*Registration payment includes Credit Cards and Interfund Transfers ONLY.
This event is funded through ReCAST II Mecklenburg, a SAMHSA-funded grant initiative.*
A child enters foster care every two minutes in the United States. North Carolina investigates over 119,500 reports of child maltreatment annually, with over 27,000 resulting in substantiated claims.
Nationally, 99% of FosterCARE participants report learning at least one useful skill, and 98% would recommend the training to a colleague. CARE blends lecture, activities, and live practice with trainer feedback to create a fast-paced, fun-filled training experience.
FosterCARE is an adaptation of Child-Adult Relationship Enhancement (CARE), a trauma-informed way for any adult to interact with any child or teen. This adaptation speaks to the unique challenges of children and families involved in the foster care system and the adults that support them. It seeks to increase positive child-adult interaction, child compliance, and child engagement.
FosterCARE expands CARE skills to foster agencies, specifically to provide foster and kinship parents with basic skills for interacting with youths with trauma histories. FosterCARE is implemented through a 6 hour in-person training to include a trauma education component specialized for children involved with the child welfare system, and FosterCARE skills and strategies. FosterCARE encourages brief daily home practice between caregiver and child.
Skills Preview
Participants will learn and practice skills designed to strengthen healthy relationships. Trainers give live feedback to enhance learning of FosterCARE skills. FosterCARE training targets two key concepts:
• Positive Relationships: Skills and techniques that work together to strengthen relationships, improve communication, and reduce problematic behaviors.
• Increased Compliance: Tips and strategies to improve the likelihood of following adult directives.
If you have questions about the training content, please contact laura.nelson@duke.edu
Who CAREs?
FosterCARE is for any adult working with children or teens in the foster care system to improve relationships and reduce mild-to-moderate behavior challenges:
• Parents (foster, kinship, adoptive, biological)
• School personnel
• Medical and allied health professionals
• Mental health professionals
• Court personnel
• Child welfare or advocates
• Early childhood program providers
• Home visitors
• Shelter, residential, substance abuse treatment staff
Faculty
Robin Gurwitch, PhD
Center for Child & Family Health
Darden White, LCMHCS
Center for Child & Family Health
Location
South Piedmont AHEC
5039 Airport Center Parkway
Charlotte, NC 28208
Classroom 17/18
Date and Time
Monday, November 4, 2024
9:00am-4:00pm
Credits
CEUs
This Activity fulfills the requirement of 0.6 Continuing Education Units (CEUs).
Contact Hours
This Activity fulfills the requirements for 5.5 Contact Hours.
NC Psychologists Credit
5.5 Contact Hours (category A) CE for NC Psychologists.
National Board of Certified Counselors (NBCC)
South Piedmont has been approved by NBCC as an Approved Continuing Education Provider, ACEP No. 5096. Programs that do not qualify for NBCC credit are clearly identified. South Piedmont is solely responsible for all aspects of the program.
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