Breakout Session 3
2:00pm - 3:00pm
Presenters: Amy Barth, PhD, LPC, Val Madro, Kassidy Veness, Lauren Gorden
Impact with ACT
***This session is full. Please select a different breakout session to attend during this time.***
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) utilizes mindfulness and the Hexaflex model to foster psychological flexibility and reduce suffering. This presentation will employ a variety of activities to first enhance the audience’s understanding of ACT before demonstrating how developmentally appropriate language could potentially transform the Hexaflex model into a resource for children and adolescents
Presenter: Amy Evans, Ph.D.
Taking Care of Our Own Mental Health: Ethically Managing Reactions to Client Perspectives
With the public health, social justice and political circumstances of our current world, it may be challenging to manage our own reactions, especially with clients who may hold very different views. Counselors practicing in an ethical manner set aside our values to provide a space for clients to express theirs. How do we provide a safe environment for clients when our reactions may surprise even us? Join this session to expand your personal awareness of your own reactions. We will also discuss how to ethically work with clients whose views may differ from ours, and will also focus on bracketing our own views when the topics are often so charged and personal.
Presenters: Carol Klose Smith, Ph.D., LC, NCC, ACS, Jessie Latten, Ph.D., LPC
Trauma-informed supervision: Core concepts and challenges
This presentation seeks to inform and discuss the challenges supervisors experience when clinicians are working with clients who have experienced trauma. This presentation will focus on how supervisors are approaching trauma in counseling with their supervisees, examine how trauma manifests in the counseling relationship, how trauma affects both the clinician and the supervisor, as well as explore how supervisors can ameliorate the adverse effects of working with those who have experienced trauma. The idea of secondary trauma, vicarious trauma, tertiary trauma, and compassion fatigue are discussed as precursors to burnout.