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The Anti-Racist Social Worker

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-anti-racist-social-worker-tickets-402670176337

The Anti-Racist Social Worker

The Anti-Racist Social Worker - The Parallel Process of being trauma-informed and pushing back against the status quo.

October 3, 5, 7, 12, 14, 17, 19, 21, 24, 26, 2022 1:30 pm - 4:00pm

Live Interactive Virtual Training

Early Bird Price: $720

Regular Price: $900

Duration: 22.5 hours

Content Level: Advanced

Cultural Competency CE: 15 Ethics: 5 Total CE: 20

Target Audience Behavioral Health Services Providers and Management

Register Here:

America has made the fiction of race a fact, as the color of a person’s skin was not a social, political or economic consideration until chattel slavery became common practice and a driving economic factor. At the federal level, Black people in America were considered ⅓ of a person until slavery ended in 1865. After federal law endorsed separate and unequal treatment of Blacks until 1954. Consequentially, with this long history of disenfranchisement, the beliefs, attitudes and behaviors of white supremacy still dominate and influence the day-to-day lives of black people. And while there has been great progress, the mistreatment and disrespect experienced by President Obama, substantiates how racism negatively impacts all black people regardless of their profession, social, and economic status. And while many trainings are geared toward eliminating biases, there is a gap in training for building black’s resiliency in the face of white supremacy. This gap is significant to the Social Work profession, as according to the Council of Social Work Education, blacks are the number one demographic to obtain BSW. This combined with African Americans being more likely to experience adversity in childhood and work with high-risk populations suggest an increased risk for black social workers to experience vicarious trauma and burn-out. This experience is called shared trauma “when a practitioner experiences the same events or experiences as their clients.” This training series will walk participants through their character strengths inventory, communication style assessments, personal reflection exercises, and the racial healing journey. The goal of this training is for participants to feel empowered to confront and challenge racism in the workplace. The training has the following learning objectives:

  • Describe character strengths research and explain how your top strengths can be used to improve work performance, cultivate healthy relationships, and reduce stress
  • Identify and summarize adverse childhood events and their impacts on wellness in adulthood
  • Summarize the theory of shared trauma and provide historical examples of community responses by African Americans against white supremacy.
  • Debate and provide six examples of how a trauma-informed framework aligns with the social work code of ethics
  • Define SAMSHA’s eight dimensions of wellness
  • Generate three prevention and intervention strategies for vicarious trauma and burn-out
  • Describe the interrelationship between racial healing, social identities and privilege/power and oppression
  • Demonstrate three strategies to catch yourself in the flow of racism in your client relationships and personal as well as professional relationships
  • Develop a personal leadership statement as a racially conscious ally that confronts racism in the workplace

  Register Here:  

October 3, 2022

1:30 pm - 4:00pm

Live Interactive Virtual Training

Session 1: Self-Awareness a Core Competence –

– Professional Responsibility



Agenda

  • 00:00
    • Introductions and ground rules
  • 00:15
    • Adverse childhood experience research
    • Review of different types of trauma and long-term impacts on emotional, social, and physical health
  • 01:00
    • Trauma and the brain
    • Urban trauma
  • 01:15
    • Break



  • 01:30
    • Review SAMSHA 8 Dimensions of Wellness and PERMA research
    • Trauma-informed principles
    • How to use a trauma-informed framework to build resiliency and holistic wellness
  • 02:30



October 5, 2022

1:30 pm - 4:00pm

Live Interactive Virtual Training

Session 2: Self-Awareness a Core Competence – Racial Healing



Agenda

  • 00:00
    • Introductions and ground rules
  • 00:15
    • Ethical overview of self-awareness
    • Steps to developing self-awareness and components of self-awareness
  • 00:45
    • Critical thinking traps
  • 01:15
    • Break
  • 01:30
    • Catching yourself in the flow of critical thinking traps
    • Cathing yourself in the flow of racism activity
  • 02:00
    • Strength-based assessment and sharing of results
  • 02:30

October 7, 2022

1:30 pm - 4:00pm

Live Interactive Virtual Training

Session 3: Self-Awareness a Core Competence – Where Did it All Start



Agenda

  • 00:00
    • Introductions and ground rules
  • 00:15
    • 21st Century workplace challenges
    • Unique workforce challenges for human service providers
    • Post-pandemic ethical considerations
  • 00:45
    • Power and privilege in American society
    • Racial identities and social constructs
    • Activity: I am more than my social identity
  • 01:15
    • Break
  • 1:30
    • My Earliest Memories of Race and Racism exercise
    • Understanding where you are in the process of racial healing
  • 2:30



Oct 12, 2022

1:30 pm - 4:00pm

Live Interactive Virtual Training

Session 4: Leaving the Old Girl’s Club Behind

Agenda

  • 00:00
    • Introductions and ground rules
  • 00:15
    • Trauma and the African American community
    • Review the African American traditions of advocacy and challenging social justice
    • Analysis of social work demographic data
    • Case study of African American social work student
  • 01:15
    • Break
  • 1:30
    • Overview of NASW Code of Ethics
    • Evaluating your organization’s capacity to be trauma-informed
    • Using trauma-informed principles to dismantle white supremacy in the workplace
    • Evaluating modern day feminism theory - the intersection of race and gender
    • Trauma-informed pre-evaluation exercise
  • 2:30



October 14, 2022

1:30 pm - 4:00pm

Live Interactive Virtual Training

Session 5: Self-Care a Core Competency – Professional Responsibility

Agenda

00:00

  • Self-care: A new ethical responsibility
  • Shared trauma research and implications for the social work profession
  • Microaggressions and racism in the workplace
  • 01:15
    • Break
  • 1:30
    • The importance of human relationships - how to create opportunities for feedback
    • Embracing individual differences worksheet
    • Using your character strengths to build relationships
    • Role play exercise



October 17, 2022

1:30 pm - 4:00pm

Live Interactive Virtual Training

Session 6: Self- Care a Core Competency - Racial Healing

Agenda

  • 00:00
    • Personal ethics vs. Professionals ethic - engaging in critical self-reflection
    • Warning signs of compassion fatigue and burn-out
    • Recognizing toxic workplace stress
    • Self-care worksheet
  • 01:15
    • Break
  • 1:30
    • Resiliency and optimism research
    • Preventive measures for compassion fatigue and burn-out
    • Examine the intersection of self-care and advocacy
  • 02:30



October 19, 2022

1:30 pm - 4:00pm

Live Interactive Virtual Training

Session 7: Advocacy – A Core Competency - Raising Consciousness

Agenda



  • 00:00
    • Introductions and ground rules
  • 00:15
    • Self-determination - recognizing its limits
    • Exploring systematic racism and inequities and the role social worker plays in it
    • Understanding formal and informal power structures in the workplace
    • Advocacy is an ethical responsibility on a micro and macro level
  • 01:30
    • Break
  • 01:45
    • Positive Emotion, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning, and Accomplishment (PERMA )and how it relates to maintaining work-life balance
    • Toxic workplace patterns and administrative techniques to protect your credibility
    • Managing up and managing down to accomplish your job
    • Pushing back against the status-quo – the final step in being trauma-informed
  • 02:30

Oct 21, 2022

1:30 pm - 4:00pm

Live Interactive Virtual Training

Session 8: Advocacy is Self-Care - Racial Healing

Agenda

  • 00:00
    • Introductions and ground rules
  • 00:15
    • Understanding your communication style -what are your strengths and weaknesses
    • Conflict resolution styles and preparing for healthy confrontation
    • Evaluating your leadership style and communication style
  • 01:00
    • Break
  • 01:15
    • Creating opportunities for communication and healing
    • Organizational prevention and intervention strategies to enhance diversity and inclusion
    • How to use a trauma-informed framework to prevent and eliminate racism
  • 02:00
    • Role play exercise
  • 2:30



October 24, 2022

1:30 pm - 4:00pm

Live Interactive Virtual Training

Session 9: Providing Trauma-Informed Services - The Importance of Human Relationships



Agenda

  • 00:00
    • Introduction and ground rules
  • 00:15
    • The impacts of trauma on survivors and challenges of working with survivors of trauma
    • Recognizing mental health red flags in consumers
    • Trauma vs. challenging client behavior – professional boundaries
  • 01:15
    • Change management – trauma-informed organizational policies
  • 01:45
    • Break
  • 02:00
    • Working in your competency - an ethical mandate
    • Evaluating and identifying resources gaps
    • Best practices for making external community connections
    • Incorporating consumer feedback
  • 02:30



October 26, 2022

1:30 pm - 4:00pm

Live Interactive Virtual Training

Session 10: Integrity, Dignity, and Self-Worth- Getting comfortable with being uncomfortable

Agenda

  • 00:00
    • Introductions and ground rules
  • 00:15
    • Utilizing your power and privilege to become a racial ally
    • Activity: Understanding your comfort zone and danger zones as a racial ally
    • Ethical considerations to becoming a racial ally
  • 01:15
    • Break
  • 01:30
    • Starting the discussion with your organization around trauma, healing and equity
    • Leading diverse teams
    • The continuous process of being trauma-informed and how it can be used to address root causes of social injustice
    • Activity: making connections and developing community
    • Having difficult conversations as a racially conscious social work
  • 02:30



Trainer

Ebony Davis – LEAD CONSULTANT AKA PROFESSIONAL PROBLEM SOLVER

Ms. Ebony Davis serves as our Lead Consultant and is dedicated to building pathways for disenfranchised communities to move up the social, political, and economic ladder. She has over ten years of experience in project management, training, technical assistance, behavioral health, and working with high-risk populations. She is a graduate from the University of Maryland Baltimore County, where she received her Bachelor of Arts in Psychology and from the University of Southern California, where she received her Master of Social Work and Master of Public Administration. Ebony comes with many diverse experiences including working with the Department of Defense, Federal Emergency Management Agency, YMCA, Crystal Stairs Inc., and the Office of the Public Defender. During her free time, she enjoys spending time with her family and friends, traveling and dancing



Fee & Registration

The cost for this course is $900 and includes CE credit. Registration normally ends 48 hours prior to the course state date.



For questions, concerns, or to request special accommodations, please call: (202)-670-4668

Registrants can make accommodations requests during registration. All accommodations requests should be sent to edavis@butler-davis.com 72 hours before training to ensure that the best effort can be made to make those accommodations.



Additional Information about our training protocol can be found in our Resiliency Training Institute Handbook. Participants can find this handbook on our website or by clicking the link above.



Course Completion Requirements/Attendance Policy

Please note participants will be required to have their cameras turned on for the entire duration of the training. Participants are required to attend all training sessions to earn continuing education credit. No make-up days are offered.



LATE ARRIVAL

Class starts at the time advertised and late arrivals will not be accepted into class. Participants who arrive late can receive a 50% voucher that can be used for training in the future. This 50% voucher is typically only good for 90 days.



LEAVING EARLY

Participants who leave early forfeit their CE. If an emergency should occur where a participant needs to leave early, they can receive a 50% voucher that can be used for future training. This voucher typically expires in 90 days.



Continuing Education Distribution

In-person training will distribute CE certificates at the end of the course, once the instructor receives participant’s course evaluations.  Instructors are required to submit sign in sheets and evaluations to the Lead Consultant within three business days of the training. Participants who participate in a live-interactive webinar training will be prompted to download their certificate at the end of the training by submitting a survey/evaluation. A link to the survey/evaluation will be distributed at the end of the class via the chat room and email. Please be advised that participants must submit their course evaluation forms to receive a certificate. Certificates are available immediately for download after the survey/evaluation is submitted. Participants who register for multi-day training must attend and participate in all training sessions to earn continuing education credits.



Even when a social work board accepts courses offering ASWB ACE credit, licensees are responsible for determining whether courses meet the CE requirements in their jurisdictions. States and provincial regulatory boards have the final authority to determine whether any individual course may be accepted for credit.

  • New Jersey accepts only individual approved courses/conferences.
  • New York does not accept ASWB ACE provider or course/conference approval.
  • West Virginia accepts ACE providers and courses for programs offered outside the state or through distance learning.
  • District of Columbia accepts ASWB  approved providers. Social Work License Board Information can be found here
  • Maryland accepts ASWB-approved providers. Social Work License Board Information can be found here



Grievance Policy for Training and Technical Assistance Department

Procedures for external

Butler & Davis Consulting will comply with all legal and ethical responsibilities to be non-discriminatory in promotional activities, program content and in the treatment of program participants. The monitoring and assessment of compliance with these standards will be the responsibility of the Lead Consultant and the Senior Consultant. When a grievance arises pertaining to continuing education programs or processes, course content, speakers, facilities, nonreceipt of certificates, and other miscellaneous occurrences the complainant is expected to submit a grievance form as soon as possible, so that the nature of the concern may be addressed in a timely fashion by Ebony Davis LCSW-C, or Senior Consultant,Norma Bravo LCSW. If the Lead Consultant cannot immediately resolve the issue, the Senior Consultant, Norma Bravo will be tasked with resolving the issue. All possible care will be taken to uphold the confidentiality of the complainant. The consultant will formulate a response to the complaint and recommend action if necessary, which will be conveyed directly to the complainant. A grievance concerning a specific course offering, content, or costs may be resolved by modifications to future offerings, and/or by providing a partial refund to the complainant, or an alternative opportunity. The participant who initiated the grievance is informed of the status of the complaint at all levels. The Senior Consultant will advise the Lead Consultant on any process and improvements as indicated by submitted grievances.



Refund Policy

What is the refund policy?

There are no refunds. Cancellations must be made at least 72 hours prior to the start date of the workshop to receive transfer credit to a future workshop of equal or lesser value ONLY. Any cancellations made less than 72 hours of the start date of the workshop will only be eligible for 50% voucher.



Butler & Davis Consulting LLC - Resiliency Training Institute, #1808, is approved to offer social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program. Organizations, not individual courses, are approved as ACE providers. State and provincial regulatory boards have the final authority to determine whether an individual course may be accepted for continuing education credit. Butler & Davis Consulting LLC - Resiliency Training Institute maintains responsibility for this course. ACE provider approval period: 06/09/2022 – 06/09/2023. Social workers completing this course receive 15 Cultural Competency and 5 Ethics Continuing education credits.




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Comments (1)

Newest · Oldest · Popular

Thoughts on the "trauma-informed training and consultancy" marketplace?

I am a lived experience survivor of trauma and abuse, including being re-traumatized repeatedly by existing service offerings. I have spent hundreds of hours looking through the knowledge base meant to support service professionals and have many notes and critiques.

I've been trying to develop a funding pathway for such work for almost two years and am failing. I don't have a professional degree, despite the many hours of self-study. Half the provider community hates me. And the CE marketplace feels, for me, competitive and hostile. I'm not even allowed to offer CE's as a lived experience expert since I don't have a professional license or advanced degree in social science/psychology.

I hate what most so-called wisdom about "mental health" says about me and my peers and I feel extremely disempowered to fight back.

Any thoughts or advice is appreciated. I could easily see myself developing a course series like this one, but I lack start-up funds, social capital, and physical/emotional energy to push through any more lack of assistance.

I'm both glad courses like this exist, and saddened at how high the barrier to entry is, and how little the professional community is doing anything to help ease that barrier and provide assistance for efforts like mine.

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