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Clinical Social Work CE Courses for Social Workers

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190 courses found


Post-Traumatic Growth: Fostering Resilience in Trauma Survivors
Presented by Patrice Berry, PsyD, LCP
VideoAudio
Course: #85Level: Introductory1 Hour
This course will define post-traumatic growth and describe ways to help build resilience in trauma survivors. In addition, this course will discuss ways to assess post-traumatic growth and specific interventions that build resilience in children, teens, and adults.

A Framework for Understanding and Approaching Grief for Clinicians
Presented by Lisa Zoll, MSW, LCSW, Lynn Shiner
Video
Course: #82Level: Introductory1.25 Hours
This webinar focuses on identifying various aspects of grief and applying the concept of disenfranchised grief to death and non-death related losses. In addition, a framework for approaching grief is introduced.

Clinical Social Work with Adoptive Parents: Issues and Guidelines
Presented by Deborah H. Siegel, PhD, LICSW, DCSW, ACSW
VideoAudioText
Course: #79Level: Intermediate1 Hour
This webinar identifies challenges adoptive parents often encounter when seeking adoption competent care from clinical social workers and other mental health professionals; predictable normative developmental issues adoptive parents and their families commonly experience; assumptions and mistakes clinicians often make in their work with adoptive parents; and guidelines for adoption competent clinical intervention with adoptive parents.

Childhood Trauma: Impact and Intervention
Presented by Kim Anderson, PhD, MSSW, LCSW
Video
Course: #76Level: Intermediate1 Hour
This course discusses the impact of trauma on child development. Information is provided regarding clinical interventions with children to affect change.

Person-in-Environment Amplified: Understanding the Role of ACEs in Clinical Conceptualization
Presented by Alison D. Peak, MSW, LCSW, IMH-E
VideoText
Course: #63Level: Intermediate1 Hour
This course will discuss Adverse Childhood Experiences as a clinical lens through which clinicians may understand the environment of a client and its impact on their development, understanding of relationships, and general functioning. This course will also cover the impact of ACEs on long-term health outcomes.

Addressing Complex Trauma Across the Lifespan
Presented by Patrice Berry, PsyD, LCP
VideoText
Course: #7Level: Intermediate1 Hour
This course will define and describe common symptoms of complex trauma and will provide an overview of clinical considerations and clinical perspectives to address complex trauma in teens and adults.

Treating Non-Suicidal Self-injury
Presented by Patrice Berry, PsyD, LCP
VideoAudioText
Course: #13Level: Introductory1 Hour
This course will define non-suicidal self-injury and dispel common myths about self-injury. This course will also discuss how to assess, safety plan, and treat non-suicidal self-injury.

Solution-Focused Interventions with Trauma Survivors
Presented by Kim Anderson, PhD, MSSW, LCSW
VideoText
Course: #11Level: Intermediate1 Hour
This course combines knowledge from trauma theory and solution-focused practice to offer effective strengths-based strategies to positively impact change in survivors of family violence. Populations include; survivors of domestic violence relationships, child abuse, and sexual assault.

Using What We Know About How We Grow: Utilizing Development as an Assessment Tool for Early Childhood Services
Presented by Alison D. Peak, MSW, LCSW, IMH-E
VideoAudioText
Course: #9Level: Introductory1 Hour
This course will review childhood physical and social-emotional development, considering knowledge of both domains as central to initial assessment of functioning for children, adolescents, and families.

Providing Support to Families of Children with Hearing Loss
Presented by Jane Madell, PhD, CCC-A/SLP, LSLS Cert AVT
VideoAudioText
Course: #55Level: Introductory1 Hour
Families of children with hearing loss present with unique needs and challenges. Families’ issues commonly center around accepting hearing loss as well as planning management. Children need support regarding social, emotional and academic development. Hearing loss may impact speech, language, listening, reading, and learning – skills that are critical during childhood years and beyond. The impact of hearing loss on children and families is individual but there are many common challenges even for those with the most access to resources and support. This course will present information and resources for social workers, speech-language pathologists, audiologists, school personnel, therapists and other professionals to support them in their work with families of children with hearing loss.