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Friday
07:00pm - 07:00pm EDT - March 12, 2021
Credits Available:
10.00 CE Hours/Credits

This book is the culmination of the authors combined 75 years of experience working with animals as a part of their therapeutic practice. Professional practitioners, as well as the paraprofessionals who work in tandem with them, will find this book of enormous value. While the focus is on mental health professionals, the approach and methods covered can easily be adapted for use by allied health professionals, such as physical, occupational, speech, and recreational therapists as well as those in the educational field such as teachers and school counselors. Animal Assisted Play Therapy™ (AAPT) adds the elements of playfulness, humor, and lightness to the therapeutic process, and can be helpful for clients of all ages. It focuses heavily on relationships: how the relationship between therapist and animal must be developed in positive, mutually respectful ways in which the animals have a voice and choice whenever possible. This in turn provides a model for clients to help them strengthen their own relationships, not only with therapy animals and their own companion animals, but within the human relationships in their families and communities. The authors demonstrate how the techniques can be readily applied for dogs, horses, cats, and other animals. Many illustrative case examples are included.

Play Therapy Primary Areas:
  • History
  • Seminal / Historically Significant Theories
  • Skills and Methods
  • Special Topics


Objectives:
  • Review the historical and theoretical background of Animal Assisted Play Therapy and animal types and characteristics most often utilized
  • Address common misconceptions regarding the use of animals in therapeutic settings
  • Identify the training requirements/ethical considerations required to become an Animal Assisted Play Therapist
  • Develop an understanding of the unique characteristics which define and structure the therapist/animal relationship
  • Identify how AAPT is beneficial with culturally diverse populations for assisting with child, adult and family constellation and needs
  • Identify non-directive and directive Play Therapy interventions most commonly used in AAPT
Tuesday
01:00pm - 01:00pm EDT - March 16, 2021
Credits Available:
10.00 CE Hours/Credits

Written for therapists looking for guidance on how to incorporate play therapy into their practice, as well as students or those in need of a refresher on the latest methods and techniques, Foundations of Play Therapy, Second Edition is a standard-setting resource presenting pragmatic and useful information for therapists at all levels of training.

Play Therapy Primary Areas:

  • History
  • Seminal / Historically Significant Theories
  • Skills and Methods



Objectives:
  • Identify the historical antecedents of play therapy.
  • Recognize how the therapeutic powers are inherent to play therapy.
  • Produce insight into ethical fitness and decision making.
  • List principles of theories and models of play therapy.
  • Compare play, play therapy and therapeutic play.
  • Explain the major theories of play therapy and their basic concepts.
  • Describe the core techniques used to implement play therapy.
Tuesday
01:00pm - 01:00pm EDT - March 16, 2021
Credits Available:
9.00 CE Hours/Credits

An integrative approach to play therapy blending various therapeutic treatment models and techniques. 

Reflecting the transition in the field of play therapy from a "one size fits all" approach to a more eclectic framework that integrates more than one perspective, Integrative Play Therapy explores methods for blending the best theories and treatment techniques to resolve the most common psychological disorders of childhood.

Play Therapy Primary Areas:
  • Seminal / Historically Significant Theories
  • Skills and Methods
  • Special Topics


Objectives:
  • Describe the theoretical foundations and benefits of integrative play therapy practices.
  • Describe how the therapeutic powers of play are flexible and adaptive.
  • Discuss how they can integrate play therapy into their practice.
  • Explain how to blend play therapy, art, and sandtray therapy as well as theraplay with evidence-based practices.
  • Recognize the importance of the Integrative Movement in the field of psychotherapy.
  • Describe the historical background of integrative psychotherapy.
  • Employ the current applications of integrative play therapy to a wide range of childhood disorders.
Tuesday
01:00pm - 01:00pm EDT - March 16, 2021
Credits Available:
19.00 CE Hours/Credits

Over the past several years, numerous changes within the field have encouraged the development of improved techniques that surpass traditional assessment protocols and methods, such as new scales, more focused procedures, and instruments with higher levels of reliability and validity than have been previously established. Now, this classic book has been updated to address and reflect these ongoing changes. Focusing on the needs of the clinician, this new edition presents empirically tested diagnostic tools and describes improvements to existing play therapy assessment instruments, such as new testing instruments for time-limited therapy and early intervention assessment tools for young children.

Play Therapy Primary Areas:
  • History
  • Seminal / Historically Significant Theories
  • Skills and Methods
  • Special Topics


Objectives:
  • Articulate both the importance of play to childhood development and the utility of play as a diagnostic tool.
  • Describe the differences between different types and stages of play.
  • Identify and describe play and parent-child interaction assessment measures that can be used with infants, children, and families.
  • Discuss factors to consider in using play and parent-child interaction assessment instruments.
  • Describe developmental aspects of family and parent-child/infant interactions.
  • Describe how play assessment and qualitative and quantitative peer interactions can be used as a component of the diagnostic process.
  • Name and critique (at least) two instruments for assessing peer interaction or social or non-social play.
Tuesday
01:00pm - 01:00pm EDT - March 16, 2021
Sandra Russ, Author
Credits Available:
8.00 CE Hours/Credits

Going beyond traditional play therapy, this innovative book presents a range of evidence-based assessment and intervention approaches that incorporate play as a key element. It is grounded in the latest knowledge about the importance of play in child development. Leading experts describe effective strategies for addressing a wide variety of clinical concerns, including behavioral difficulties, anxiety, parent–child relationship issues, trauma, and autism. The empirical support for each approach is summarized and clinical techniques are illustrated. The book also discusses school-based prevention programs that utilize play to support children's learning and social-emotional functioning.

Play Therapy Primary Areas:
  • History
  • Seminal / Historically Significant Theories
  • Skills and Methods
  • Special Topics


Objectives:
  • Analyze research results on the relationship between play and various aspects of child development.
  • Describe constructs that play-based assessment instruments measure.
  • Explain play-related characteristics of various evidence-based interventions with children.
  • List patterns of results in research on various evidence-based interventions with children.
  • Discuss and describe "Standardized Testing".
  • Explain PCIT.
Tuesday

In Group Filial Therapy, therapists train parents to undertake play sessions with their own children until these skills become an integral part of family life. Based on Non-directive Play Therapy principles, this evidence-based approach is a highly effective method for working therapeutically with children and families in crisis. This professional manual provides an accessible introduction to the theory and practice of the Group Filial Therapy approach, and for the first time offers step-by-step instructions for designing and implementing filial therapy group programmes with families. The authors address important practical considerations, such as how to determine the composition of groups and the duration of programmes, how to conduct intake interviews and assessments, as well as the personal qualities and skills needed to be an effective Filial Therapy group leader. Comprehensive guidelines for implementing the 20 week model of Group Filial Therapy practiced by Dr Guerney are included, and the book closes with examples from clinical practice, including useful insights into the ways in which the programme may be adapted to meet the needs of particular groups. This definitive guide to the Group Filial Therapy approach is essential reading for all those working therapeutically with children and their families, including play and family therapists, mental health practitioners, social workers, parenting experts and foster and adoptive careers.

Play Therapy Primary Areas:
  • Seminal / Historically Significant Theories
  • Skills and Methods
  • Special Topics


Objectives:
  • Identify the four main skills parents will be taught through the Group Filial Therapy model
  • Identify at least three issues that may occur within group or play sessions and how to facilitate these sessions most effectively.
  • Identify at least three of the roles parents can utilize in play sessions.
  • Identify the four stages of training and practice in the Group Filial Therapy model.
  • Identify at least two considerations in modifying the Group Filial Therapy Model.
Tuesday
01:00pm - 01:00pm EDT - March 16, 2021
Credits Available:
4.00 CE Hours/Credits

Play therapy can do more than we thought. Much more. Integrating Extremes: Aggression and Death in the Playroom offers a new perspective on working with kids. Lisa Dion, LPC, RPT-S, provides therapists and other professionals that work with kids a science-based process for working with children at the deepest, most profound levels of healing while staying safe and sane. This book explores a new understanding of aggression and death play that's based on brain function and neuro-science. It provides therapists with a framework to authentically work with the intensity of aggression and death play, without causing their own nervous systems to start to shut down. Integrating Extremes shows therapists how to facilitate aggression and death play in a way that truly allows healing to occur, for both the therapist and the child, at the deepest level possible.

Play Therapy Primary Areas:
  • Special Topics


Objectives:
  • Identify three ways that the play therapist may engage in self-regulation while working with aggressive and death behaviors in the playroom.
  • Practice two ways to incorporate authenticity in the playroom to facilitate trust, safety, and healing for clients.
  • Distinguish between and effectively navigate hyper-aroused play behaviors and hypo-aroused play behaviors.
Tuesday
02:00pm - 02:00pm EDT - March 16, 2021
Credits Available:
8.00 CE Hours/Credits

With an incisive historical foreword by John Shelton Lawrence and insight from contributors such as Michael Brody, Patty Scanlon, and Roger Kaufman, Lawrence Rubin takes us on a dynamic tour of the benefits of using these icons of popular culture and fantasy in counseling and play therapy. Not only can superheroes assist in clinical work with children, but Rubin demonstrates how they can facilitate growth and change with teen and adults. Early childhood memories of how we felt pretending to have the power to save the world or our families in the face of impending danger still resonate in our adult lives, making the use of superheroes attractive as well, to the creative counselor.

In presenting case studies and wisdom gleaned from practicing therapists' experience, Lawrence Rubin shows how it is possible to uncover children's secret identities, assist treatment of adolescents with sexual behavior problems, and inspire the journey of individuation for gay and lesbian clients, all by paying attention to our intrinsic social need for superhero fantasy and play.

Play Therapy Primary Areas:
  • Skills and Methods
  • Special Topics


Objectives:
  • Describe the relationship between fantasy, fantasy play and metaphor and their role in play therapy.
  • Explain the relationship between the superhero myth and the classical hero.
  • Discuss the foundation for the use of superheroes in play therapy.
  • Identify the play therapy-based elements of the superhero myth.
  • List at least 3 ways that superheroes can be used for problem exploration and treatment in play therapy.
  • Explain the use of superheroes for play-based treatment with unique clinical populations.
  • Recognize the limitations of using superheroes in play therapy.
Tuesday
This comprehensive guide is designed for the play therapy practitioner. It incorporates a wide variety of play therapy approaches and will appeal to practitioners from diverse theoretical orientations. It is a practical model that guides decision-making and helps answer the Who, What, When, Where and Why of play therapy.

Play Therapy Primary Areas:

  • History
  • Seminal / Historically Significant Theories
  • Skills and Methods


Objectives:
  • Describe the two primary dimensions conceptualized in model, along with the four quadrants that relate to therapeutic decision making.
  • Identify the commonalities and differences in existing models and approaches to play therapy and map them on the model.
  • Identify the advantages of an integrative approach to play therapy that is based on the child's needs and development, as identified through specific child moderating factors.
  • Describe ways a therapist might immerse him/herself in the play process, and identify the potential impact and outcome of each type of immersion.
  • Identify three stages of therapist development, according to the developmental model of supervision and discuss two primary bridging activities a supervisor may use to facilitate growth in each phase.
Tuesday
05:00pm - 05:00pm EDT - March 16, 2021
Credits Available:
7.00 CE Hours/Credits
Adolescents are often resistant, hostile, moody, and difficult, but they can also be fascinating, creative, spontaneous, and passionate. How do mental health professionals get past the facade? Play Therapy with Adolescents is the first book to offer a complete variety of play therapy approaches specifically geared toward adolescents. The chapters, written by experts in the field, offer readers entry into the world of adolescents, showing how to make connections and alliances.

Play Therapy Primary Areas:

  • History
  • Seminal / Historically Significant Theories
  • Skills and Methods
  • Special Topics


Objectives:
  • Identify the unique characteristics and needs of adolescents in treatment and identify play therapy techniques to effectively meet those needs.
  • Explain the rationale for and advantages of using play therapy with adolescent clients, and will learn some of the special considerations for the use of this modality when working with this population.
  • Identify strategies for utilizing play therapy to establish trust and build therapeutic relationships with adolescent clients.
  • Describe strategies for adapting play therapy approaches typically utilized with younger children such as Theraplay and Filial Therapy, to provide a developmentally appropriate approach to therapy with adolescents.
  • Identify play therapy approaches and playful therapeutic techniques that have been found to be useful for working with adolescents. This includes review of historical and theoretical foundations as well as practical applications.
  • Describe the use of play therapy and some specific approaches with adolescents in specific populations, such as those in foster care or those diagnosed with eating disorders.
  • Identify the unique benefits of both directive and non-directive play therapy approaches with adolescents and describe specific adolescent populations or issues that might warrant one approach over another.