Department of Resiliency in the Helping Professions
Overview
A minimum of six courses (18 credits) make up the certificate program that focuses on resiliency cultivation strategies for helping professionals and their clients, students, patients and consumers. Students study how to build emotional regulation, realistic optimism, self-compassion, mindfulness, empathy and self-efficacy, all key facets of resiliency. Since many effective helping professionals advance to leadership and supervisory roles, special emphasis is given to strengthening emotionally intelligent leadership skills.
In addition, the Resiliency curriculum will assist helping professionals to teach these valuable strategies to their clients, patients, students and/or consumers. The Resiliency in the Helping Professions C.G.S. and C.A.G.S. has broad professional applicability and is targeted to increase professional effectiveness for professionals who are School Counselors, Rehabilitation Counselors, Social Workers, Educators, Mental Health Counselors, and Patient Advocates. The Resiliency in the Helping Professions C.G.S. and C.A.G.S. programs are grounded in evidence-based approaches that are effective for burnout recovery and prevention. A C.A.G.S. is awarded to program completers holding a master’s degree, while a C.G.S. is earned by those whose highest degree is a bachelor’s degree.
Learning Goals
- Identify the factors of resilience and supporting research from advances in positive psychology.
- Understand the neuroscience of traumatic experience, recovery and resilience.
- Implement skill building practices that support resilience through social emotional learning interventions.
- Promote post traumatic growth.
- Practice resonant leadership to foster resilience capacity across systems.
- Implement skill building practices to support personal resilience against empathetic distress and burnout.
Faculty
Lea Christo, MSW, LICSW, BCPA
Resilience Program Coordinator
Associate Professor of Practice, School of Graduate Studies
Lecturers
Karen Bluth, Ph.D.
Keith Lahikainen, Psy.D.
Mary Ann Reilly Mariani, Ph.D.