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Live Webinar

Well-Being in Academia: Promoting Awareness and Developing Skills for Managing Mental Health with Students and Faculty


Speaker:
Jennifer Wilke-Deaton, MA, LPA
Duration:
1 Hour 30 Minutes
Product Code:
LWC059393
Brochure Code:
IHW89476B
Media Type:
Live Webinar

Dates


Description

We are living in a new era of instructional speed bumps as we all emerge from Covid. If you are like me, you too are facing an exponential increase in mental health manifestation in all venues. Specifically, post-secondary training and trade schools are experiencing prevalent issues with attendance (attrition), performance, collaborative socialization, and endurance in classrooms and training settings. Improving our awareness of mental health and the impact it has on a student’s ability to achieve is a necessity, as many of your students have not accessed consistent treatment or support in more than 3 years. Let’s change that together! Please join me for a training day that will improve your understanding of several mental health disorders, and how we can easily adapt instruction and interactions to improve long-term achievement across the board. You will become well-versed in recognizing how anxiety, depression, ADHD, and other mental health concerns can look and negatively impact your instructional space. Let’s build a practical and evidence-based skills toolbox for communicating with our students, easily adapting instructional goals to meet needs, and effectively teaching a variety of populations in spite of the interference of mental health concerns. When you leave training on this day you will feel more confident in recognizing student concerns and behaviors, knowing when outside support should be accessed, and effecting real change to move towards a trajectory of success for everyone.

Credit


* Credit Note - *

NOTE: Each purchase includes CE credit for one individual (participants in full attendance will be able to print the certificate of completion after passing the online post-test (80% passing score) and completing the evaluation). Instructional methods will include PowerPoint, didactic lecture, Q&A, and others.

Continuing Education Information: Credits listed below are for full attendance at the live, interactive webinar only. This webinar is being broadcast live in real-time and must be attended live, in its entirety, in order to earn credit. You will be able to type questions to the speaker. The speaker will see the questions and address them during the presentation as time allows. Please note, your state licensing board dictates whether web-based activities are an acceptable form of continuing education, as well as which credit types are acceptable for continuing education hours. Please refer to your state rules and regulations. If your profession is not listed, please contact your licensing board to determine your continuing education requirements and check for reciprocal approval. For other credit inquiries not specified below, please contact info@pesi.com or 800-844-8260 before the event.

Materials that are included in this course may include interventions and modalities that are beyond the authorized practice of your profession.  As a licensed professional, you are responsible for reviewing the scope of practice, including activities that are defined in law as beyond the boundaries of practice in accordance with and in compliance with your profession's standards.

For Planning Committee disclosures, please see the statement above.  For speaker disclosures, please see the faculty biography.
 


* Credit Note - No CE Available

Continuing education credit is not available on this webcast.



Handouts/Brochure

Speaker

Jennifer Wilke-Deaton, MA, LPA's Profile

Jennifer Wilke-Deaton, MA, LPA Related seminars and products


Jennifer Wilke-Deaton, MA, LPA, is a licensed behavioral health therapist working in a private practice setting in Richmond and Lexington, KY, and a nationally recognized school consultant. Jen has 25 years of experience working with crisis management, psychological testing, inpatient/outpatient treatment, groups, families, and the court system. A tireless and passionate advocate for children and families, she developed a parent training program recognized by the Governor’s Commission for the Treatment of Children & Families and Kentucky’s Child Protective Services. Jen helped create a regional children’s crisis stabilization unit, children’s advocacy center, and an intensive after-school program for behaviorally challenged youth. She has published the Creative Parenting Handbook, Parenting Better Children, CD Awareness in Focus: Modern Guided Imagery Techniques for Immediate Practice, CD Awareness in Focus by Kids for Kids, and The Mandela Workbook: Activities Across the Lifespan.

In addition to delivering her nationally recognized training programs for PESI and keynote presentations, Jen regularly speaks on mental health issues and child abuse for Morehead State University, Eastern Kentucky University, KY Child Protective Services, and National Public Radio; as well as serving as the psychometrician for the Center for Academic and Tutoring Services (CATS) – University of Kentucky, and providing psychological evaluations and therapeutic support services for the Department of Disability Determinations and the Office of Vocational Rehabilitation. Jennifer consults regularly for private/state foster care organizations, social services, schools, psychiatric hospitals, Head Start programs, in-home therapy programs, and case management services. Her specialties are in the areas of child abuse, PTSD, DBT, behavioral disorders, anxiety, autistic spectrum, and attachment. Jen shares time-tested, real approaches from the trenches, using humor, energy and passion for helping others.

 

Speaker Disclosures:
Financial: Jennifer Wilke-Deaton has employment relationships with the University of Kentucky and Hundley Psychological Services. She receives compensation as a guest speaker and royalties as a published author. Jennifer Wilke-Deaton receives a speaking honorarium and recording royalties from PESI, Inc. She has no relevant financial relationships with ineligible organizations.
Non-financial: Jennifer Wilke-Deaton has no relevant non-financial relationships.


Outline

  1. How can we be aware of mental health Issues that can impact performance and attendance in training facilities and post-training placement?
  2. Common mental health issues in our populations, and when we should be asking for outside support.
    1. Anxiety
      1. Social Anxiety in adults
          1. Symptoms
          2. What it looks like in real life.
          3. What types of interactions can make it worse?
          4. What we can do to improve their ability to be successful in a variety of social settings.
      2. Separation Anxiety
          1. Symptoms
          2. What does it look life in training and work settings?
          3. How commonly does this occur with adults?
          4. Small changes can improve success quickly.
      3. Generalized Anxiety Disorder
          1. Symptoms and severity
          2. What does GAD sound like in every day interactions?
          3. What types of physical symptoms can we look for to prevent escape and attrition?
          4. How often is this mistaken for ADHD?
          5. How can we advise and promote choices for employment that are best fits for individuals with GAD symptoms?
      4. Discussion and problem solving to address the impact of long-term Covid restrictions and virtual learning.
          1. The value of social skills building and coping mechanisms after isolation with specific examples of daily use tools.
          2. Creating skill sets for working in large groups.
          3. Recognizing that learning styles and endurance for training may have changed with direct schedule planning.
          4. Recognizing that these individuals may be coping with loss in your learning space (death of family members and friends, income/housing changes, etc.)
          5. How to teach students to self-advocate when feeling overwhelmed, rather than quitting.
          6. Common mistakes made in interacting with students with anxiety presentation, and how to best approach and interact for success.
    2. Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
      1. Symptoms.
      2. Subtypes that can impair training and new skills practice (i.e. compulsive counting, organization, concerns about contamination, etc.).
      3. Types of interactions in training environments that increase Obsessions and compulsions, and how to fix it.
    3. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
        1. Symptoms.
        2. Likelihood of having exposure to trauma.
        3. What can be perceived as trauma that you may have never considered before?
        4. What can it look like in your setting?
        5. Are they being difficult, or are they showing you fight/flight responses?
        6. How to create perceived safety in teaching/training/practice environments with practical skills to address:
          1. Tone.
          2. Space.
          3. Unexpected change.
          4. Eye contact.
          5. Objects of perceived aggression.
          6. Posture.
    4. ADHD
        1. Symptoms.
        2. Types.
        3. Comparison and change between child and adult presentation.
        4. Errors we make, and solutions for change, as teachers and trainers that increase difficulties with:
          1. Limited executive functioning and organizational skills.
          2. Fostering dependency that cannot be sustained in the work force.
          3. Fortune-telling failure because of attentional deficit.
          4. Considering low frustration tolerance and irritability a behavioral issue with students.
    5. Depressive Disorders
      1. Major Depressive Disorder
          1. Symptoms.
          2. Thoughts shown as behaviors.
          3. Combatting the “I can’t do it” narrative.
          4. Preventing hopelessness and worthlessness.
          5. Awareness of suicidal ideation.
      2. Persistent Depressive Disorder
          1. Symptoms.
          2. Issues with passivity and decision making.
          3. Issues with self-confidence and the impact on effort.
      3. Being aware of how we respond and interact with symptoms, and practical techniques for long-term change:
          1. The danger of invalidation, and how to transform it into validation opportunities.
          2. Being aware, responsive, and preventative with seasonal changes in depression.
          3. Checking on those students that have “disappeared” from training or seem “checked out.”
          4. Improving student independence and self-advocacy.
    6. Personality Disorders
      1. Types/Clusters
          1. Cluster A
          2. Cluster B
          3. Cluster C
      2. How they look in the real world.
      3.  How symptoms can impact training and practical success.
    7. Substance Abuse and Dependency
      1. What does this include?
          1. Not only illicit drugs, but tobacco, caffeine, energy drinks, etc.
          2. How to address intoxication in the training setting.
          3. How to structure daily training to decrease the negative impact of withdrawal and irritability.

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