the “go-to’s” of behavior response
    • Experiment purposefully with other strategies
Regulation: Manage Out of Control Emotions and Reduce Difficult Behaviors
  • Identify triggers and emotional responses
  • Use labeling to raise awareness of feelings
  • How feelings show up in thoughts, behaviors and the body
  • Where feelings and body states come from
  • Modulate emotion and the body’s alarm system
  • ”Feelings Toolkit” for emotional experience tolerance
  • Teach kids to understand degrees of feeling
  • Connect children to their bodies
  • Understand and regulate the arousal response
Competency: Build Resilience and Establish Identity and Sense of Self
  • Explore relationships and build connections
    • Help children understand the role of relationships
    • Identify safe resources and healthy relationships
    • Approaches to develop effective communication skills
  • Strengthening executive functions
    • Ways to build problem solving and negotiation skills
    • Impulse control exercises
  • Self-identity developments
    • How to explore individuality
    • Techniques to establish positive self-recognition
    • Contextual aspects of self and identity
    • Approaches to develop future orientation
  • Trauma Experience Integration
    • Understand state-based treatment
    • The role of the core ARC targets in integrating traumatic experiences

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Therapists
  • Case Managers
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Nurses
  • Marriage & Family
  • Therapists
  • General Educators
  • Special Educators
  • School Administrators
  • School Psychologists
  • School Social Workers
  • Guidance Counselors
  • School Nurses
  • Directors of Special Education
  • Speech-Language Pathologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Paraprofessionals

Copyright : 08/03/2018

SESSION 2: Engagement, Education, Rhythm and Routine - ARC’s Unifying Strategies

Treating a child in isolation doesn't work. Without addressing trauma with both the child and caregiver system your efforts will fail to reach their greatest therapeutic effectiveness.

Co-developed by Dr. Margaret Blaustein, ARC (Attachment, Regulation and Competency) is a flexible framework proven to enhance effective trauma treatment by intervening with both the child and the caregiver system; allowing you to foster the supportive environment necessary for healthy development and lasting change.

THIS COURSE IS YOUR CHANCE TO LEARN THE ARC FRAMEWORK FROM DR. BLAUSTEIN HERSELF!

Watch and discover what over 300 agencies and child-serving systems already know. ARC gives you a roadmap to cultivate attachment in traumatized kids, build the self-regulatory skills they need to identify and manage powerful emotions, and establish a positive sense of identity that will set the stage for a healthy and fulfilling adult life.

This offer may not come your way again! Don't miss out on this rare opportunity to transform your treatment of childhood trauma and achieve sustainable positive outcomes for this most vulnerable population

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Analyze the meaning of complex trauma and communicate three consequences of early complex trauma exposure.
  2. Analyze the role of routines in the caregiving system to enhance a child’s felt safety and stability, and specify why this is important in treatment.
  3. Characterize how the core attachment targets of ARC apply to the participant and/or providers within the participant’s system.
  4. Articulate at least one aspect of self and identity that may be impacted in trauma-exposed youth.
  5. Determine how caregiver ability to identify their own responses to trauma reactions is critical to the recovery process in children who have experienced trauma.
  6. Employ techniques that enable caregivers to depersonalize trauma-driven behaviors and reframe responses to trauma reactions.
  7. Characterize at least two patterns of youth dysregulation, including function of the adaptation.
  8. Employ strategies for teaching children to identify physiological responses to stress to help them understand and regulate the arousal response.
  9. Employ exercises to help traumatized children identify safe resources and develop effective communication skills.
  10. Support how consistent emotional responses from caregivers can help establish secure attachment.
  11. Determine how self-identity can be developed through exercises that establish positive self-recognition and a future orientation.
  12. Specify how activities that target executive function can be incorporated into trauma treatment to improve impulse control and build problem solving and negotiating skills.

Outline

THE ARC TREATMENT FRAMEWORK
Build a Foundation for Treatment

  • Tune into engagement
    • Factors that affect engagement in trauma treatment
    • Strategies to support child, caregiver, and provider engagement
  • The role of education
    • Tune in to the role of education in thoughtful trauma intervention
  • Use of routines and rhythms to build safety and support goals
    • Strategies to increase felt safety through predictability
    • Build self-regulation with daily routines
    • Use of structures to support treatment goals
How to Foster Attachment: Work with the Caregiver System to Build a Safe-Enough Container
  • Manage caregiver responses to trauma reactions
    • The cycle of dysregulation between child and caregiver
    • Tools to help caregivers to recognize their own emotions
    • Address feelings of helplessness, inadequacy and rejection
    • Approaches and techniques to teach caregivers to:
      • Identify their triggers
      • Depersonalize trauma driven behaviors
      • Cognitively reframe responses to trauma reactions
      • Use self-talk to counter self-blame
      • Handle “button-pushing” behavior
  • Attunement strategies for positive attachment
    • Learn the emotional language of kids who have experienced trauma
    • Become a “Feeling Detective” to read emotional cues
    • Identify child’s trauma triggers and responses
    • 5 steps to master reflective listening – help kids feel heard
  • The power of building effective responses in establishing secure attachment
    • Use attunement skills to understand behaviors
    • Identify the “go-to’s” of behavior response
    • Experiment purposefully with other strategies
Regulation: Manage Out of Control Emotions and Reduce Difficult Behaviors
  • Identify triggers and emotional responses
  • Use labeling to raise awareness of feelings
  • How feelings show up in thoughts, behaviors and the body
  • Where feelings and body states come from
  • Modulate emotion and the body’s alarm system
  • ”Feelings Toolkit” for emotional experience tolerance
  • Teach kids to understand degrees of feeling
  • Connect children to their bodies
  • Understand and regulate the arousal response
Competency: Build Resilience and Establish Identity and Sense of Self
  • Explore relationships and build connections
    • Help children understand the role of relationships
    • Identify safe resources and healthy relationships
    • Approaches to develop effective communication skills
  • Strengthening executive functions
    • Ways to build problem solving and negotiation skills
    • Impulse control exercises
  • Self-identity developments
    • How to explore individuality
    • Techniques to establish positive self-recognition
    • Contextual aspects of self and identity
    • Approaches to develop future orientation
  • Trauma Experience Integration
    • Understand state-based treatment
    • The role of the core ARC targets in integrating traumatic experiences

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Therapists
  • Case Managers
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Nurses
  • Marriage & Family
  • Therapists
  • General Educators
  • Special Educators
  • School Administrators
  • School Psychologists
  • School Social Workers
  • Guidance Counselors
  • School Nurses
  • Directors of Special Education
  • Speech-Language Pathologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Paraprofessionals

Copyright : 08/03/2018

SESSION 3: Healing Wounds of Attachment—Key Strategies for Successfully Engaging Caregivers

Treating a child in isolation doesn't work. Without addressing trauma with both the child and caregiver system your efforts will fail to reach their greatest therapeutic effectiveness.

Co-developed by Dr. Margaret Blaustein, ARC (Attachment, Regulation and Competency) is a flexible framework proven to enhance effective trauma treatment by intervening with both the child and the caregiver system; allowing you to foster the supportive environment necessary for healthy development and lasting change.

THIS COURSE IS YOUR CHANCE TO LEARN THE ARC FRAMEWORK FROM DR. BLAUSTEIN HERSELF!

Watch and discover what over 300 agencies and child-serving systems already know. ARC gives you a roadmap to cultivate attachment in traumatized kids, build the self-regulatory skills they need to identify and manage powerful emotions, and establish a positive sense of identity that will set the stage for a healthy and fulfilling adult life.

This offer may not come your way again! Don't miss out on this rare opportunity to transform your treatment of childhood trauma and achieve sustainable positive outcomes for this most vulnerable population

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Analyze the meaning of complex trauma and communicate three consequences of early complex trauma exposure.
  2. Analyze the role of routines in the caregiving system to enhance a child’s felt safety and stability, and specify why this is important in treatment.
  3. Characterize how the core attachment targets of ARC apply to the participant and/or providers within the participant’s system.
  4. Articulate at least one aspect of self and identity that may be impacted in trauma-exposed youth.
  5. Determine how caregiver ability to identify their own responses to trauma reactions is critical to the recovery process in children who have experienced trauma.
  6. Employ techniques that enable caregivers to depersonalize trauma-driven behaviors and reframe responses to trauma reactions.
  7. Characterize at least two patterns of youth dysregulation, including function of the adaptation.
  8. Employ strategies for teaching children to identify physiological responses to stress to help them understand and regulate the arousal response.
  9. Employ exercises to help traumatized children identify safe resources and develop effective communication skills.
  10. Support how consistent emotional responses from caregivers can help establish secure attachment.
  11. Determine how self-identity can be developed through exercises that establish positive self-recognition and a future orientation.
  12. Specify how activities that target executive function can be incorporated into trauma treatment to improve impulse control and build problem solving and negotiating skills.

Outline

THE ARC TREATMENT FRAMEWORK
Build a Foundation for Treatment

  • Tune into engagement
    • Factors that affect engagement in trauma treatment
    • Strategies to support child, caregiver, and provider engagement
  • The role of education
    • Tune in to the role of education in thoughtful trauma intervention
  • Use of routines and rhythms to build safety and support goals
    • Strategies to increase felt safety through predictability
    • Build self-regulation with daily routines
    • Use of structures to support treatment goals
How to Foster Attachment: Work with the Caregiver System to Build a Safe-Enough Container
  • Manage caregiver responses to trauma reactions
    • The cycle of dysregulation between child and caregiver
    • Tools to help caregivers to recognize their own emotions
    • Address feelings of helplessness, inadequacy and rejection
    • Approaches and techniques to teach caregivers to:
      • Identify their triggers
      • Depersonalize trauma driven behaviors
      • Cognitively reframe responses to trauma reactions
      • Use self-talk to counter self-blame
      • Handle “button-pushing” behavior
  • Attunement strategies for positive attachment
    • Learn the emotional language of kids who have experienced trauma
    • Become a “Feeling Detective” to read emotional cues
    • Identify child’s trauma triggers and responses
    • 5 steps to master reflective listening – help kids feel heard
  • The power of building effective responses in establishing secure attachment
    • Use attunement skills to understand behaviors
    • Identify the “go-to’s” of behavior response
    • Experiment purposefully with other strategies
Regulation: Manage Out of Control Emotions and Reduce Difficult Behaviors
  • Identify triggers and emotional responses
  • Use labeling to raise awareness of feelings
  • How feelings show up in thoughts, behaviors and the body
  • Where feelings and body states come from
  • Modulate emotion and the body’s alarm system
  • ”Feelings Toolkit” for emotional experience tolerance
  • Teach kids to understand degrees of feeling
  • Connect children to their bodies
  • Understand and regulate the arousal response
Competency: Build Resilience and Establish Identity and Sense of Self
  • Explore relationships and build connections
    • Help children understand the role of relationships
    • Identify safe resources and healthy relationships
    • Approaches to develop effective communication skills
  • Strengthening executive functions
    • Ways to build problem solving and negotiation skills
    • Impulse control exercises
  • Self-identity developments
    • How to explore individuality
    • Techniques to establish positive self-recognition
    • Contextual aspects of self and identity
    • Approaches to develop future orientation
  • Trauma Experience Integration
    • Understand state-based treatment
    • The role of the core ARC targets in integrating traumatic experiences

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Therapists
  • Case Managers
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Nurses
  • Marriage & Family
  • Therapists
  • General Educators
  • Special Educators
  • School Administrators
  • School Psychologists
  • School Social Workers
  • Guidance Counselors
  • School Nurses
  • Directors of Special Education
  • Speech-Language Pathologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Paraprofessionals

Copyright : 08/03/2018

SESSION 4: A Step by Step Guide to Enhancing Attunement

Treating a child in isolation doesn't work. Without addressing trauma with both the child and caregiver system your efforts will fail to reach their greatest therapeutic effectiveness.

Co-developed by Dr. Margaret Blaustein, ARC (Attachment, Regulation and Competency) is a flexible framework proven to enhance effective trauma treatment by intervening with both the child and the caregiver system; allowing you to foster the supportive environment necessary for healthy development and lasting change.

THIS COURSE IS YOUR CHANCE TO LEARN THE ARC FRAMEWORK FROM DR. BLAUSTEIN HERSELF!

Watch and discover what over 300 agencies and child-serving systems already know. ARC gives you a roadmap to cultivate attachment in traumatized kids, build the self-regulatory skills they need to identify and manage powerful emotions, and establish a positive sense of identity that will set the stage for a healthy and fulfilling adult life.

This offer may not come your way again! Don't miss out on this rare opportunity to transform your treatment of childhood trauma and achieve sustainable positive outcomes for this most vulnerable population

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Analyze the meaning of complex trauma and communicate three consequences of early complex trauma exposure.
  2. Analyze the role of routines in the caregiving system to enhance a child’s felt safety and stability, and specify why this is important in treatment.
  3. Characterize how the core attachment targets of ARC apply to the participant and/or providers within the participant’s system.
  4. Articulate at least one aspect of self and identity that may be impacted in trauma-exposed youth.
  5. Determine how caregiver ability to identify their own responses to trauma reactions is critical to the recovery process in children who have experienced trauma.
  6. Employ techniques that enable caregivers to depersonalize trauma-driven behaviors and reframe responses to trauma reactions.
  7. Characterize at least two patterns of youth dysregulation, including function of the adaptation.
  8. Employ strategies for teaching children to identify physiological responses to stress to help them understand and regulate the arousal response.
  9. Employ exercises to help traumatized children identify safe resources and develop effective communication skills.
  10. Support how consistent emotional responses from caregivers can help establish secure attachment.
  11. Determine how self-identity can be developed through exercises that establish positive self-recognition and a future orientation.
  12. Specify how activities that target executive function can be incorporated into trauma treatment to improve impulse control and build problem solving and negotiating skills.

Outline

THE ARC TREATMENT FRAMEWORK
Build a Foundation for Treatment

  • Tune into engagement
    • Factors that affect engagement in trauma treatment
    • Strategies to support child, caregiver, and provider engagement
  • The role of education
    • Tune in to the role of education in thoughtful trauma intervention
  • Use of routines and rhythms to build safety and support goals
    • Strategies to increase felt safety through predictability
    • Build self-regulation with daily routines
    • Use of structures to support treatment goals
How to Foster Attachment: Work with the Caregiver System to Build a Safe-Enough Container
  • Manage caregiver responses to trauma reactions
    • The cycle of dysregulation between child and caregiver
    • Tools to help caregivers to recognize their own emotions
    • Address feelings of helplessness, inadequacy and rejection
    • Approaches and techniques to teach caregivers to:
      • Identify their triggers
      • Depersonalize trauma driven behaviors
      • Cognitively reframe responses to trauma reactions
      • Use self-talk to counter self-blame
      • Handle “button-pushing” behavior
  • Attunement strategies for positive attachment
    • Learn the emotional language of kids who have experienced trauma
    • Become a “Feeling Detective” to read emotional cues
    • Identify child’s trauma triggers and responses
    • 5 steps to master reflective listening – help kids feel heard
  • The power of building effective responses in establishing secure attachment
    • Use attunement skills to understand behaviors
    • Identify the “go-to’s” of behavior response
    • Experiment purposefully with other strategies
Regulation: Manage Out of Control Emotions and Reduce Difficult Behaviors
  • Identify triggers and emotional responses
  • Use labeling to raise awareness of feelings
  • How feelings show up in thoughts, behaviors and the body
  • Where feelings and body states come from
  • Modulate emotion and the body’s alarm system
  • ”Feelings Toolkit” for emotional experience tolerance
  • Teach kids to understand degrees of feeling
  • Connect children to their bodies
  • Understand and regulate the arousal response
Competency: Build Resilience and Establish Identity and Sense of Self
  • Explore relationships and build connections
    • Help children understand the role of relationships
    • Identify safe resources and healthy relationships
    • Approaches to develop effective communication skills
  • Strengthening executive functions
    • Ways to build problem solving and negotiation skills
    • Impulse control exercises
  • Self-identity developments
    • How to explore individuality
    • Techniques to establish positive self-recognition
    • Contextual aspects of self and identity
    • Approaches to develop future orientation
  • Trauma Experience Integration
    • Understand state-based treatment
    • The role of the core ARC targets in integrating traumatic experiences

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Therapists
  • Case Managers
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Nurses
  • Marriage & Family
  • Therapists
  • General Educators
  • Special Educators
  • School Administrators
  • School Psychologists
  • School Social Workers
  • Guidance Counselors
  • School Nurses
  • Directors of Special Education
  • Speech-Language Pathologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Paraprofessionals

Copyright : 08/03/2018

SESSION 5: Mastering Effective Response—A Detailed How-to for Therapists and Primary Caretakers

Treating a child in isolation doesn't work. Without addressing trauma with both the child and caregiver system your efforts will fail to reach their greatest therapeutic effectiveness.

Co-developed by Dr. Margaret Blaustein, ARC (Attachment, Regulation and Competency) is a flexible framework proven to enhance effective trauma treatment by intervening with both the child and the caregiver system; allowing you to foster the supportive environment necessary for healthy development and lasting change.

THIS COURSE IS YOUR CHANCE TO LEARN THE ARC FRAMEWORK FROM DR. BLAUSTEIN HERSELF!

Watch and discover what over 300 agencies and child-serving systems already know. ARC gives you a roadmap to cultivate attachment in traumatized kids, build the self-regulatory skills they need to identify and manage powerful emotions, and establish a positive sense of identity that will set the stage for a healthy and fulfilling adult life.

This offer may not come your way again! Don't miss out on this rare opportunity to transform your treatment of childhood trauma and achieve sustainable positive outcomes for this most vulnerable population

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Analyze the meaning of complex trauma and communicate three consequences of early complex trauma exposure.
  2. Analyze the role of routines in the caregiving system to enhance a child’s felt safety and stability, and specify why this is important in treatment.
  3. Characterize how the core attachment targets of ARC apply to the participant and/or providers within the participant’s system.
  4. Articulate at least one aspect of self and identity that may be impacted in trauma-exposed youth.
  5. Determine how caregiver ability to identify their own responses to trauma reactions is critical to the recovery process in children who have experienced trauma.
  6. Employ techniques that enable caregivers to depersonalize trauma-driven behaviors and reframe responses to trauma reactions.
  7. Characterize at least two patterns of youth dysregulation, including function of the adaptation.
  8. Employ strategies for teaching children to identify physiological responses to stress to help them understand and regulate the arousal response.
  9. Employ exercises to help traumatized children identify safe resources and develop effective communication skills.
  10. Support how consistent emotional responses from caregivers can help establish secure attachment.
  11. Determine how self-identity can be developed through exercises that establish positive self-recognition and a future orientation.
  12. Specify how activities that target executive function can be incorporated into trauma treatment to improve impulse control and build problem solving and negotiating skills.

Outline

THE ARC TREATMENT FRAMEWORK
Build a Foundation for Treatment

  • Tune into engagement
    • Factors that affect engagement in trauma treatment
    • Strategies to support child, caregiver, and provider engagement
  • The role of education
    • Tune in to the role of education in thoughtful trauma intervention
  • Use of routines and rhythms to build safety and support goals
    • Strategies to increase felt safety through predictability
    • Build self-regulation with daily routines
    • Use of structures to support treatment goals
How to Foster Attachment: Work with the Caregiver System to Build a Safe-Enough Container
  • Manage caregiver responses to trauma reactions
    • The cycle of dysregulation between child and caregiver
    • Tools to help caregivers to recognize their own emotions
    • Address feelings of helplessness, inadequacy and rejection
    • Approaches and techniques to teach caregivers to:
      • Identify their triggers
      • Depersonalize trauma driven behaviors
      • Cognitively reframe responses to trauma reactions
      • Use self-talk to counter self-blame
      • Handle “button-pushing” behavior
  • Attunement strategies for positive attachment
    • Learn the emotional language of kids who have experienced trauma
    • Become a “Feeling Detective” to read emotional cues
    • Identify child’s trauma triggers and responses
    • 5 steps to master reflective listening – help kids feel heard
  • The power of building effective responses in establishing secure attachment
    • Use attunement skills to understand behaviors
    • Identify the “go-to’s” of behavior response
    • Experiment purposefully with other strategies
Regulation: Manage Out of Control Emotions and Reduce Difficult Behaviors
  • Identify triggers and emotional responses
  • Use labeling to raise awareness of feelings
  • How feelings show up in thoughts, behaviors and the body
  • Where feelings and body states come from
  • Modulate emotion and the body’s alarm system
  • ”Feelings Toolkit” for emotional experience tolerance
  • Teach kids to understand degrees of feeling
  • Connect children to their bodies
  • Understand and regulate the arousal response
Competency: Build Resilience and Establish Identity and Sense of Self
  • Explore relationships and build connections
    • Help children understand the role of relationships
    • Identify safe resources and healthy relationships
    • Approaches to develop effective communication skills
  • Strengthening executive functions
    • Ways to build problem solving and negotiation skills
    • Impulse control exercises
  • Self-identity developments
    • How to explore individuality
    • Techniques to establish positive self-recognition
    • Contextual aspects of self and identity
    • Approaches to develop future orientation
  • Trauma Experience Integration
    • Understand state-based treatment
    • The role of the core ARC targets in integrating traumatic experiences

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Therapists
  • Case Managers
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Nurses
  • Marriage & Family
  • Therapists
  • General Educators
  • Special Educators
  • School Administrators
  • School Psychologists
  • School Social Workers
  • Guidance Counselors
  • School Nurses
  • Directors of Special Education
  • Speech-Language Pathologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Paraprofessionals

Copyright : 08/03/2018

SESSION 6: Regulation—the Ultimate Goal and an Ongoing Process for Traumatized Children

Treating a child in isolation doesn't work. Without addressing trauma with both the child and caregiver system your efforts will fail to reach their greatest therapeutic effectiveness.

Co-developed by Dr. Margaret Blaustein, ARC (Attachment, Regulation and Competency) is a flexible framework proven to enhance effective trauma treatment by intervening with both the child and the caregiver system; allowing you to foster the supportive environment necessary for healthy development and lasting change.

THIS COURSE IS YOUR CHANCE TO LEARN THE ARC FRAMEWORK FROM DR. BLAUSTEIN HERSELF!

Watch and discover what over 300 agencies and child-serving systems already know. ARC gives you a roadmap to cultivate attachment in traumatized kids, build the self-regulatory skills they need to identify and manage powerful emotions, and establish a positive sense of identity that will set the stage for a healthy and fulfilling adult life.

This offer may not come your way again! Don't miss out on this rare opportunity to transform your treatment of childhood trauma and achieve sustainable positive outcomes for this most vulnerable population

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Analyze the meaning of complex trauma and communicate three consequences of early complex trauma exposure.
  2. Analyze the role of routines in the caregiving system to enhance a child’s felt safety and stability, and specify why this is important in treatment.
  3. Characterize how the core attachment targets of ARC apply to the participant and/or providers within the participant’s system.
  4. Articulate at least one aspect of self and identity that may be impacted in trauma-exposed youth.
  5. Determine how caregiver ability to identify their own responses to trauma reactions is critical to the recovery process in children who have experienced trauma.
  6. Employ techniques that enable caregivers to depersonalize trauma-driven behaviors and reframe responses to trauma reactions.
  7. Characterize at least two patterns of youth dysregulation, including function of the adaptation.
  8. Employ strategies for teaching children to identify physiological responses to stress to help them understand and regulate the arousal response.
  9. Employ exercises to help traumatized children identify safe resources and develop effective communication skills.
  10. Support how consistent emotional responses from caregivers can help establish secure attachment.
  11. Determine how self-identity can be developed through exercises that establish positive self-recognition and a future orientation.
  12. Specify how activities that target executive function can be incorporated into trauma treatment to improve impulse control and build problem solving and negotiating skills.

Outline

THE ARC TREATMENT FRAMEWORK
Build a Foundation for Treatment

  • Tune into engagement
    • Factors that affect engagement in trauma treatment
    • Strategies to support child, caregiver, and provider engagement
  • The role of education
    • Tune in to the role of education in thoughtful trauma intervention
  • Use of routines and rhythms to build safety and support goals
    • Strategies to increase felt safety through predictability
    • Build self-regulation with daily routines
    • Use of structures to support treatment goals
How to Foster Attachment: Work with the Caregiver System to Build a Safe-Enough Container
  • Manage caregiver responses to trauma reactions
    • The cycle of dysregulation between child and caregiver
    • Tools to help caregivers to recognize their own emotions
    • Address feelings of helplessness, inadequacy and rejection
    • Approaches and techniques to teach caregivers to:
      • Identify their triggers
      • Depersonalize trauma driven behaviors
      • Cognitively reframe responses to trauma reactions
      • Use self-talk to counter self-blame
      • Handle “button-pushing” behavior
  • Attunement strategies for positive attachment
    • Learn the emotional language of kids who have experienced trauma
    • Become a “Feeling Detective” to read emotional cues
    • Identify child’s trauma triggers and responses
    • 5 steps to master reflective listening – help kids feel heard
  • The power of building effective responses in establishing secure attachment
    • Use attunement skills to understand behaviors
    • Identify the “go-to’s” of behavior response
    • Experiment purposefully with other strategies
Regulation: Manage Out of Control Emotions and Reduce Difficult Behaviors
  • Identify triggers and emotional responses
  • Use labeling to raise awareness of feelings
  • How feelings show up in thoughts, behaviors and the body
  • Where feelings and body states come from
  • Modulate emotion and the body’s alarm system
  • ”Feelings Toolkit” for emotional experience tolerance
  • Teach kids to understand degrees of feeling
  • Connect children to their bodies
  • Understand and regulate the arousal response
Competency: Build Resilience and Establish Identity and Sense of Self
  • Explore relationships and build connections
    • Help children understand the role of relationships
    • Identify safe resources and healthy relationships
    • Approaches to develop effective communication skills
  • Strengthening executive functions
    • Ways to build problem solving and negotiation skills
    • Impulse control exercises
  • Self-identity developments
    • How to explore individuality
    • Techniques to establish positive self-recognition
    • Contextual aspects of self and identity
    • Approaches to develop future orientation
  • Trauma Experience Integration
    • Understand state-based treatment
    • The role of the core ARC targets in integrating traumatic experiences

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Therapists
  • Case Managers
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Nurses
  • Marriage & Family
  • Therapists
  • General Educators
  • Special Educators
  • School Administrators
  • School Psychologists
  • School Social Workers
  • Guidance Counselors
  • School Nurses
  • Directors of Special Education
  • Speech-Language Pathologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Paraprofessionals

Copyright : 08/03/2018

SESSION 7: Modulation—the Second Milestone on the Road to Self-Regulation

Treating a child in isolation doesn't work. Without addressing trauma with both the child and caregiver system your efforts will fail to reach their greatest therapeutic effectiveness.

Co-developed by Dr. Margaret Blaustein, ARC (Attachment, Regulation and Competency) is a flexible framework proven to enhance effective trauma treatment by intervening with both the child and the caregiver system; allowing you to foster the supportive environment necessary for healthy development and lasting change.

THIS COURSE IS YOUR CHANCE TO LEARN THE ARC FRAMEWORK FROM DR. BLAUSTEIN HERSELF!

Watch and discover what over 300 agencies and child-serving systems already know. ARC gives you a roadmap to cultivate attachment in traumatized kids, build the self-regulatory skills they need to identify and manage powerful emotions, and establish a positive sense of identity that will set the stage for a healthy and fulfilling adult life.

This offer may not come your way again! Don't miss out on this rare opportunity to transform your treatment of childhood trauma and achieve sustainable positive outcomes for this most vulnerable population

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Analyze the meaning of complex trauma and communicate three consequences of early complex trauma exposure.
  2. Analyze the role of routines in the caregiving system to enhance a child’s felt safety and stability, and specify why this is important in treatment.
  3. Characterize how the core attachment targets of ARC apply to the participant and/or providers within the participant’s system.
  4. Articulate at least one aspect of self and identity that may be impacted in trauma-exposed youth.
  5. Determine how caregiver ability to identify their own responses to trauma reactions is critical to the recovery process in children who have experienced trauma.
  6. Employ techniques that enable caregivers to depersonalize trauma-driven behaviors and reframe responses to trauma reactions.
  7. Characterize at least two patterns of youth dysregulation, including function of the adaptation.
  8. Employ strategies for teaching children to identify physiological responses to stress to help them understand and regulate the arousal response.
  9. Employ exercises to help traumatized children identify safe resources and develop effective communication skills.
  10. Support how consistent emotional responses from caregivers can help establish secure attachment.
  11. Determine how self-identity can be developed through exercises that establish positive self-recognition and a future orientation.
  12. Specify how activities that target executive function can be incorporated into trauma treatment to improve impulse control and build problem solving and negotiating skills.

Outline

THE ARC TREATMENT FRAMEWORK
Build a Foundation for Treatment

  • Tune into engagement
    • Factors that affect engagement in trauma treatment
    • Strategies to support child, caregiver, and provider engagement
  • The role of education
    • Tune in to the role of education in thoughtful trauma intervention
  • Use of routines and rhythms to build safety and support goals
    • Strategies to increase felt safety through predictability
    • Build self-regulation with daily routines
    • Use of structures to support treatment goals
How to Foster Attachment: Work with the Caregiver System to Build a Safe-Enough Container
  • Manage caregiver responses to trauma reactions
    • The cycle of dysregulation between child and caregiver
    • Tools to help caregivers to recognize their own emotions
    • Address feelings of helplessness, inadequacy and rejection
    • Approaches and techniques to teach caregivers to:
      • Identify their triggers
      • Depersonalize trauma driven behaviors
      • Cognitively reframe responses to trauma reactions
      • Use self-talk to counter self-blame
      • Handle “button-pushing” behavior
  • Attunement strategies for positive attachment
    • Learn the emotional language of kids who have experienced trauma
    • Become a “Feeling Detective” to read emotional cues
    • Identify child’s trauma triggers and responses
    • 5 steps to master reflective listening – help kids feel heard
  • The power of building effective responses in establishing secure attachment
    • Use attunement skills to understand behaviors
    • Identify the “go-to’s” of behavior response
    • Experiment purposefully with other strategies
Regulation: Manage Out of Control Emotions and Reduce Difficult Behaviors
  • Identify triggers and emotional responses
  • Use labeling to raise awareness of feelings
  • How feelings show up in thoughts, behaviors and the body
  • Where feelings and body states come from
  • Modulate emotion and the body’s alarm system
  • ”Feelings Toolkit” for emotional experience tolerance
  • Teach kids to understand degrees of feeling
  • Connect children to their bodies
  • Understand and regulate the arousal response
Competency: Build Resilience and Establish Identity and Sense of Self
  • Explore relationships and build connections
    • Help children understand the role of relationships
    • Identify safe resources and healthy relationships
    • Approaches to develop effective communication skills
  • Strengthening executive functions
    • Ways to build problem solving and negotiation skills
    • Impulse control exercises
  • Self-identity developments
    • How to explore individuality
    • Techniques to establish positive self-recognition
    • Contextual aspects of self and identity
    • Approaches to develop future orientation
  • Trauma Experience Integration
    • Understand state-based treatment
    • The role of the core ARC targets in integrating traumatic experiences

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Therapists
  • Case Managers
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Nurses
  • Marriage & Family
  • Therapists
  • General Educators
  • Special Educators
  • School Administrators
  • School Psychologists
  • School Social Workers
  • Guidance Counselors
  • School Nurses
  • Directors of Special Education
  • Speech-Language Pathologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Paraprofessionals

Copyright : 08/03/2018

SESSION 8: Bringing the Process Homes—Supporting Competency, Connection and the Ability to Act in the Present Moment

Treating a child in isolation doesn't work. Without addressing trauma with both the child and caregiver system your efforts will fail to reach their greatest therapeutic effectiveness.

Co-developed by Dr. Margaret Blaustein, ARC (Attachment, Regulation and Competency) is a flexible framework proven to enhance effective trauma treatment by intervening with both the child and the caregiver system; allowing you to foster the supportive environment necessary for healthy development and lasting change.

THIS COURSE IS YOUR CHANCE TO LEARN THE ARC FRAMEWORK FROM DR. BLAUSTEIN HERSELF!

Watch and discover what over 300 agencies and child-serving systems already know. ARC gives you a roadmap to cultivate attachment in traumatized kids, build the self-regulatory skills they need to identify and manage powerful emotions, and establish a positive sense of identity that will set the stage for a healthy and fulfilling adult life.

This offer may not come your way again! Don't miss out on this rare opportunity to transform your treatment of childhood trauma and achieve sustainable positive outcomes for this most vulnerable population

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Analyze the meaning of complex trauma and communicate three consequences of early complex trauma exposure.
  2. Analyze the role of routines in the caregiving system to enhance a child’s felt safety and stability, and specify why this is important in treatment.
  3. Characterize how the core attachment targets of ARC apply to the participant and/or providers within the participant’s system.
  4. Articulate at least one aspect of self and identity that may be impacted in trauma-exposed youth.
  5. Determine how caregiver ability to identify their own responses to trauma reactions is critical to the recovery process in children who have experienced trauma.
  6. Employ techniques that enable caregivers to depersonalize trauma-driven behaviors and reframe responses to trauma reactions.
  7. Characterize at least two patterns of youth dysregulation, including function of the adaptation.
  8. Employ strategies for teaching children to identify physiological responses to stress to help them understand and regulate the arousal response.
  9. Employ exercises to help traumatized children identify safe resources and develop effective communication skills.
  10. Support how consistent emotional responses from caregivers can help establish secure attachment.
  11. Determine how self-identity can be developed through exercises that establish positive self-recognition and a future orientation.
  12. Specify how activities that target executive function can be incorporated into trauma treatment to improve impulse control and build problem solving and negotiating skills.

Outline

THE ARC TREATMENT FRAMEWORK
Build a Foundation for Treatment

  • Tune into engagement
    • Factors that affect engagement in trauma treatment
    • Strategies to support child, caregiver, and provider engagement
  • The role of education
    • Tune in to the role of education in thoughtful trauma intervention
  • Use of routines and rhythms to build safety and support goals
    • Strategies to increase felt safety through predictability
    • Build self-regulation with daily routines
    • Use of structures to support treatment goals
How to Foster Attachment: Work with the Caregiver System to Build a Safe-Enough Container
  • Manage caregiver responses to trauma reactions
    • The cycle of dysregulation between child and caregiver
    • Tools to help caregivers to recognize their own emotions
    • Address feelings of helplessness, inadequacy and rejection
    • Approaches and techniques to teach caregivers to:
      • Identify their triggers
      • Depersonalize trauma driven behaviors
      • Cognitively reframe responses to trauma reactions
      • Use self-talk to counter self-blame
      • Handle “button-pushing” behavior
  • Attunement strategies for positive attachment
    • Learn the emotional language of kids who have experienced trauma
    • Become a “Feeling Detective” to read emotional cues
    • Identify child’s trauma triggers and responses
    • 5 steps to master reflective listening – help kids feel heard
  • The power of building effective responses in establishing secure attachment
    • Use attunement skills to understand behaviors
    • Identify the “go-to’s” of behavior response
    • Experiment purposefully with other strategies
Regulation: Manage Out of Control Emotions and Reduce Difficult Behaviors
  • Identify triggers and emotional responses
  • Use labeling to raise awareness of feelings
  • How feelings show up in thoughts, behaviors and the body
  • Where feelings and body states come from
  • Modulate emotion and the body’s alarm system
  • ”Feelings Toolkit” for emotional experience tolerance
  • Teach kids to understand degrees of feeling
  • Connect children to their bodies
  • Understand and regulate the arousal response
Competency: Build Resilience and Establish Identity and Sense of Self
  • Explore relationships and build connections
    • Help children understand the role of relationships
    • Identify safe resources and healthy relationships
    • Approaches to develop effective communication skills
  • Strengthening executive functions
    • Ways to build problem solving and negotiation skills
    • Impulse control exercises
  • Self-identity developments
    • How to explore individuality
    • Techniques to establish positive self-recognition
    • Contextual aspects of self and identity
    • Approaches to develop future orientation
  • Trauma Experience Integration
    • Understand state-based treatment
    • The role of the core ARC targets in integrating traumatic experiences

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Therapists
  • Case Managers
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Nurses
  • Marriage & Family
  • Therapists
  • General Educators
  • Special Educators
  • School Administrators
  • School Psychologists
  • School Social Workers
  • Guidance Counselors
  • School Nurses
  • Directors of Special Education
  • Speech-Language Pathologists
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Paraprofessionals

Copyright : 08/03/2018