CASRA Core Values Learning Series - The Core Foundation

Event Program

DAYS:
September 14  -   October 12  -   November 09

September 14, 2022

Title Speaker Description Goals CEU

Overview of Recovery
(09:00 AM - 12:00 PM)
Pacific Time (GMT-8)

Joe Ruiz

Handout(s):

This workshop provides an overview of recovery as the paradigm that provides the framework for serving individuals who live with behavioral health conditions. it introduces and explores the stages of hope, empowerment, self-responsibility and meaningful roles and how each is incorperated into practice.

Participants will be able to define the concepts of hope, empowerment, self-responsibility, and meaningful roles.

Participants will learn strategies for fostering and promoting hope

Participants will learn strategies for employment the practice of doing with vs. doing for.

Participants will learn the difference between supporting vs. caretaking individuals in their recovery process.

Participants will learn the importance of and how to support the development of meaningful roles.

3

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October 12, 2022

Title Speaker Description Goals CEU

Values, Principles, and Practice of Psychosocial Rehabilitation
(09:00 AM - 12:00 PM)
Pacific Time (GMT-8)

Joe Ruiz

Handout(s):

This workshop addresses the values, beliefs and principles that are the foundation of psychosocial rehabilitation and recovery- oriented practice. It explores the philosophy and practice of psychosocial rehabilitation that grows from our fundamental belief in the capacity of individuals to grow and build lives of their choosing.

Participants will be able to identify the values of psychosocial rehabilitation

Participants will be able to identify the principles of psychosocial rehabilitation

Participants will able to identify and use practices that promote growth, wellness, and self-determination.

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November 09, 2022

Title Speaker Description Goals CEU

Language - What We Say Matters!
(09:00 AM - 12:00 PM)
Pacific Time (GMT-8)

John Travers

Handout(s):

Language shapes how we see the world-and ourselves. We have a choice in the words we use to describe ourselves, others, and the world around us. The words we choose and the meanings we attach to them influence our decisions, beliefs, and well-being. The workshop examines the use of person-first language in the behavioral health field to build respectful, person centered relationshps.

Particicipants will:
Increase their understanding of terminology and language that distances us from forming relationships with the individuals we support.

Increase their ability to intentionally use language that provides an alternative interpretation to the “medicalization” of a person’s story not based in psychiatric models or diagnoses.

Increase their ability to reframe behavior described as “Manipulative”, “attention-seeking”, “entitled”, “acting-out” that support working with individuals they support develop more effective ways to get their needs met.
 

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