Introduction to Drama Therapy and Addiction
Identity Transformation with Addictive Populations
Dates: May 31 2020 10:30am to 6pm
Location: 3205 Ocean Park Blvd. #240, Santa Monica, CA 90405 (online due to the pandemic)
This course focuses on providing psychologists and other mental health professionals a theoretical understanding of how drama therapy and other creative arts therapies can be integrated into addiction treatment. Professionals will actively participate in a practical forum for trying out different creative experiential exercises with clients dealing with substance abuse and/or process addictions. In particular, participants will learn how to help clients differentiate between the “addict self” and the descriptors used to identify one’s core self. Important treatment considerations which involve cognitive restructuring, identifying triggering behaviors, and identifying future life choices in comparison to current life choices will be explored.
The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercises such as the “Role Card Exercise” will help psychologists and other mental health professionals assist clients identify the roles that they play in their lives that will either help promote or combat the addiction.
- The experiential exercises such as “Befriending the Addiction” will teach psychologists and other mental health professionals about the process of “disidentification” where the client can learn to separate from the addiction and create a healthy dialogue with it, as opposed to being enmeshed in a toxic way.
- The experiential exercises such as the “I Come From” poetry exercise will help psychologists and other mental health professionals learn about the themes and patterns that arise in clients’ lives that might enable an addiction. Participants will explore ways that addicts can rebuild and reshape their identity from just “being an addict,” through techniques of character creation, role play, poetry and life mapping.
Participants will be able to articulate the use of a variety of creative techniques and to demonstrate how these can be incorporated into practice with clients dealing with the effects of addiction.
Participants will learn how to assist clients using drama therapy in building coping mechanisms through exercises geared to broaden role repertoire, address feelings of shame and guilt, provide healthy living alternatives, and build positive self-image, self-esteem, and self-discipline.
Course Objectives (not the same as learning objectives, see below):
- Present 2 theories and applications of using drama therapy with clients dealing with addictions.
- Demonstrate 2 creative methods using drama therapy, psychodramatic techniques and other creative therapies in working with clients who are dealing with the effects of addiction.
- Present two case studies discussing the use of drama therapy in at least 2 different addiction treatment settings with opportunities for participant questions and participation.
- Show methods of identifying and working with triggers through drama therapy.
- Explore methods of helping addictive clients identify new life choices and their core identity through drama therapy.
Learning Objectives:
- Participants will name 2 different approaches of using drama therapy with clients dealing with addiction. • Participants will name two creative techniques to use with clients dealing with the effects of addiction. • Participants will name one relevant method and theory based on either of the two case studies presented in class.
- Participants will list two methods of identifying and working with triggers through drama therapy • Participant will identify and name one drama method of helping addicts focus on future life choices and one method which combines drama therapy and the creative arts to identify core identity
Instructor:
Alexis Maron (MA, RDT-BCT, RADT) is a Registered Drama Therapist and Board Certified Trainer specializing in relationships, family dynamics, and sexual and chemical addictions. In New York, she worked as a drama therapist with high school students, homeless mentally disordered adults, and the aged and infirm at a nursing home/rehab facility.
Alexis has the privilege of leading Drama Therapy groups at renowned treatment centers, such as the Waismann Institute, Simple Recovery, Lido Wellness, and Nexus Recovery with clients who suffer from substance abuse and sexual addictions. In addition, she is working with First Responders in a treatment center setting suffering from both addiction, and PTSD and also works with clients who suffer from substance abuse and sexual addictions. In addition, Alexis works with a non-profit organization, the Down Syndrome Association of Orange County, facilitating a “social skills” group for adults with Down Syndrome.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation • Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865 • Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262-8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Allies in Healing: Narradrama and Narrative Therapy
Part I focus on narrative theories and foundational practices
June 14, 2020 10:30 am to 6:00 pm
Via zoom
Course Description
In this workshop, participants will (1) explore current research on theories of narradrama and narrative therapy that form an alliance to deepen growth and healing; (2) learn and practice specific narradrama and narrative therapy interventions that open more expressive, and creative ways to explore and honor identities and differences. This alliance with narrative therapy centers on discovering strengths and encouraging spontaneity and creativity, which is a strong focus of narradrama. Well-established narrative concepts –such as externalization, scaffolding and landscapes of action and identity will be expanded through narradrama. Providing advanced training and understanding of these concepts will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention and communication. Limitations and risks related to creative expression (such as flooding of emotions, feeling safe, and de-rolling practices) will be discussed and addressed.
The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercises of, “challenged assumptions” and “Meaning making” illustrate the concept of narrative questioning and provide practice in utilizing art, puppetry and sculpting to assist the process. 2. The experiential exercise, “Re-authoring,” explores action interventions museum of values or value mural to help expand the clients’ voice.
- The experiential exercises, “Inoculation” and “Unique Outcome,” show ways to help the client identify and enact a unique outcome or self-identity change story which has been a pivotal in their life.
Course Learning Objectives:
- Participants will be able to list two key tenets of narrative therapy and Narradrama. 2. Participants will be able to list two key principles of intersectionality connected to narradrama. 3. Participants will be able to identify two narradrama interventions.
- Participants will be able to name one important principle in determining whether to use tools such as masks, puppets, drawings, objects or photos.
- Participants will be able to list a limitation of the approach and a risk associated with its use.
Tentative Schedule:
10:30-11:00 Introductions, Review of syllabus and warmup exercises
11:00-11:30 Themes for the day and scene work
11:30-12:15 Lecture and PowerPoint on Narradrama (Stories, methods, and intersectionality) 12:15-12:45 Experiential: Scene work … Asking Narrative questions
12:45-1:00 Video: animated documentaries and Excerpt from Daniel Whitlow
1:00-1:15 Review of morning session, Q&A
1:15-1:45 Lunch Break
1:45 to 2:15 Video: Watch Interview with Julie Tilsen on your own (Link at very end of syllabus)
2:15-5:15 Narrative Questioning Experientials on “Challenged Assumptions,” “Meaning Making,” “Re authoring values,” “Inoculation,” “Unique Outcomes,” and “Time Travelling”
The afternoon session will include working in small groups in breakout sessions, returning to present to the whole class, with a 10 minute break around 4:00 pm
5:45-6:00 Closure and Goodbyes
Risk Factors:
Risk factors will be discussed at the beginning of the class
Class Expectations & Assignments:
Learning in this class will come in two forms: theoretical (through handouts and class lectures) and experiential (by participating in demonstration exercises in class). It is expected that students will, participate fully in drama and creative arts therapy demonstrations.
Attendance Policy:
CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation. Participants will sign in to the class in the morning and after the lunch break and at the conclusion. A final quiz of questions and specific exercises to be completed by the participant must be turned in to the instructor to receive CE credit.
Policies:
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Kamran Afary at 661-478-9016. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable thereafter; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Kamran Afary at 661-478-9016 or email:
dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Rachel Brousseau at (626) 460-0570 or email: rachelbrousseau@gmail.com
Instructors Statements:
Special Accommodations: Reasonable accommodations will be provided upon request for persons with disabilities. Please check in with the instructor to ensure that your special accommodations in order for you to participate are met.
Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute Of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
This course will include a discussion of the following:
- Limitations of the content being taught, including contradictory evidence and its source.
- Discussions of clinical assessment, treatments or interventions will be presented with credibly supported most current scientific evidence (such as research from peer reviewed journals, established psychological practice, clinical expertise, and patient acceptability).
- Discussion of any risks associated with these contents, and their extent, severity, or frequency
- A disclosure of any potential conflict of interest, commercial support, or commercial interest that applies to the presenter or the content of the presentation.
Instructor bio
Kamran Afary RDT/NT; PhD in Performance Studies
Kamran Afary is an Assistant Professor of Intersectional Identities and Relationships and a recipient of the 2016 Outstanding Lecturer Award at Cal State LA. He teaches interpersonal and health communication to student-prisoners in Lancaster California, and has worked extensively with Middle Eastern and South Asian refugee-immigrant populations He is a Narradrama Trainer and has recently presented Narradrama training in China. His publications include: Iranian Diaspora Identities: Stories and Songs (Hamilton 2020); Communication Research on Expressive Arts as Forms of Healing (Lexington 2020); and Performance and Activism: Grassroots Discourse after the Los Angeles Rebellion of 1992 (Lexington 2009). He is a co-author with Pam Dunne and Pam Paulson of “Narradrama: A Narrative Approach to Drama Therapy.” In Current Approaches in Drama therapy (3rd edition).
Selected References and Resources
Dunne, Pam, Afary, Kamran, and Paulson, Pam (2020) “Narradrama: A Narrative Approach to Drama Therapy.” In Current Approaches in Drama therapy (3rd edition). Eds. David Reed Johnson and Renee Emunah. Charles C Thomas Publishing.
Afary, Kamran (2020) “A Narradrama Approach to Teaching Communication.” In Communication Research on Expressive Arts and Narrative: More than Words, eds, Kamran Afary and Alice Marianne Fritz. Lexington Books. 2020.
Tilsen, Julie. (2018). “I’m not telling, I’m asking,” in Narrative Approaches to Youth Work: Conversational Skills for a Critical Practice. Routledge.
Carey, Maggie and Russell, Shona. “Re-Authoring Commonly Asked Question”
TCTV. A collection of narrative therapy videos and live interviews. https://tctv.live/
Tilsen, Julie. Interview “On the Art and Craft of Curiosity.” June 9, 2020)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qWAYSnnFkwc&list=PLE39pWxhWwzr5pPou_ZZJHXCn8ejLxd1U&i ndex=6&t=0s
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation • Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865 • Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262-8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Drama Therapy for Mental Health Professionals
Date: June 20, 2020 10:30-6:00 class via Zoom
Drama Therapy for Mental Health Professionals
Course Description:
This course focuses on providing mental health professionals and others interested in Drama Therapy processes a theoretical understanding of how Drama Therapy and other creative arts therapies can be integrated into treatment. In this class, participants will be introduced to the basic techniques and foundations of Drama Therapy. They will learn how to describe this modality and understand tools and techniques to use with a variety of populations. In addition, participants will walk away with a handful of Drama Therapy games and warm-ups that may be applied in both an educational and professional setting. The experiential exercises will give first-hand experience with how it works, and where to best implement these kinetic techniques.
The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercises such as the “Role Card Exercise” will help mental health professionals and others identify the roles that they play in their lives that will either help promote or combat positive choices in their lives.
- The experiential exercises such as “Befriending the Diagnosis/Issue” will teach participants about the process of “disidentification” where the subject can learn to separate from their “issues” and create a healthy dialogue with it, as opposed to being enmeshed in a toxic way.
- The experiential exercises such as the “I Come From” poetry exercise will help mental health professionals and others learn about the themes and patterns that arise in their lives and decipher if those patterns are beneficial for overall success and well-being.
Participants will be able to articulate the use of a variety of creative techniques and to demonstrate how these can be incorporated into practice with clients and/or themselves.
Participants will learn how to assist clients using drama therapy in building coping mechanisms through exercises geared to broaden role repertoire, address feelings of shame and guilt, provide healthy living alternatives, and build positive self-image, self-esteem, and self-discipline.
Course Objectives (not the same as learning objectives):
- Present 2 theories and applications of using drama therapy
- Demonstrate 2 creative methods using drama therapy, psychodramatic techniques and other creative therapies
- Show methods of identifying and working with triggers through drama therapy.
- Explore methods of helping clients identify new life choices and their core identity through drama therapy.
Learning Objectives:
- Participants will name 2 different approaches of using drama therapy with clients
- Participants will name two creative techniques to use with clients
- Participants will list two methods of identifying and working with triggers through drama therapy • Participant will identify and name one drama method of helping clients focus on future life choices and one method which combines drama therapy and the creative arts
Risk Factors:
Risk Factors will be discussed at the beginning of the class.
Class Expectations and Assignments:
Learning in this class will come in two forms: Theoretical (through handouts and class lectures) and Experiential (by participating in demonstration exercises via zoom). It is expected that students will participate fully in drama and creative arts therapy demonstrations.
Attendance Policy:
CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation. Participants will sign in to the class in the morning and after the lunch break and at the conclusion. A final quiz of questions and specific exercises must be turned in to the instructor to receive CE credit.
Policies:
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 1 week prior; 50% refundable thereafter; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Alexis Maron at 310-422-9386 or email her at alexis@alexismaron.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
Instructor’s Statements:
Special Accommodations: Reasonable accommodations will be provided for persons with disabilities. Please check in with the instructor to ensure that your special accommodations (in order for you to participate) are met. Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute Of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
This course will include a discussion of the following:
- Limitations of the content being taught, including contradictory evidence and its source. • Discussions of clinical assessment, treatments or interventions will be presented with credibly supported most current scientific evidence (such as research from peer reviewed journals, established psychological practice, clinical expertise, and patient acceptability).
- Discussion of any risks associated with these contents, their extent, severity, or frequency
- A disclosure of any potential conflict or interest, commercial support, or commercial interest that applies to the presenter or the content of the presentation.
Instructor bio:
Alexis Maron (MA, RDT-BCT, RADT) is a Registered Drama Therapist and Board Certified Trainer specializing in relationships, family dynamics, and sexual and chemical addictions. In New York, she worked as a drama therapist with high school students, homeless mentally disordered adults, and the aged and infirm at a nursing home/rehab facility.
Alexis has the privilege of leading Drama Therapy groups at renowned treatment centers, such as the Waismann Institute, Simple Recovery, Lido Wellness, and Nexus Recovery with clients who suffer from substance abuse and sexual addictions. In addition, she is working with First Responders in a treatment center setting suffering from both addiction, and PTSD and also works with clients who suffer from substance abuse and sexual addictions. Alexis works with a non-profit organization, the Down Syndrome Association of Orange County, facilitating a weekly “social skills” group for adults with Down Syndrome.
References:
Alschuler, M. (2009). The darkest abyss: Poetry therapy in the treatment of addictions. In The use of the creative therapies with chemical dependency issues (pp. 256-268). Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Bailey, S. (2009). Recovering identity and stimulating growth through drama therapy. In The use of the creative therapies with chemical dependency issues (pp. 204-217). Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Brooke, S. L. (Ed.). (2009). The use of the creative therapies with chemical dependency issues. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Emunah, R. (2019). Acting For Real. Drama Therapy Process, Technique and Performance (2nd edition). New York: Routledge.
Johnson, D., Emunah R. (2020) Current Approaches in Drama Therapy.(3rd edition) Springfield IL: Charles C Thomas.
Krentzman, A. R. (2013). Review of the application of positive psychology to substance use, addiction, and recovery research. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 27(1), 151.
Landy, R. J. (1993) Persona and Performance: The Meaning of Role in Drama, Therapy and Everyday Life. The Guilford Press.
Landy, R. J. (1996) Essays in Drama Therapy: The Double Life. London and Philadelphia. Jessica Kingsley Publishers.
Landy, R. J. (2008) The couch and the stage: Integrating words and action in psychotherapy. Jason Aronson. Lewis, P. and Johnson, D. (2000) Current Approaches in Drama Therapy. Springfield, IL. Charles c. Thomas
Linden, Saphira (ed.) (2013) The Heart and Soul of Psychotherapy: A transformational approach to theatre arts: Drama Therapy, Psychodrama, Transformational Theatre. Trafford Publishing.
Yalom, I. (1989). Love’s Executioner and Other Tales of Psychotherapy. New York. Harper Collins.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama
therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation • Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865 • Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262-8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors. • APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Narradrama Witnessing Practices: Reflecting Teams and Creative Arts
Date: June 26 2020 10:30-6:00 Class via Zoom
In the workshop, participants will (1) explore narrative and drama therapy theories and practices based on current research and (2) learn and practice specific drama and creative arts interventions (based on narradrama) that open more expressive, and creative ways to work and to respect cultural differences. Opening up expressive modalities in conjunction with verbal expression expands communication. This enhanced expression helps both the therapist and client to more clearly understand the client’s issues and explore alternative solutions. This method also centers on discovering client strengths and encouraging spontaneity and creativity, which is a strong focus of narradrama. These methods are compatible with the leading psychological theories. Well-established narrative concepts –such as externalization, scaffolding and landscapes of action and identity— which may be familiar to psychology graduates, will be expanded through narradrama. Providing advanced training and understanding of these concepts will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention and communication. Limitations and risks related to creative expression (such as flooding of emotions, feeling safe, and de rolling practices) will be thoroughly discussed and addressed.
Focus on Witnessing Practices
- Participants will explore witnessing and reflective practices which honor and enhance the therapeutic session through expansive ways to reflect through conversation, art, movement, phototherapy and reflecting teams. These practices bring hope in a time of isolation and challenge with COVID 19.
- Narradrama therapy combines a strength-based value system with theatrical techniques and concepts to bring about meaningful change. It gives clients a way to express their feelings, interact with others, and rehearse healthy behaviors. It is intended to help participants explore their inner experience and break them out of any rigid roles or frameworks. (Johnson & Ackerman) The purpose of this strength-based approach in to expand discoveries about personal strengths, choices and/or values.
- During this workshop we will explore and experience Witnessing practices. Witnessing Practices invite an expansive, unobtrusive, deeply honoring way of being seen and
appreciated. Participants will explore witnessing practices which help to enhance the therapeutic session including the use of a reflecting team, authentic movement, individual reflections and expansive ways to reflect through conversation, art, movement and phototherapy.
- The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercise, “externalizing the problem,” illustrates the concept of externalization and provides practice in utilizing art, puppetry and sculpting to assist the process.
- The experiential exercise, “finding your strengths,” explores action interventions through drama, music, art and poetry to help expand the clients’ voice.
- The experiential exercise, transformational stories,” shows ways to help the client identify and enact a unique outcome or self-identity change story which has been a pivotal in their life.
Learning Objectives:
- Participants will be able to name five Witnessing Practices
- Participants will be able to name three Narradrama therapy tools that can be integrated into Witnessing Practices.
- Participants will be able to name the four stage Reflective Team Practice.
- Participants will name the 2 core Witnessing Practices in Authentic Movement. Instructor:
Pam Paulson, MA, LMFT, RDT, NT, serves as adjunct faculty and Narradrama trainer at the Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles. She leads Narradrama training workshops in both China and the United States. For 28 years, Pam worked for Orange County Children & Family Services as a senior social worker/supervisor specializing in: childhood trauma, intimate partner violence, substance abuse and adoptions. Pam worked with community partnerships to create a Parent Mentor Program and a Strengthening Marriage Workshop for active duty and veteran families. As a co-writer and director, she created “The Job Interview,” a training about white privilege, and co-founded PAX (Personal Art eXchange) a community-based art group. She teaches Authentic Movement and holds a certificate from the Authentic Movement Institute in Berkeley, California. She is an Advisory Board member for the non profit Project Satori which provides therapeutic services to trafficking survivors.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation • Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865 • Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262-8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Navigating the Journey through Trauma and Loss with Narradrama
Date: July 12th, 10:30 to 6:00 class via Zoom
Instructor: Pam Paulson, MA, LMFT, RDT, NT
Course Description :
Change is a constant in our lives and takes on various rhythms throughout our lifespan. The change of the seasons, growing through developmental stages, the transition from night to day and birth and death. There are losses experienced along the way as well as positive growth and the emerging of strengths. Trauma is experienced when we are strained beyond our capacity to adapt and to regulate our states of arousal. Trauma inhibits our ability to play, imagine, and have hope. During this course we will explore the natural rhythms of loss and the impact of trauma including biological, relational, social and emotional. Using drama and creative arts, participants will explore interventions centered in action techniques, which have been helpful in working with groups and individuals who have experienced loss and trauma.
There will be a variety of experiential exercises during this course which will assist participants in exploring aspects of body awareness, exploring strengths and coping strategies. Here is a sample of a few creative exercises that will be explored during this workshop.
- Participants will explore soothing body exercises to experience a sense of relaxation and calm. 2. Island of Safety – Participants will draw an Island of Safety thus creating an environment which creates a sense of safety.
- Metaphors of the healing journey – Participants will select a healing story, symbol or metaphor representing their healing journey
The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercise, “soothing body exercises,” illustrates the skill to regulate the nervous system and build safety, resources, and sensation awareness.
- The experiential exercise “Island of Safety” focuses on physical activities and games that foster healthy defense responses, boundary setting, and promote connectedness.
- The experiential exercise “Healing Journey” involves activities to balance and restore lost protective reflexes, confidence, and resilience.
Learning Objectives:
- Participants will be able to name 4 types of traumas.
- Participants will name two Narradrama techniques used in dealing with trauma
- Participants will list two negative consequences of the impact of trauma
- Participants will list 2 positive consequences as a result of working with trauma.
- Participant will identify and name the 3 stages of Healing Trauma.
Risk Factors:
Risk Factors will be discussed at the beginning of the class.
Class Expectations and Assignments:
Learning in this class will come in two forms: Theoretical and Experiential.
Attendance Policy:
CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation. Participants will sign in to the class in the morning and after the lunch break and at the conclusion. A final quiz of questions and specific exercises must be turned in to the instructor to receive CE credit.
Policies:
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable thereafter; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Pam Paulson at 4pampaulson@gmail.com or contact her by phone at 213- 300-7023
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at
dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
Instructor’s Statements:
Special Accommodations: Reasonable accommodations will be provided for persons with disabilities. Please check in with the instructor to ensure that your special accommodations (in order for you to participate) are met. Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute Of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
This course will include a discussion of the following:
- Limitations of the content being taught, including contradictory evidence and its source. • Discussions of clinical assessment, treatments or interventions will be presented with credibly supported most current scientific evidence (such as research from peer reviewed journals, established psychological practice, clinical expertise, and patient acceptability).
- Discussion of any risks associated with these contents, their extent, severity, or frequency • A disclosure of any potential conflict or interest, commercial support, or commercial interest that applies to the presenter or the content of the presentation.
References:
Bonanno, G. (2004) Loss, Trauma, and Human Resilience: Have We Underestimated the Human Capacity to Thrive After Extremely Aversive Events? American Psychologist
Cloitre, M., Cohen, L., Ortigo, K., Jackson, C. and Koenen, K. (2020)Treating Survivors of Childhood Abuse and Interpersonal Trauma, Second Edition: STAIR Narrative Therapy Second Edition The Guilford Press Courtois, C. (2013) Treating Complex Traumatic Stress Disorders: Scientific Foundations and Therapeutic Models. The Guilford Press
Emunah, R. (1994). Acting For Real. Drama Therapy Process, Technique and Performance. New York and London. Brunner- Routledge.
Landy, R. J. (1996) Essays in Drama Therapy: The Double Life. London and Philadelphia. Jessica Kingsley Publishers. Levine, P. (1997) Waking the Tiger: Healing Trauma North Atlantic Books; 1 edition
Lewis, P. and Johnson, D. (2000) Current Approaches in Drama Therapy. Springfield, IL. Charles c. Thomas Sajnani, N., Johnson, D. (2014) Trauma-Informed Drama Therapy: Transforming Clinics, Classrooms, and Communities 1st Edition. Charles C Thomas Publishers
Van der Kolk, B. M.D. (2015) The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma, Penguin Books; Reprint edition
White, M. Children, Trauma & Subordinate Storyline Development, International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work: Responding to Trauma Part 2 -2005 Nos. 3.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation • Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865 • Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262-8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors. • APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Intersectional Identities in the Therapeutic Encounter
2017 APA Multicultural Guidelines:
An Ecological Approach to Context, Identity, and Intersectionality
July 19, 2020 10:30am to 6pm
Class via zoom
Course Description:
This workshop will address the following questions:
- How is our ethical practice in therapeutic, clinical, and educational settings informed by the way identities intersect and influence human experience? (NADTA 2015 and Talwar 2017)
- What is intersectionality as a theoretical paradigm and as a practice in drama therapy? (Sajnani, 2013, and Watts-Jones 2010)
- How are gendered, racialized, neurodiverse, and queer bodies and perspectives quieted in our field? (APA 2015)
- What can we do to help amplify — not quiet—intersectional identities? (APA 2017)
This course will include a discussion of the new 2017 APA Multicultural Guidelines: An Ecological Approach to Context, Identity, and Intersectionality. Participants will engage in discussion and enactments of the 10 Overall Multicultural Guidelines to reconsider diversity and multicultural practice within professional psychology. Participants will consider how the term “multicultural” has evolved from its 2002 definition in APA literature as interactions between racial/ethnic groups in the U.S. and the implications for education, training, research, practice, and organizational change” to a much broader conceptualization that considers contextual factors and intersectionality among and between reference group identities.
Participants will also explore the five layers of the Layered Ecological Model of the Multicultural Guidelines in APA’s new guidelines. These layers include: the microsystem, mesosystem, exosystem, macrosystem, and chronosystem of multicultural identity formations.
Given these new 2017 APA guidelines, how can we better address the sociopolitical traumas that influence our clients’ psychological health? How can we help create space for the reshaping of identities in the therapeutic encounter? What are some of the risks that psychologists may have to take in order to engage in discussions of identity? How can we ensure that in following the APA’s aspirational guidelines, practitioners are also strictly adhering to ethical standards. (APA 2017)
Instructor will also follow DTILA’s guidelines and procedures (enclosed) to disclose any potential conflict of interest, commercial support, or commercial interest that applies to the presenter or the content of the presentation.
The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the
following three ways:
- The experiential exercises illustrate the need for awareness about the assumptions we make about normative identities and help build response-ability, safety, and resources.
- The experiential exercises focus on physical activities and games that foster healthy reflexivity about construction of identities, boundary setting, and promoting compassion.
- The experiential exercises involve activities to layers of ecological identities and awareness of intersectional identities that are silenced or erased, in order to help clients gain confidence, and resilience.
Course Objectives:
- Participants will be able to list two important concepts and tenants of theories of intersectionality and social construction of identities.
- Participants will be able to identify two elements of a specific intervention for adults in a cultural diversity workshop.
- Participants will be able to identify one specific interventions to help express identities in gender, race, age, class, sexuality, and ability
4- Participants will be able to list a limitation of the approach and a risk associated with its use
Instructor
Kamran Afary is an Assistant Professor of Intersectional Identities and Relationships and a recipient of the 2016 Outstanding Lecturer Award at Cal State LA. He teaches interpersonal and health communication to student-prisoners in Lancaster California, and has worked extensively with Middle Eastern and South Asian refugee-immigrant populations He is a Narradrama Trainer and has recently presented Narradrama training in China. His publications include: Iranian Diaspora Identities: Stories and Songs (Rowman & Littlefield 2020) and Communication Research on Expressive Arts and Narrative as Forms of Healing (Lexington 2020); and Performance and Activism: Grassroots Discourse after the Los Angeles Rebellion of 1992 (Lexington 2009).
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation • Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865 • Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262-8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Body Awareness and Movement In Personal Growth, Psychotherapy and Education
Dates: August 1, 2020 10:30-6:00
Location: Class via zoom
This course will provide theory and an active experiential approach to learn about the mind and body connection, body awareness, and observation and assessment of movement through Laban Movement Analysis and Bartenieff Fundamentals. Piaget began to notice through his research how movement plays a part in development and perception. The introduction to Laban Movement Analysis provides a common language for therapists to observe, assess, and provide interventions. The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercises will help psychologists and mental health professionals in noticing the emotions in the body and tension that can be held from past traumas and learning. 2. The experiential exercises will specifically look at the 6 developmental patterns of connectivity in the body as a way of finding inner connections that support the following four psychological skills: 1- outer expressivity, 2-self-esteem, 3-being in the world, 4-re-storying unhelpful narratives. 3. The experiential exercises are crafted to develop stronger observational skills that will help psychologists and other mental health professionals bring awareness to clients’ movement preferences as well as others’. This in turn can help in making more informed decisions on appropriate clinical direction for treatment.
Learning Objectives:
- Participants will be able to name Laban’s four categories to assessing movement and how each category builds body awareness.
- Participants will be able to name 6 patterns of developmental connectivity in the body and how they relate to psychosocial development.
- Participants will be able to identify 3 clinically appropriate movement interventions to build self-esteem including opening and exploring the head-tail connection.
- Participants will list clinically important information learned in the workshop and how they can be applied to individual, group, and family therapy sessions.
Instructor:
Deva Connett is a Board Certified Dance/Movement Therapist and a Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor. Deva has worked in artistic, clinical, and educational settings with a variety of clients. Her body of work is an integration of her experience with clients who have experienced trauma, eating disorders, general mental health disorders, and intellectual disabilities. She guides clients toward obtaining a greater quality of life through exposure to movement and creative expression. Deva is a Certified Laban Movement Analyst, experienced therapeutic group facilitator, individual therapist and public speaker.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation • Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865 • Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262-8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Clinical Uses of Narradrama with Individuals and Groups
Narradrama and Neuroscience
Dates: August 15, 2020 10:30-6:00pm
Location: Class via zoom
General Narradrama Course Description:
In the workshop, participants will (1) explore narrative and drama therapy theories and practices based on current research and (2) learn and practice specific drama and creative arts interventions (based on narradrama) that open more expressive, and creative ways to work and to respect cultural differences. Opening up expressive modalities in conjunction with verbal expression expands communication. This enhanced expression helps both the therapist and client to more clearly understand the client’s issues and explore alternative solutions. This method also centers on discovering client strengths and encouraging spontaneity and creativity, which is a strong focus of narradrama. These methods are compatible with the leading psychological theories. Well-established narrative concepts –such as externalization, scaffolding and landscapes of action and identity— which may be familiar to psychology graduates, will be expanded through narradrama. Providing advanced training and understanding of these concepts will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention and communication. Limitations and risks related to creative expression (such as flooding of emotions, feeling safe, and de rolling practices) will be thoroughly discussed and addressed.
- The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercise, “externalizing the problem,” illustrates the concept of externalization and provides practice in utilizing art, puppetry and sculpting to assist the process.
- The experiential exercise, “finding your strengths,” explores action interventions through drama, music, art and poetry to help expand the clients’ voice.
- The experiential exercise, transformational stories,” shows ways to help the client identify and enact a unique outcome or self-identity change story which has been a pivotal in their life.
Learning Objectives:
- Participants will be able to list two key tenets of narrative therapy and Narradrama. 2. Participants will be able to list two key principles of neuroscience connected to narradrama.
- Participants will be able to identify two narradrama interventions.
- Participants will be able to name one important principle in determining whether to use tools such as masks, puppets, drawings, objects or photos.
- Participants will be able to list a limitation of the approach and a risk associated with its use.
Focus on Neuroscience
The workshop, centered in Narradrama and rooted in narrative therapy and drama therapy will focus on Narradrama action techniques which increase emotional arousal, novelty, repetition and focus of attention which are factors in optimizing conditions for new synaptic growth (Siegel, 2011). Participants will discover through selected Narradrama interventions how Narradrama can be utilized to strengthen synaptic connections in each of the four areas. The workshop will also cover research concerning positive and negative emotions and research confirming benefits of positive emotions and research about memory consolidation. In addition, the importance of social engagement from a neurological point of view and the use of mirroring will be demonstrated. Additional research by Beaudoin and Zimmerman (2011, 2015) shows how narrative practices increase the repertoire of problem counter-states and research by Dunne (2017) shows the connection between Narradrama and Siegel’s 4 areas. Providing advanced training and understanding of Narradrama and Neuroscience concepts will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention and communication. Limitations and risks related to creative expression (such as flooding of emotions, feeling safe, and de-rolling practices) will be thoroughly discussed and addressed.
Focus on Neuroscience Learning Objectives
- Participants will be able to list Siegel’s 4 areas related to growth in synapses.
- Participants will be able to list two benefits of positive emotions as verified in research studies. 3. Participants will be able to identify one Narradrama exercise related to Siegel’s area of emotional arousal.
- Participants will be able to identify one Narradrama exercise related to Siegel’s identification of the area of novelty.
- Participants will be able to identify one Narradrama exercise related to Siegel’s area of repetition.
Instructor:
Pam Dunne, PhD, RDT/BCT/NT, is a clinical psychologist, registered drama therapist, board-certified trainer, professor emerita at California State University Los Angeles, and Executive Director of the Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles and of the Creative Therapies Center. With well over a dozen books, films, articles, and book chapters, Dr. Dunne is credited with developing narradrama, which is a specific method in drama therapy and narrative therapy that integrates drama, narrative, and the creative arts. She has pioneered narradrama training in Europe, Australia, New Zealand, China and Russia. Dr. Dunne has completed postgraduate study including over 125 continuing education hours in the study of interpersonal neurobiology. Dr. Dunne is a past president of the North American Drama Therapy Association and founding member of its board of examiners. In 2014, she was honored to receive the Teaching Excellence Award in recognition of her outstanding dedication to education in the field of drama therapy through teaching and mentorship. In 2016, she was honored to receive the Gertrud
Schattner Award. The Gertrud Schattner Award has been given since 1993 in recognition of distinguished contribution to the field of drama therapy in education, publication, practice, and service. This is the highest award that the NADTA gives in recognition of outstanding service to drama therapy.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation • Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865 • Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262-8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Clinical Uses of Narradrama with Individuals and Groups
Narradrama and Neuroscience
Dates: August 15, 2020 10:30-6:00pm
Location: Class via zoom
General Narradrama Course Description:
In the workshop, participants will (1) explore narrative and drama therapy theories and practices based on current research and (2) learn and practice specific drama and creative arts interventions (based on narradrama) that open more expressive, and creative ways to work and to respect cultural differences. Opening up expressive modalities in conjunction with verbal expression expands communication. This enhanced expression helps both the therapist and client to more clearly understand the client’s issues and explore alternative solutions. This method also centers on discovering client strengths and encouraging spontaneity and creativity, which is a strong focus of narradrama. These methods are compatible with the leading psychological theories. Well-established narrative concepts –such as externalization, scaffolding and landscapes of action and identity— which may be familiar to psychology graduates, will be expanded through narradrama. Providing advanced training and understanding of these concepts will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention and communication. Limitations and risks related to creative expression (such as flooding of emotions, feeling safe, and de rolling practices) will be thoroughly discussed and addressed.
- The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercise, “externalizing the problem,” illustrates the concept of externalization and provides practice in utilizing art, puppetry and sculpting to assist the process.
- The experiential exercise, “finding your strengths,” explores action interventions through drama, music, art and poetry to help expand the clients’ voice.
- The experiential exercise, transformational stories,” shows ways to help the client identify and enact a unique outcome or self-identity change story which has been a pivotal in their life.
Learning Objectives:
- Participants will be able to list two key tenets of narrative therapy and Narradrama. 2. Participants will be able to list two key principles of neuroscience connected to narradrama.
- Participants will be able to identify two narradrama interventions.
- Participants will be able to name one important principle in determining whether to use tools such as masks, puppets, drawings, objects or photos.
- Participants will be able to list a limitation of the approach and a risk associated with its use.
Focus on Neuroscience
The workshop, centered in Narradrama and rooted in narrative therapy and drama therapy will focus on Narradrama action techniques which increase emotional arousal, novelty, repetition and focus of attention which are factors in optimizing conditions for new synaptic growth (Siegel, 2011). Participants will discover through selected Narradrama interventions how Narradrama can be utilized to strengthen synaptic connections in each of the four areas. The workshop will also cover research concerning positive and negative emotions and research confirming benefits of positive emotions and research about memory consolidation. In addition, the importance of social engagement from a neurological point of view and the use of mirroring will be demonstrated. Additional research by Beaudoin and Zimmerman (2011, 2015) shows how narrative practices increase the repertoire of problem counter-states and research by Dunne (2017) shows the connection between Narradrama and Siegel’s 4 areas. Providing advanced training and understanding of Narradrama and Neuroscience concepts will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention and communication. Limitations and risks related to creative expression (such as flooding of emotions, feeling safe, and de-rolling practices) will be thoroughly discussed and addressed.
Focus on Neuroscience Learning Objectives
- Participants will be able to list Siegel’s 4 areas related to growth in synapses.
- Participants will be able to list two benefits of positive emotions as verified in research studies. 3. Participants will be able to identify one Narradrama exercise related to Siegel’s area of emotional arousal.
- Participants will be able to identify one Narradrama exercise related to Siegel’s identification of the area of novelty.
- Participants will be able to identify one Narradrama exercise related to Siegel’s area of repetition.
Instructor:
Pam Dunne, PhD, RDT/BCT/NT, is a clinical psychologist, registered drama therapist, board-certified trainer, professor emerita at California State University Los Angeles, and Executive Director of the Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles and of the Creative Therapies Center. With well over a dozen books, films, articles, and book chapters, Dr. Dunne is credited with developing narradrama, which is a specific method in drama therapy and narrative therapy that integrates drama, narrative, and the creative arts. She has pioneered narradrama training in Europe, Australia, New Zealand, China and Russia. Dr. Dunne has completed postgraduate study including over 125 continuing education hours in the study of interpersonal neurobiology. Dr. Dunne is a past president of the North American Drama Therapy Association and founding member of its board of examiners. In 2014, she was honored to receive the Teaching Excellence Award in recognition of her outstanding dedication to education in the field of drama therapy through teaching and mentorship. In 2016, she was honored to receive the Gertrud
Schattner Award. The Gertrud Schattner Award has been given since 1993 in recognition of distinguished contribution to the field of drama therapy in education, publication, practice, and service. This is the highest award that the NADTA gives in recognition of outstanding service to drama therapy.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation • Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865 • Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262-8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Clinical Uses of Embodied Narradrama for Trauma in Childhood and Adolescence (PART I)
Date: September 20, 2020 10:30-6:00
Class via Zoom
Course Description
In the workshop, participants will learn and practice trauma specific drama and creative arts interventions (based on narradrama, somatic experiencing, and mindfulness). This perspective brings in a trauma informed care approach based on current research and best practices models. Participants will learn interventions to help guide children and adolescent through 1) the shock experienced in the aftermath of a wide range of overwhelming life events, and 2) focusing on the story of trauma in the body, which is where the trauma resides, and restorying the trauma. Narrative and somatic processes such as externalization, pendulation, resourcing, and preferred identities/futures will be expanded through narradrama. These techniques will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention. Limitations and risks related to embodied creative expression (such as flooding of emotions, safety issues, and dissociation) will be thoroughly discussed and addressed.
The restorying experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercise, “externalizing the problem,” illustrates the concept of externalization and provides practice in utilizing art, sculpts, and music to build safety, resources, and sensation awareness.
- The experiential exercises focusing on physical activities and games foster healthy defense responses, boundary setting, and promote connectedness.
- The experiential exercises involved in balancing activities restore lost protective
reflexes, confidence, and resilience.
Course Learning Objectives:
- Participants will be able to list two key signs of trauma in children. 2. Participants will be able to list two key symptoms of trauma in adolescents.
- Participants will be able to list three key components of trauma informed care.
- Participants will be able to identify two skills in Trauma First Aid. 5. Participants will be able to identify two narradrama interventions.
Risk Factors:
Risk factors will be discussed at the beginning of the class
Class Expectations & Assignments:
Learning in this class will come in two forms: theoretical (through handouts and class lectures) and experiential (by participating in demonstration exercises in class). Learning will emphasize experiential approaches. It is expected that students will participate fully in drama and creative arts therapy demonstrations.
Attendance Policy:
CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation. Participants will sign in to the class in the morning and after the lunch break and at the conclusion. A final quiz of questions and specific exercises to be completed by the participant must be turned in to the instructor to receive CE credit.
Policies:
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable thereafter; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Pamela Dunne 310-428-0349 or email at pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
Instructors Statements:
Special Accommodations: Reasonable accommodations will be provided upon request for persons with disabilities. Please check in with the instructor to ensure that your special accommodations in order for you to participate are met.
Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute Of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
This course will include a discussion of the following:
- Limitations of the content being taught, including contradictory evidence and its source.
- Discussions of clinical assessment, treatments or interventions will be presented with credibly supported scientific evidence (such as research from peer reviewed journals, established psychological practice, clinical expertise, and patient acceptability).
- Discussion of any risks associated with these contents, and their extent, severity, or frequency
- A disclosure of any potential conflict of interest, commercial support, or commercial interest that applies to the presenter or the content of the presentation.
Instructor
Renda Dionne Madrigal, PhD, RDT-P, NP is a Licensed Clinical Psychologist, UCLA Certified Mindfulness Facilitator, Somatic Experiencing Practitioner, and member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians. She was featured on the cover of the February 2018 edition of Mindful Magazine. She has been a Licensed Clinical Psychologist for over twenty-five years. She is also a TA/Advisor for the UCLA Mindfulness Awareness Research Center, partner of the Cousins Center for Psychoneuroimmunology within the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, Teacher Training Program. She has served as Co-Investigator on 3 NIDA funded prevention projects within the Native American community, as a consultant for UC Davis Resource Center for Family Focused Practice, and for Riverside DPSS and Riverside University Health Systems on engaging tribes in wellness. She was one of the steering team members for a project funded by the Children’s Bureau for Bringing and Building Evidence in the Child Welfare System. She has also served as an Associate Research Scientist with the Oregon Research Institute. She has presented at numerous conferences and trainings at the tribal, county, state, and federal level. She has been involved in a Therapeutic Theatre Project, Menil and Her
Heart about Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls and Native Storytelling using Narradrama as a Three Act Play for uncovering wisdom in traditional stories and their applicability to difficulties we face in our lives today. In her clinical practice she utilizes mindfulness, somatic experiencing (body based), and creative arts (narradrama, dramatherapy, and storytelling) as healing modalities. Her book Mindful Family Circle is in press and will be out in the Spring of 2021.
References
Current Peer reviewed
Phil Jones (2015) Trauma and dramatherapy: dreams, play and the social construction of culture, South African Theatre Journal, 28:1, 4-16, DOI: 10.1080/10137548.2015.1011897
Leitch, M. L. (2007). Somatic Experiencing Treatment With Tsunami Survivors in Thailand: Broadening the Scope of Early Intervention. Traumatology, 13(3), 11–20.
Ortiz, R., & Sibinga, E. M. (2017). The Role of Mindfulness in Reducing the Adverse Effects of Childhood Stress and Trauma. Children (Basel, Switzerland), 4(3), 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/children4030016 National Institute of Health.
Additional suggested references
Dunne, P. (2009). Narradrama: A Narrative Approach to Drama Therapy. In D. R. Johnson & R. Emunah (Eds.), Current Approaches in Drama Therapy. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Nylund, D., & Smith, C. (Eds.). (1997). Narrative Therapies with Children and Adolescents. New York: The Guilford Press.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation
- Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much
advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training. • Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262- 8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Course Syllabus
Clinical Uses of Embodied Narradrama for Trauma in Childhood and Adolescence: Expanding Treatment and Techniques
(PART II)
Course Description
In the workshop, participants will learn and practice trauma specific drama and creative arts interventions (based on narradrama, somatic experiencing, and mindfulness). This perspective brings in a trauma informed care approach based on current research and best practices models. Participants will learn interventions to help understand 1) the poly vagal theory of trauma, 2) breaking down the story of trauma, and 3) narradrama skills related to self-regulation. Narradrama and drama therapy processes such as resourcing, and preferred identities/futures will be expanded through narradrama. These techniques will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention.
The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercise, “creating scenes,” allows for increasing conceptual knowledge of the poly vagal theory related to trauma.
- The experiential exercises focusing on self-regulation provide important resourcing for trauma survivors, according to trauma informed care.
- The experiential exercises involved in breaking down the story provide techniques for making working with trauma more manageable.
- The experiential exercises, “ broken story,” and double listening, focus on important narradrama ideas in dealing with trauma.
- The experiential exercises, draw, describe, enact, reflect grounded in narradrama target specific ways of working with children and adolescents who have experienced trauma.
Course Learning Objectives:
- Participants will list two concepts of poly vagal theory
- Participants will list two methods of telling the trauma story • Participants will list two ways of restoring balance, self-regulation. • Participants will list two narradrama interventions for working with trauma
- Participants will list two targeted exercises for children and adolesents in relating to trauma, inspired by narradrama.
Risk Factors:
Risk factors will be discussed at the beginning of the class. Limitations and risks related to embodied creative expression (such as flooding of emotions, safety issues, and dissociation) will be thoroughly discussed and addressed.
Class Expectations & Assignments:
Learning in this class will come in two forms: theoretical (through handouts and class lectures) and experiential (by participating in demonstration exercises in class). Learning will emphasize experiential approaches. It is expected that students will participate fully in drama and creative arts therapy demonstrations.
A final short quiz will be administered for completion of the course.
Attendance Policy:
CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation. Participants will sign in to the class in the morning and after the lunch break and at the conclusion.
Policies:
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Renda Dionne at (909) 262-8325. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable thereafter; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne (909) 262-8325 or email at Mindfulpractice@protonmail.com.
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
Instructors Statements:
Special Accommodations: Reasonable accommodations will be provided upon request for persons with disabilities. Please check in with the instructor to ensure that your special accommodations in order for you to participate are met.
Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute Of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
This course will include a discussion of the following:
- Limitations of the content being taught, including contradictory evidence and its source.
- Discussions of clinical assessment, treatments or interventions will be presented with credibly supported scientific evidence (such as research from peer reviewed journals, established psychological practice, clinical expertise, and patient acceptability).
- Discussion of any risks associated with these contents, and their extent, severity, or frequency
- A disclosure of any potential conflict of interest, commercial support, or commercial interest that applies to the presenter or the content of the presentation.
Instructor
Renda Dionne Madrigal, PhD, RDT-P, NP is a Licensed Clinical Psychologist, Registered Drama Therapist, UCLA Certified Mindfulness Facilitator, Somatic Experiencing Practitioner, and member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians. She was featured on the cover of the February 2018 edition of Mindful Magazine. She has been a Licensed Clinical Psychologist for over twenty-five years. She is also a TA/Advisor for the UCLA Mindfulness Awareness Research Center, partner of the Cousins Center for Psychoneuroimmunology within the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, Teacher Training Program. She has served as Co-Investigator on 3 NIDA-funded prevention projects within the Native American community, as a consultant for UC Davis Resource Center for Family Focused Practice, and for Riverside DPSS and Riverside University Health Systems on engaging tribes in wellness. She was one of the steering team members for a project funded by the Children’s Bureau for Bringing and Building Evidence in the Child Welfare System. She has also served as an Associate Research Scientist with the Oregon Research Institute. She has presented at numerous conferences and trainings at the tribal, county, state, and federal level. She has been involved in a Therapeutic Theatre Project, Menil and Her Heart about Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls and Native Storytelling using Narradrama as a Three Act Play for uncovering wisdom in traditional stories and their applicability to
difficulties we face in our lives today. In her clinical practice she utilizes mindfulness, somatic experiencing (body based), and creative arts (narradrama, dramatherapy, and storytelling) as healing modalities. Her book Mindful Family Circle is in press and will be out in the Spring of 2021.
References
Current Peer reviewed
Jones, Phil (2015) Trauma and dramatherapy: dreams, play and the social construction of culture. South African Theatre Journal, 28:1, 4-16, DOI: 10.1080/10137548.2015.1011897
Malchiodi, Cathy A. (2020) Trauma and expressive arts therapy: Brain, body, and imagination in the healing process. New York: Guilford Press
Ortiz, R., & Sibinga, E. M. (2017). The Role of Mindfulness in Reducing the Adverse Effects of Childhood Stress and Trauma. Children (Basel, Switzerland), 4(3), 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/children4030016
Porges, S., (2007). The Poly Vagal Perspective. Biol Psychol.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1868418/
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation
- Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much
advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training. • Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262- 8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Clinical Uses of Narradrama with Individuals and Groups
Focus on Narradrama Steps
Dates: October 2-23 2020
Total of 14.0 CE Hours
Location: Classes Via Zoom
General Course Description
In the workshop, participants will (1) explore narrative and drama therapy theories and practices based on current research and (2) learn and practice specific drama and creative arts interventions (based on narradrama) that open more expressive, and creative ways to work and to respect cultural differences. Opening up expressive modalities in conjunction with verbal expression expands communication. This enhanced expression helps both the therapist and client to more clearly understand the client’s issues and explore alternative solutions. This method also centers on discovering client strengths and encouraging spontaneity and creativity, which is a strong focus of narradrama. These methods are compatible with the leading psychological theories. Well-established narrative concepts –such as externalization, scaffolding and landscapes of action and identity— which may be familiar to psychology graduates, will be expanded through narradrama. Providing advanced training and understanding of these concepts will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention and communication. Limitations and risks related to creative expression (such as flooding of emotions, feeling safe, and de rolling practices) will be thoroughly discussed and addressed.
- The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercise, “externalizing the problem,” illustrates the concept of externalization and provides practice in utilizing art, puppetry and sculpting to assist the process.
- The experiential exercise, “finding your strengths,” explores action interventions through drama, music, art and poetry to help expand the clients’ voice.
- The experiential exercise, transformational stories,” shows ways to help the client identify and enact a unique outcome or self-identity change story which has been a pivotal in their life.
General Learning Objectives:
- Participants will be able to list two key tenets of narrative therapy and Narradrama.
- Participants will be able to list two key principles of neuroscience connected to narradrama. 3. Participants will be able to identify two narradrama interventions.
- Participants will be able to name one important principle in determining whether to use tools such as masks, puppets, drawings, objects or photos.
- Participants will be able to list a limitation of the approach and a risk associated with its use.
Focus on Steps: Course Description
The workshop, centered in Narradrama and rooted in narrative therapy and drama therapy. This particular workshop is part II of the Clinical uses of Narradrama with Individuals and Groups which focuses on the Narradrama Steps
Well-established narrative concepts –such as externalization, and landscapes of action and identity— which may be familiar to graduates, will be expanded through Narradrama. Providing advanced training and understanding of these steps will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention and communication. Limitations and risks related to creative expression (such as flooding of emotions, feeling safe, and de-rolling practices) will be thoroughly discussed and addressed. The following Narradrama steps will be expanded through various exercises , interventions and questions. Order of steps vary.
Narradrama Steps
- Discover New Descriptions of Self Identity and Preferred Environment
- Externalize and Map the Influence of the Problem
- Discover Alternative Stories and Pivotal Moments
- Expand Personal Agency
- Externalize Choices
- Illuminate Values
- Expand Possibility Extensions through Stories and Roles
- Re-story Life Story
- Reflect and Celebrate
Textbook: Narradrama: Integrating Drama Therapy, Narrative and the Creative Arts
Experiential Exercises:
- The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercise, “externalizing the problem,” illustrates the concept of externalization and provides practice in utilizing art, puppetry and sculpting to assist the process.
- The experiential exercise, “finding your strengths,” explores action interventions through drama, music, art and poetry to help expand the clients’ voice.
- The experiential exercise, “embodied pathways,” concretizes choices that are before the client . Focus on Steps — Learning Objectives:
- 1.Participants will be able to list 5 of the 9 Narradrama steps
- Participants will be able to identify two methods of externalization.
- Participants will be able to name two interventions relating to concretizing choices 4. 4.Participants will be able to name one theory related to the Narradrama steps.
- Participants will be able to list a limitation of the approach and a risk associated with its use.
Instructor:
Pam Dunne, PhD, RDT/BCT/NT, is a clinical psychologist, registered drama therapist, board-certified trainer, professor emerita at California State University Los Angeles, and Executive Director of the Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles and of the Creative Therapies Center. With well over a dozen books, films, articles, and book chapters, Dr. Dunne is credited with developing narradrama, which is a specific method in drama therapy and narrative therapy that integrates drama, narrative, and the creative arts. She has pioneered narradrama training in Europe, Australia, New Zealand, China and Russia. Dr. Dunne has completed postgraduate study including over 125 continuing education hours in the study of interpersonal neurobiology. Dr. Dunne is a past president of the North American Drama Therapy Association and founding member of its board of examiners. In 2014, she was honored to receive the Teaching Excellence Award in recognition of her outstanding dedication to education in the field of drama therapy through teaching and mentorship. In 2016, she was honored to receive the Gertrud Schattner Award. The Gertrud Schattner Award has been given since 1993 in recognition of distinguished contribution to the field of drama therapy in education, publication, practice, and service. This is the highest award that the NADTA gives in recognition of outstanding service to drama therapy.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $338.00 for 14 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation • Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865 • Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262-8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course
meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences. • Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Narradrama with Indigenous populations
Date: October 11, 2020. 10:30-6:00
Location: Course via Zoom
Course Description
In the workshop, participants will use narrative and drama therapy interventions (based on narradrama) to 1) deepen understanding of the intergenerational impact of history, colonization, and oppression on Indigenous people’s health and wellbeing, 2) apply embodied mindfulness based compassion practices that can be used by providers to work towards cultural humility and work with obstacles to care such as internalized oppression and compassion fatigue, and 3) develop understanding of the relationship of cultural practices such as storytelling and arts to activism and healing. Narradrama practices such as externalizing the problem, deconstruction and unique outcomes will be utilized. These techniques will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention. Limitations and risks related to embodied creative expression (such as flooding of emotions and safety) will be thoroughly discussed and addressed.
This training will be experiential in nature and require active participation.
The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercise, “externalizing the problem,” illustrates the concept of externalization and provides practice in utilizing art, sculpts, and enactments to deepen understanding of the intergenerational impact of history, colonization, and oppression on American Indian communities mental health and wellbeing
- The experiential exercises focusing on deconstruction makes the issues more specific and reduces overgeneralizing; it also clarifies what the core issue or issues actually are.
- The experiential exercises involved in unique outcomes works with the storyline from an indigenous perspective offering meaning making linked to a positive and functional identity.
Course Learning Objectives:
- Participants will be able to identify two effects of historical trauma on Indigenous well-being.
- Participants will be able to identify two ways the arts are used in activism for Indigenous populations.
- Participants will be able to identify two symptoms of compassion fatigue. 4. Participants will be able to identify a mindfulness practice to combat compassion fatigue.
- Participants will be able to identify two narradrama interventions for use with Indigenous populations.
Risk Factors:
Risk factors will be discussed at the beginning of the class
Class Expectations & Assignments:
Learning in this class will come in two forms: theoretical (through handouts and class lectures) and experiential (by participating in demonstration exercises in class). Learning will emphasize experiential approaches. It is expected that students will participate fully in drama and creative arts therapy demonstrations. A final quiz of questions and specific exercises to be completed by the participant must be turned in to the instructor to receive CE credit.
Attendance Policy:
CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation. Participants will sign in to the class in the morning and after the lunch break and at the conclusion.
Policies:
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal at (909) 262-8325. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable thereafter; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Pamela Dunne 310-428-0349 or email at mindfulpractice@protonmail.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
Instructors Statements:
Special Accommodations: Reasonable accommodations will be provided upon request for persons with disabilities. Please check in with the instructor to ensure that your special accommodations in order for you to participate are met.
Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute Of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
This course will include a discussion of the following:
- Limitations of the content being taught, including contradictory evidence and its source.
- Discussions of clinical assessment, treatments or interventions will be presented with credibly supported scientific evidence (such as research from peer reviewed journals, established psychological practice, clinical expertise, and patient acceptability).
- Discussion of any risks associated with these contents, and their extent, severity, or frequency
- A disclosure of any potential conflict of interest, commercial support, or commercial interest that applies to the presenter or the content of the presentation.
Instructor
Renda Dionne Madrigal, PhD, RDT-P, NP is a Licensed Clinical Psychologist, UCLA Certified Mindfulness Facilitator, Somatic Experiencing Practitioner, and member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians. She was featured on the cover of the February 2018 edition of Mindful Magazine. She has been a Licensed Clinical Psychologist working within Indigenous communities for over twenty-five years. She is also a TA/Advisor for the UCLA Mindfulness Awareness Research Center, partner of the Cousins Center for Psychoneuroimmunology within the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, Teacher Training Program. She has served as Co-Investigator on 3 NIDA-funded prevention projects within the Native American community, as a consultant for UC Davis Resource Center for Family Focused Practice, and for Riverside DPSS and Riverside University Health Systems on engaging tribes in wellness. She was one of the steering team members for a project funded by the Children’s Bureau for Bringing and Building Evidence in the Child Welfare System. She has also served as an Associate Research Scientist with the Oregon Research Institute. She has presented at numerous conferences and trainings at the tribal, county, state, and federal level. She has been involved in a Therapeutic Theatre Project, Menil and Her Heart about Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls and Native Storytelling using Narradrama as a Three Act Play for uncovering wisdom in traditional stories and their applicability to difficulties we face in our lives today. In her clinical practice she utilizes mindfulness, somatic experiencing (body based), and creative arts (narradrama, dramatherapy, and storytelling) as healing modalities. Her book Mindful Family Circle is in press and will be out in the Spring of 2021.
References
Current Peer reviewed
Dionne Madrigal, R. & Dunne, P. (2021) “Narradrama as a Three Act Play” in Miller C, Editor. Creative Arts Therapy and Neurobiology (working title) Routledge (in press).
Elinor Vettraino, Warren Linds & Professor Divya Jindal-Snape (2017) Embodied voices: using applied theatre for co-creation with marginalised youth, Emotional and Behavioural Difficulties, 22:1, 79-95, DOI: 10.1080/13632752.2017.1287348
Hartmann, W. E., Wendt, D. C., Burrage, R. L., Pomerville, A., & Gone, J. P. (2019). American Indian historical trauma: Anticolonial prescriptions for healing, resilience, and survivance. The American psychologist, 74(1), 6–19.
https://doi.org/10.1037/amp0000326
Additional suggested references
Dionne Madrigal, R. (2021). Circle Up. A Mindful Families Guidebook. Parallax Press, Berkeley, CA (In press).
Dunne, P. (2009). Narradrama: A Narrative Approach to Drama Therapy. In D. R. Johnson & R. Emunah (Eds.), Current Approaches in Drama Therapy. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Duran, E. and Duran, B. (1995) Native American Postcolonial Psychology. State University of New York Press, Albany.
Duran, Eduardo, et al. “Liberation psychology as the path toward healing cultural soul wounds.” Journal of Counseling and Development, vol. 86, no. 3, 2008, p. 288.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation
- Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much
advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training. • Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262- 8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Clinical Uses of Narradrama with Individuals and Groups
Focus on Pivotal Moments
Dates: November 13 2020 10:30-6:00 Class via Zoom
In the workshop, participants will (1) explore narrative and drama therapy theories and practices based on current research and (2) learn and practice specific drama and creative arts interventions (based on narradrama) that open more expressive, and creative ways to work and to respect cultural differences. Opening up expressive modalities in conjunction with verbal expression expands communication. This enhanced expression helps both the therapist and client to more clearly understand the client’s issues and explore alternative solutions. This method also centers on discovering client strengths and encouraging spontaneity and creativity, which is a strong focus of narradrama. These methods are compatible with the leading psychological theories. Well-established narrative concepts –such as externalization, scaffolding and landscapes of action and identity— which may be familiar to psychology graduates, will be expanded through narradrama. Providing advanced training and understanding of these concepts will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention and communication. Limitations and risks related to creative expression (such as flooding of emotions, feeling safe, and de rolling practices) will be thoroughly discussed and addressed.
FOCUS ON PIVOTAL MOMENTS
In this particular course, participants will explore the use of drama therapy and creative arts in uncovering aha experiences or pivotal moments which bring forth positive entry ways into personal stories for the client which show agency and hope. Through experiential exercises involving embodied art and transformational moments, participants will discover how to help clients reclaim and reconnect with preferred memories and experiences, values and relationships.
- The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercise, “externalizing the problem,” illustrates the concept of externalization and provides practice in utilizing art, puppetry and sculpting to assist the process.
- The experiential exercise, “finding your strengths,” explores action interventions through drama, music, art and poetry to help expand the clients’ voice.
- The experiential exercise, transformational stories,” shows ways to help the client identify and enact a unique outcome or self-identity change story which has been a pivotal in their life.
Learning Objectives:
- Participants will be able to list two key tenets of narrative therapy and Narradrama. 2. Participants will be able to list two key principles of neuroscience connected to narradrama. 3. Participants will be able to identify two narradrama interventions.
- Participants will be able to name one important principle in determining whether to use tools such as masks, puppets, drawings, objects or photos.
- Participants will be able to list a limitation of the approach and a risk associated with its use.
Instructor:
Pam Dunne, PhD, RDT/BCT/NT, is a clinical psychologist, registered drama therapist, board-certified trainer, professor emerita at California State University Los Angeles, and Executive Director of the Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles and of the Creative Therapies Center. With well over a dozen books, films, articles, and book chapters, Dr. Dunne is credited with developing narradrama, which is a specific method in drama therapy and narrative therapy that integrates drama, narrative, and the creative arts. She has pioneered narradrama training in Europe, Australia, New Zealand, China and Russia. Dr. Dunne has completed postgraduate study including over 125 continuing education hours in the study of interpersonal neurobiology. Dr. Dunne is a past president of the North American Drama Therapy Association and founding member of its board of examiners. In 2014, she was honored to receive the Teaching Excellence Award in recognition of her outstanding dedication to education in the field of drama therapy through teaching and mentorship. In 2016, she was honored to receive the Gertrud Schattner Award. The Gertrud Schattner Award has been given since 1993 in recognition of distinguished contribution to the field of drama therapy in education, publication, practice, and service. This is the highest award that the NADTA gives in recognition of outstanding service to drama therapy.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation • Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865 • Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262-8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Course Syllabus
Using Drama Therapy with Addicts and Their Families (Advanced Class) Date: DEC. 6th, 2020, 10:30 to 6:00 class via Zoom
Course Description:
This course focuses on working with clients dealing with addiction disorders and their family/friends dynamics. Clients often have friends/family members who have been a part of both their active use/behaviors and their recovery, and this may lead to feelings of shame, guilt and regret for everyone involved. This experiential workshop helps therapists understand the use of drama therapy tools with individuals and groups in learning how to address the impact of addiction on clients and their core and chosen families. Using Robert Landy’s drama therapeutic Role Theory, participants will explore how family “roles” can work towards recovery and reparation of relationships, as well as helping to take ownership of their part in the addiction process. Participants will have the opportunity to use projective techniques and embodiment to enhance their clinical skills and will also explore the unique challenges of working in systems with potentially resistant clients and their families. In addition, participants will explore these exercises from both the therapist and the client’s perspectives.
The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercises such as the “Role Card Exercise” will help mental health professionals and others identify the roles that they play in their lives that will either help promote or combat positive choices in their lives.
- The experiential exercises such as “Befriending the Diagnosis/Issue” will teach participants about the process of “disidentification” where the subject can learn to separate from their “issues” and create a healthy dialogue with it, as opposed to being enmeshed in a toxic way.
- The experiential exercises such as the “Family Sculpture Exercise” will teach participants to identify how client see/experience their family dynamics in regards to their addiction.
Participants will be able to articulate the use of a variety of creative techniques and to demonstrate how these can be incorporated into practice with clients and/or themselves.
Participants will learn how to assist clients using drama therapy in building coping mechanisms through exercises geared to broaden role repertoire, address feelings of shame and guilt, provide healthy living alternatives, and build positive self-image, self-esteem, and self-discipline.
Course Objectives (not the same as learning objectives):
- Present 2 theories and applications of using drama therapy
- Demonstrate 2 creative methods using drama therapy, psychodramatic techniques and other creative therapies
- Show methods of identifying and working with triggers through drama therapy.
- Explore methods of helping clients identify new life choices and their core identity through drama therapy.
- Demonstrate how to work with resistant clients and their families.
Learning Objectives:
- Participants will name 2 different approaches of using drama therapy with clients
- Participants will name two creative techniques to use with clients
- Participants will list two methods of identifying and working with triggers through drama therapy • Participant will identify and name one drama therapy method of helping clients focus on future life choices and one method which combines drama therapy and the creative arts.
- Participants will identify and name one drama therapy method of helping clients repair relationships with friends and family.
Risk Factors:
Risk Factors will be discussed at the beginning of the class.
Class Expectations and Assignments:
Learning in this class will come in two forms: Theoretical (through screen sharing, power points and class lectures) and Experiential (by participating in demonstration exercises via zoom). It is expected that students will participate fully in drama and creative arts therapy demonstrations.
Attendance Policy:
CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation. Participants will sign in to the class in the morning and after the lunch break and at the conclusion. A final quiz of questions and specific exercises must be turned in to the instructor to receive CE credit.
Policies:
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 1 week prior; 50% refundable thereafter; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Alexis Maron at 310-422-9386 or email her at alexis@alexismaron.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
Instructor’s Statements:
Special Accommodations: Reasonable accommodations will be provided for persons with disabilities. Please check in with the instructor to ensure that your special accommodations (in order for you to participate) are met. Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute Of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
This course will include a discussion of the following:
- Limitations of the content being taught, including contradictory evidence and its source. • Discussions of clinical assessment, treatments or interventions will be presented with credibly supported most current scientific evidence (such as research from peer reviewed journals, established psychological practice, clinical expertise, and patient acceptability).
- Discussion of any risks associated with these contents, their extent, severity, or frequency • A disclosure of any potential conflict or interest, commercial support, or commercial interest that applies to the presenter or the content of the presentation.
Instructor:
Alexis Maron (MA, RDT-BCT, RADT) is a Registered Drama Therapist and Board Certified Trainer specializing in relationships, family dynamics, and sexual and chemical addictions. In New York, she worked as a drama therapist with high school students, homeless mentally disordered adults, and the aged and infirm at a nursing home/rehab facility.
Alexis has the privilege of leading Drama Therapy groups at renowned treatment centers, such as the Waismann Institute, Simple Recovery, Lido Wellness, and Nexus Recovery with clients who suffer from substance abuse and sexual addictions. In addition, she is working with First Responders in a treatment center setting suffering from both addiction, and PTSD and also works with clients who suffer from substance abuse and sexual addictions. Alexis works with a non-profit organization, the Down Syndrome Association of Orange County, facilitating a weekly “social skills” group for adults with Down Syndrome.
References:
Alschuler, M. (2009). The darkest abyss: Poetry therapy in the treatment of addictions. In The use of the creative therapies with chemical dependency issues (pp. 256-268). Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Bailey, S. (2009). Recovering identity and stimulating growth through drama therapy. In The use of the creative therapies with chemical dependency issues (pp. 204-217). Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Brooke, S. L. (Ed.). (2009). The use of the creative therapies with chemical dependency issues. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Emunah, R. (1994). Acting For Real. Drama Therapy Process, Technique and Performance. New York and London. Brunner- Routledge.
Lewis, P. and Johnson, D. (2000) Current Approaches in Drama Therapy. Springfield, IL. Charles c. Thomas
Krentzman, A. R. (2013). Review of the application of positive psychology to substance use, addiction, and recovery research. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 27(1), 151.
Landy, R. J. (1996) Essays in Drama Therapy: The Double Life. London and Philadelphia. Jessica Kingsley Publishers.
Landy, R. J. (2008) The couch and the stage: Integrating words and action in psychotherapy. Jason Aronson.
Landy, R. J. (1993) Persona and Performance: The Meaning of Role in Drama, Therapy and Everyday Life. The Guilford Press.
Yalom, I. (1989). Love’s Executioner and Other Tales of Psychotherapy. New York. Harper Collins.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by
attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation • Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865 • Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262-8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors. • APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Healing & Rebuilding: Creative Griefwork with Children and Adolescents Date: February 21, 2020 10:30-6:00 Class via Zoom
Course Description
In the workshop, participants will learn and practice grief-specific drama and creative arts interventions (based on Piaget’s developmental model, drama therapy and psychodrama techniques, and grief theory and practice). This perspective presents a supportive treatment approach in griefwork with children and adolescents based on current research and best practices models. Participants will learn interventions to help understand the variables affecting grief reaction, including 1) developmental considerations, 2) cultural influences, 3) personal loss history, 4) nature of the relationship to the deceased, and 5) cause of death. Drama therapy processes such as sculpting, mask work, storytelling, role play and improvisation, combined with therapeutic art and writing activities will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention during griefwork with children and adolescents.
The experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercise, “sculpting” allows for increasing conceptual knowledge of Kubler-Ross’ 5 stages of grief model.
- The experiential exercises focusing on roleplay and improvisation demonstrate ways to effectively explore coping skills to manage grief symptoms.
- The experiential exercises involved in artwork and writing/journaling demonstrate creative avenues for emotional expression.
- The experiential exercise, “Storytelling” focuses on methods to increase therapeutic rapport and build trust.
Course Learning Objectives:
- Participants will be able to identify 3 variables affecting the grief reaction in children and teens.
- Participants will be able to identify developmentally appropriate ways to support the grieving child/teens.
- Participants will be able to demonstrate two drama therapy interventions in working with children and teens in griefwork.
- Participants will be able to identify 3 cultural or religious influences that affect children and teens in griefwork.
Risk Factors:
Risk factors will be discussed at the beginning of the class. Limitations and risks related to embodied creative expression (such as flooding of emotions, safety issues, and dissociation) will be thoroughly discussed and addressed.
Class Expectations & Assignments:
Learning in this class will come in two forms: theoretical (through handouts and class lectures) and experiential (by participating in demonstration exercises in class). Learning will emphasize experiential approaches. It is expected that students will participate fully in drama and creative arts therapy demonstrations.
Attendance Policy:
CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation. Participants will sign into the class in the morning and after the lunch break and at the conclusion.
Policies:
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Renda Dionne at (909) 262-8325. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable thereafter; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Patricia Jauchler (818) 667-1641 or email at onbrightwings@yahoo.com.
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
Instructors Statements:
Special Accommodations: Reasonable accommodations will be provided upon request for persons with disabilities. Please check in with the instructor to ensure that your special accommodations in order for you to participate are met.
Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
This course will include a discussion of the following:
- Limitations of the content being taught, including contradictory evidence and its source.
- Discussions of clinical assessment, treatments or interventions will be presented with credibly supported scientific evidence (such as research from peer reviewed journals, established psychological practice, clinical expertise, and patient acceptability).
- Discussion of any risks associated with these contents, and their extent, severity, or frequency
- A disclosure of any potential conflict of interest, commercial support, or commercial interest that applies to the presenter or the content of the presentation.
Instructor
Patricia Jauchler, MA, MS, RDT/BCT, CT, CDP is a Registered Drama Therapist and Board-Certified Trainer, Certified Thanatologist, and Certified Dementia Practitioner. She holds certificates as a Death Midwife/End-of-Life Doula, Bereavement Facilitator, and Grief Support Specialist.
She is founder and director of On Bright Wings Alternative End-of-Life Services, assisting the aging, dying, and bereaved in home, hospice, and facility settings throughout the Los Angeles area. She uses a unique blend of Drama Therapy and other creative arts methods with reminiscence, legacy work, and therapeutic support to attain peace, acceptance, and resolution. Her theatre company, Theatre on the Threshold, explores end-of-life issues through short plays followed by discussions and workshops in community settings through the Los Angeles area.
She has taught about the use of Drama Therapy and other creative approaches with end-of-life issues throughout the US, UK, and China.
References
Karst, P. and Wyss, D. (2019). The Invisible String Workbook: Creative Activities to Comfort, Calm, and Connect. New York: Little, Brown, and Company.
Jiménez-Alonso, B., & de Luna, I. B. (2021). Narratives of Loss: Exploring Grief through Photography. Qualitative Studies, 6(1), 91-115.
Kubler-Ross, E. & Kessler, D. (2005). On Grief & Grieving: Finding the Meaning of Grief Through the Five Stages of Loss. New York: Scribner Publishing.
Neimeyer, R.A. (Ed.) 2012. Techniques of Grief Therapy: Creative Practices ofr Counseling the Bereaved. New York: Routledge.
Rogers, J. E. (2011) The Art of Grief: The Use of Expressive rts in a Grief Support Group. New York, NY: Routledge
Thompson, B.E. and Neimeyer, R. A. (2014). Grief and the Expressive Arts. New York: Routledge.
Wolfelt, A. (2004). A Child’s View of Grief: A Guide for Parents, Teachers, and Counselors. Fort Collins, CO: Companion Press.
Worden, J.W. (2002). Grief Counseling and Grief Therapy: A Handbook for the Mental Health Practitioner (3rd ed.). New York: Springer Publishing.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation
- Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much
advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training. • Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262- 8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit
for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com
Mindfulness and Narradrama
Date: February 28, 2021 Class via Zoom
Course Description
In the workshop, participants will learn and practice mindfulness based practices and narradrama. Participants will learn interventions to help 1) understand the three pillars of mindfulness, 2) Work with restorying problem saturated stories informed by mindfulness and 3) Work with preferred roles to expand presence in their lives. These techniques will increase the possible methods of therapeutic intervention. Limitations and risks related to embodied creative expression (such as safety issues, and dissociation) will be thoroughly discussed and addressed.
The restorying, mindfulness, and. preferred role experiential exercises are linked directly to the active development of professional knowledge and skill in the following three ways:
- The experiential exercises involved in restorying , illustrates the concept of utilizing art, movement and scene work to expand a sense of connectedness with self and other.
- The experiential exercises focusing on mindful movement and breathwork to promote self regulation and connectedness.
- The experiential exercises involved in preferred roles involve expanding role repertoire in life setting producing more agency.
Course Learning Objectives:
- Participants will be able to list three pillars of mindfulness.
- Participants will be able to identify two key ways of bringing out a mindset of curiosity through the creative arts.
- Participants will be able to list a technique for engaging in relational mindfulness.
- Participants will be able to identify two techniques to utilize in working with a preferred role.
Risk Factors:
Risk factors will be discussed at the beginning of the class
Class Expectations & Assignments:
Learning in this class will come in two forms: theoretical (through class lectures) and experiential (by participating in demonstration exercises in class). Learning will emphasize experiential approaches. It is expected that students will participate fully in drama and creative arts therapy demonstrations.
Attendance Policy:
CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation. Participants will sign in to the class in the morning and after the lunch break and at the conclusion. A final quiz of questions and specific exercises to be completed by the participant must be turned in to the instructor to receive CE credit.
Policies:
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable thereafter; no refunds day of training.
- Questions or concerns: Please contact Pamela Dunne 310-428-0349 or email at pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
Instructors Statements:
Special Accommodations: Reasonable accommodations will be provided upon request for persons with disabilities. Please check in with the instructor to ensure that your special accommodations in order for you to participate are met.
Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute Of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
This course will include a discussion of the following:
- Limitations of the content being taught, including contradictory evidence and its source.
- Discussions of clinical assessment, treatments or interventions will be presented with credibly supported scientific evidence (such as research from peer reviewed journals, established psychological practice, clinical expertise, and patient acceptability).
- Discussion of any risks associated with these contents, and their extent, severity, or frequency
- A disclosure of any potential conflict of interest, commercial support, or commercial interest that applies to the presenter or the content of the presentation.
Instructor
Renda Dionne Madrigal, PhD, RDT, NP is a licensed clinical psychologist, Registered Drama Therapist, President of Mindful Practice Inc., and member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians. She is also a mentor for the UCLA Mindfulness Awareness Teacher Training Program, partner of the Cousins Center for Psychoneuroimmunology within the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, and is on the faculty at the Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles and the California Indian Nations College. Featured on the cover of Mindful magazine in 2018, her workshops on mindful families, story medicine, and therapeutic theatre are popular nationally in the United States. In her clinical practice, Madrigal offers mindfulness-based therapy, somatic experiencing, and storytelling for both adults and children. She has more than twenty years of experience creating and directing culturally tailored, evidence-based family and child programs for better health. She has served as Co-Investigator on 3 NIDA funded prevention projects within the Native American community, as a consultant for UC Davis Resource Center for Family Focused Practice, and for Riverside DPSS and Riverside University Health Systems on engaging tribes in wellness. She was one of the steering team members for a project funded by the Children’s Bureau for Bringing and Building Evidence in the Child Welfare System. She has also served as an Associate Research Scientist with the Oregon Research Institute. She has presented at numerous conferences and trainings at the tribal, county, state, and federal level. She loves writing stories with Indigenous female protagonists working to save the world, and acting in indigenous plays (healing ceremonies) with her family and community. She has performed in plays written by her two Cahuilla Chippewa daughters: Menil and Her Heart and Wildflower: The Soul of an Indian. She lives in Temecula, California. Her book The Mindful Family Guidebook will be out in May of 2021.
References
Current Peer reviewed
Ameli R, Sinaii N, West CP, et al. Effect of a Brief Mindfulness-Based Program on Stress in Health Care Professionals at a US Biomedical Research Hospital: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Netw Open.2020;3(8):e2013424. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.13424
Behan C. (2020). The benefits of meditation and mindfulness practices during times of crisis such as COVID-19. Irish journal of psychological medicine, 37(4), 256– 258. https://doi.org/10.1017/ipm.2020.38
Keng, S. L., Smoski, M. J., & Robins, C. J. (2011). Effects of mindfulness on psychological health: a review of empirical studies. Clinical psychology review, 31(6), 1041–1056. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cpr.2011.04.006
Additional suggested references
Dunne, P. (2009). Narradrama: A Narrative Approach to Drama Therapy. In D. R. Johnson & R. Emunah (Eds.), Current Approaches in Drama Therapy. Springfield, IL: Charles C. Thomas.
Smalley, S. L., & Winston, D. (2010). Fully present: The science, art, and practice of mindfulness. Cambridge, Mass.: Da Capo Lifelong.
Come prepared and dressed to move!
Format will be 1/2 Discussion and 1/2 experiential!
These workshops are targeted to licensed mental health professionals (Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs). Participants do not need to have a theater background to attend. Participants will not become certified in drama therapy by attending this workshop as that is a much longer process, but will instead learn how to use techniques of drama therapy and apply what they have learned to training already mastered as a psychologist and licensed mental health professional.
- Cost: $169.00 for 7 hours of CE
- Attendance Policy: CE credits awarded to those with 100% active and full participation
- Topic Area: Counseling Theory/Practice
- Register or Contact CTC/DTILA: Pamela@dramatherapyinstitutela.com (310) 226-2865
- Access to facilities: Facilities and programs are accessible to persons with disabilities. If you have a special need and plan to attend the workshop, please contact Pamela Dunne at (310) 428-0349. Please allow as much
advance notice as is possible to ensure we have ample opportunity to meet your needs.
- Refunds: Workshop fee fully refundable until 3 weeks prior; 50% refundable one week before the class; no refunds day of training. • Questions or concerns: Please contact Renda Dionne Madrigal- 909-262- 8325 or email at DionneR@msn.com
- Grievance or complaints: Please contact Kamran Afary (661) 478-9016 or email him at dramatherapyabroad@gmail.com
- Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA) does not accept any financial or in-kind support provided by another party and does not accept any commercial sponsors.
- APA Continuing Education: Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. (Creative Therapies Center, DBA Drama Therapy Institute of Los Angeles (CTC/DTILA)) maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
- CAMFT Approval: (CTC/DTILA) is approved by CAMFT (the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists) (Provider # 139229) to sponsor continuing education for LMFT, LCSW, LPCC, LEP. CTC/DTILA maintains responsibility for this program/course and its content. Course meets the qualifications for seven [7] hours of continuing education credit for LMFTs, LCSWs, LPCCs, and/or LEPs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences.
• Certificates: Will be issued upon students completing evaluation forms emailed to: dtilaevals@gmail.com