Attachment, Mentalization, and Trauma: Implications for Child Psychotherapy with Arietta Slade at IPTAR

CHILD & ADOLESCENT PSYCHOTHERAPY PROGRAM
(the CAP Program)

IPTARCAP

VISITING FACULTY SERIES PRESENTS

Attachment, Mentalization, and Trauma:
Implications for Child Psychotherapy

Arietta Slade, Ph.D.

Monday, November 14th, 2016 at 8:00 PM
Reception and Open House at 7:30 pm
Program to follow
IPTAR, Suite 201
1651 3rd Avenue
RSVP: iptarcaprsvp@gmail.com
Please include your name, phone number, affiliation and specify
if you will be requesting social work credits
Seating is limited. Admission is by confirmed reservation.

Dr. Arietta Slade will discuss the implications of attachment and mentalization theory and research for clinical work with young children and their families. While attachment theory has been instrumental to the infant mental health movement and has transformed many areas of developmental research, it has had less of an impact on the way clinicians approach their work with preschool and school age children. These approaches provide powerful ways of understanding how and why development (in all its complexities) may be disrupted, and of thinking about how to intervene with the child, and the family. Dr. Slade will present some of the core principles of attachment and mentalization theory and then outline their direct implications for clinical practice, particularly in children struggling with adversity and trauma.

Learning Objectives:
Participants will learn the core principles of attachment and mentalization theory.
Participants will learn about recent advances in trauma theory and treatment.
Participants will learn about how these advances pertain to psychoanalytically oriented therapy with children.
Arietta Slade, Ph.D. is Clinical Professor at the Yale Child Study Center and Professor Emerita at The City University of New York. An internationally recognized theoretician, clinician, researcher, and teacher, she is known for her work on the clinical implications of attachment and mentalization. She is co-director of Minding the Baby®, an interdisciplinary reflective home visiting program for high-risk young families at the Yale Child Study Center. Dr. Slade has written many highly regarded papers, and recently compiled, with Jeremy Holmes, a 6 volume collection of major work in attachment. She has also been in private practice for thirty-five years, working with individuals of all ages.

Social Workers: The Institute for Psychoanalytic Training and Research, Inc. (IPTAR) SW CPE is recognized by the New York State Education Department’s State Board for Social Work as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed social workers #0226. (2) CE credits will be granted to participants who have registered, have documented evidence of attendance of the entire program and have completed the on-line evaluation form. Upon completion of the evaluation form a Certificate of Completion will be emailed to all participants who comply with these requirements.
CE Administrative Fee: $15.00

CAP Executive Committee: Phyllis Beren, Ph.D., Director.
Susan Berger, Ph.D., Bettina Buschel, LCAT, Ranny Goldfarb, LCSW, Carole Grand, Ph.D.,
Miriam Pierce, LCSW, Lynne Rubin, Ph.D., Esther Savitz, LCSW,
Francesca Schwartz, Ph.D., Rori Shaffer, LCSW, Donna Roth Smith, LCSW, Leni Winn, LCSW
Candidate Representatives: Lee Zuckerman Share, Ph. D, Nadia Bassino, MA.

A Component Society of the International Psychoanalytical Association
IPTAR has an Absolute Charter from the Board of Regents of the New York State Department of Education