Trust-Based Relational Intervention Course: Session 3

Trust-Based Relational Intervention Course: Session 3

Join TXICFW for Session 3 of their four-part series on Trust-Based Relational Intervention for foster and adoptive caregivers!

By Texas Institute for Child & Family Wellbeing

Select date and time

Wednesday, May 21 · 1 - 3pm PDT

Location

Online

About this event

The Texas Institute for Child and Family Wellbeing invites foster and adoptive caregivers to attend a virtual workshop on Trust-Based Relational Intervention (TBRI). This virtual workshop covers 8-hours of content across four days (2-hour sessions). Registrants are encouraged to attend all 4 days to receive full insight.

TBRI is an attachment-based, trauma-informed intervention that is designed to meet the complex needs of vulnerable children (Karyn Purvis Institute of Child Development website). This interactive, 8-hour workshop will provide participants with an introduction to TBRI, Correcting, Empowering, and Connecting approach as developed by Dr. Karyn Purvis and Dr. David Cross. Certificates of completion will be provided.

Session 3: Empowering Principle

Session 3 Objectives:

  1. Identify techniques in each of the three principles to use with their children.
  2. Explore their family history and self-awareness as they relate to their parenting style.
  3. Identify changes to a child’s environment that may help reduce stress.
  4. Enhance understanding of how to interpret behavior and respond appropriately.
  5. Recognize the difference between “safety” and “felt safety” and the importance of the distinction.

Presenter: Nicole Washington, MA

This training is open to all caregivers, including foster parents, adoptive parents, and kinship caregivers. We encourage everyone to register for a date for all four training sessions, as the sessions will cover different topics. All training sessions will be offered on three different dates.

Other Session Training Dates:

Organized by

Located within the School of Social Work at The University of Texas at Austin, The Child and Family Research Institute enhances the lives of children and families through transformational research, program evaluation, curriculum development and policy analyses that foster meaningful solutions for vulnerable populations. Utilizing our experiences in both direct social work practice and social welfare policy, our researchers seek to build evidence for social work practitioners and policy makers to improve practices and systems.