New Strategies to Working with Justice-Involved Individuals 3.0
Monday, August 3, 2020 - 12:00 – 2:00pm (EDT)
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LIVE WEBINAR
Monday, August 3, 2020
12:00 – 2:00pm (EDT)
2 CEU for LMSWs, LCSWs, and LMHCs
Whether you take care of clients who are justice-involved or not, new strategies for working with individuals who are justice-involved will enhance your overall skills as a mental health provider.
You will master the latest on the How of interviewing to increase reliability, while maintaining rapport, engagement, trust, safety, and while strengthening the therapeutic relationship. You will also learn about subcultures, the application of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, as well as the eight principles of Carl Roger's Person-Centered Care.
This is all in addition to learning the Socratic Motivational Practice framework as part of working with this population. The amount of knowledge in mental health doubles every eighteen months, and we all want to provide authentic care.
- Learned the framework of the Socratic Motivational Practice to increase the effectiveness of your work with individuals who are justice-involved.
- Learned the Principles, Techniques, Steps, and Do's and Don'ts of the Socratic Motivational Practice when working with justice-involved individuals.
- Increased your tools to talking with patients and clients by identifying at least one thing you will start doing differently, at the end of the webinar, as a result of the Socratic Motivational Practice framework.
- Everything you want in one place, including an illustration of how to implement the newly learned skills during our role plays.
- Received your certificate by email immediately after your post-test and evaluation are completed.
"I feel more confident applying the knowledge and skills learned and received from this webinar."
- Cheryl, LCSW-R
"It is so refreshing to be fed intellectually. I feel stronger."
- Sandra, LCSW-R
"Content was good and presenter had a positive attitude and was respectful."
- Amy, LMSW
There are a handful of states that the NASW does not cover because those states want to maintain their independent authority to approve, or not, providers and courses. In New York State, the Office of Professions controls the approval process. We are an approved provider by the NY State Office of Professions. In other words:
- In the State of New York, SWEET Institute is approved by the Office of Professions under Dr. Sidor Psychiatric Services as a CEU provider for social workers (#SW-0471) and mental health counselors (#MHC-0127).
- Our live and self-study webinars are individually approved by the NASW National CE Approval Program in 46 additional states. SWEET courses are NOT approved by the NASW National CE Approval Program in: Michigan, New Jersey, and West Virginia.
Join Us Now!
89% of people reported feeling more empowered after participating in a SWEET seminar
Your Facilitator and Co-Facilitator
Mardoche Sidor, MD, is a Harvard-trained Quadruple Board Certified Psychiatrist, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University, School of Physicians and Surgeons, trained in and taught all major psychotherapeutic modalities, including and not limited to CBT, DBT, Family Systems, and Psychodynamic Psychotherapy. He is also the author of 11 books including Journey to Empowerment, Discovering Your Worth, The Power of Faith. and, The Art of Living. Dr. Sidor has worked both as a primary care physician and Medical Director in three different settings, including a Chief Medical Officer of the Center for Alternative Sentencing and Employment Services (CASES). He is a main facilitator for the SWEET Institute. His 11th book, entitled, NLP for Clinicians is now available to the public.
Karen Dubin, PhD, LCSW, is a Columbia-trained Social Worker with wide clinical, teaching, and supervision experience. She also has a background in management, mentorship, and leadership that spans more than 20 years. Her added passion is in advocacy and coaching. She has previously held Executive level positions, and two other directorships in different organizations. She is currently Adjunct Faculty at Columbia University School of Social Work and Adelphi University School of Social Work. She also maintains a private practice, provides supervision, and clinical and management training. She is also a personal and executive-level coach. She is a main facilitator for the SWEET Institute.
"The blind spot phenomenon- never heard of that before today."
- Maria, LMSW
"The level of interaction and how the information expanded to become feasible to apply with my current caseload and provided me a sense of empowerment!"
- Karen, LCSW
"The course was very informative with great role playing. The role plays were very informative and a great example of how to put the material into practice."
- Winnet, LMSW
"I find the presenter engaging and highly knowledgeable - it is a pleasure to learn from him."
- Eileen F, LCSW-R