PC TRAINING RESOURCES
The PCC does not endorse any training opportunties. In an effort to share information to potential parenting coordinators, this resource will be updated as information is gathered.
2012
February 24 and 25, 2012 from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Parenting Coordination/Facilitation:
Interventions for High Conflict Families
A Training for Licensed Mental Health Professionals and Attorneys
Presented by Bradley S. Craig, LMSW, CFLE and Aaron Robb, M.Ed., NCC, LPC-S
www.childreninthemiddle.com/parentingfacilitationtraining.htm
This training offers 16 Hours CEUs, Including 3 Hours Ethics
For some parents, conflict continues to create distress for them and their children beyond the separation and/or divorce. Problems may arise over issues that are not specifically addressed in their parenting plan. For example, the parenting plan may say that parents decide together on extra-curricular activities for their children but may not indicate how to deal with disagreements about these activities. When a conflict arises, children often feel caught in the middle. This situation may put them at greater risk for emotional and behavioral problems—e.g., poor school performance, anxiety, uncontrollable anger, and depression.
While divorce itself places children at risk for various psychological difficulties, research has shown that the strongest predictor of child maladjustment after divorce is exposure to high levels of inter-parental conflict, particularly when the conflict is hostile, aggressive, poorly resolved, and focused on issues pertaining to the children. In a small percentage of families of divorce, such conflict continues at a high level for several years following the formal divorce decree, and it typically causes the children and the parents to suffer significant and prolonged psychological distress.
Intense and prolonged inter-parental conflict can also cause problems for children indirectly. It can impair the ability of each parent to deal effectively with the children. It can also draw the children into the conflict and disrupt the children’s relationships with one or both parents. In addition, it can lead to a reduction in financial support of the children by one or both parents due to the financial costs of repeated litigation and one or both parents becoming less willing to contribute financially. In some cases, the behaviors of one or both parents may lead to the alienation of the children's relationship with a parent.
Parenting coordination and parenting facilitation are problem-solving services offered to parents raising children between homes who seek professional assistance in working together to keep their children free from the parents’ conflicts. Both are child-centered dispute resolution services that assist parents in developing and implementing workable parenting plans when they are unable to do so on their own. Both services may be ordered for families through the court for high conflict families and are codified in the Texas Family Code. The presenters will address appropriate professional boundaries and assist to clearly define roles to avoid circumstances such as this.
This training is designed to provide the 16 hours of basic parenting coordination and parenting facilitation training required to serve as a parenting coordinator or facilitator in Texas,* and covers the following learning objectives:
- Understand the roles of parenting coordinator and parenting facilitator, including working in an interdisciplinary psycho-legal context.
- Understand the different formats/approaches to parenting coordination and parenting facilitation.
- Better understand co-parenting issues and the needs of parents and children in dealing with co-parenting issues, with emphasis on high conflict families.
- Review the development of parenting plans and parenting coordination and parenting facilitation techniques and issues.
- Discuss the ethical challenges of parenting coordination and parenting facilitation.
- Learn tools for option development with conflicted families.
We are offering this training on February 24 and 25, 2012 from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Best Western Dallas-Lewisville 330 East Corporate Drive Lewisville, TX 75067. Best Western is offering participants a $69.99 corporate room rate if you call (972) 459-5300 and notify them of the conference you are attending.
The cost for the training is $325.00 per person before January 31, 2012, or $350.00 on or after January 31. Please have payment to us no later than February 17, 2012. For the best training experience, this training is limited to the first 30 paid participants.