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The Western Canadian Mental Health & Education Summit: Trauma, High-Risk, Self-Harming Behaviours, Neurodiversity, FASD, Attachment & Indigenous Perspectives

Presented by Deborah MacNamara, Ph.D. and Leigh Seldon and Denise Nowicki, Ph.D., B.Ed., B.Sc. and Robert T. Muller, Ph.D., C. Psych. and Caroline Buzanko, Ph.D., R. Psych

Monday, December 7, 2026 – Wednesday, December 9, 2026  |  Edmonton, ab


 

Date & Location

Monday, December 7, 2026 – Wednesday, December 9, 2026

8:30am – 4:00pm

Holiday Inn Express Edmonton Downtown

10010 104 Street NW, Edmonton, AB T5J 0Z1

phone:  780.423.2450



Who Should Attend

Education and Clinical Professionals: All education and mental health or healthcare professionals who work with children or youth including, but not limited to K–12 Classroom Teachers, School Counsellors, Learning Assistance/Resource Teachers, School Administrators, School Paraprofessionals including Special Education Assistants, Classroom Assistants and Childcare Workers • All other professionals who support behavioural challenges and complex learning needs including but not limited to: Nurses, Social Workers, Psychologists, Clinical Counsellors, Family Therapists, Occupational Therapists, Speech Language Pathologists, Addiction Counsellors, Youth Workers, Mental Health Workers, Probation Officers and Community Police Officers.


Day One – December 7, 2026


1. Supporting Defended and Disconnected Children and Youth: Reducing Alarm and Building Connection to Foster Resilience, Growth and Emotional Healing
Presented by Deborah MacNamara, Ph.D.

8:30am - 4:00pm   December 7, 2026

WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION

Some children and youth seem impossible to reach. They resist help, reject relationship, avoid vulnerability, push adults away, or appear emotionally shut down altogether. Traditional behavioural approaches often fail to make headway because the issue is not simply behaviour — it is alarm, adaptation, defended attachment, and much more.

Many of our most vulnerable children have experienced too much separation, instability, stress, disconnection, or emotional pain. Others may have received care but struggle to trust, depend, or receive it. In these contexts, relationship itself can become defended against.

This presentation moves beyond surface-level behaviour management — and even beyond conventional trauma-informed approaches — to explore the developmental and relational roots of disconnection, alarm, and emotional defenses. Participants will gain insight into why some children resist closeness, why caring adults can feel shut out, and how alarm and attachment dynamics shape behaviour, learning, and emotional well-being.

Grounded in developmental science, attachment theory, and practical relational experience, this seminar will explore how educators, counsellors, youth workers, and helping professionals can make meaningful headway with hard-to-reach children and youth. Participants will learn how to reduce alarm, work with — rather than against — defenses, build trust and connection over time, and create the conditions where growth, learning, and emotional healing can unfold.

This highly practical workshop will integrate real-life examples, guided reflection, and case-based application to help participants translate developmental-relational understanding into meaningful action within their own settings and with the children and youth in their care.

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LEARNING OBJECTIVES

  • Traumatized or marginalized youth
  • Oppositional or resistant behaviour
  • Emotional shutdown or detachment
  • Anxiety and alarm-based behaviours
  • Peer-oriented youth
  • High-risk or highly defended children
  • School refusal, disengagement, or chronic relational struggles
Deborah MacNamara, Ph.D.

Deborah MacNamara, PhD is a clinical counsellor and educator with more than 25 years’ experience working with children, youth, and adults. She is on faculty at the Neufeld Institute, operates a counselling practice, and speaks regularly about child and adolescent development…

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More information: www.neufeldinstitute.org/person/deborah-macnamara/



2. TBA
Presented by Leigh Seldon

8:30am - 4:00pm   December 7, 2026

WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION

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LEARNING OBJECTIVES

Leigh Seldon

Day Two – December 8, 2026


3. Supporting Neurodivergent Learners: Understanding Autism Spectrum Disorder Through a Strength-Based Lens
Presented by Denise Nowicki, Ph.D., B.Ed., B.Sc.

8:30am - 4:00pm   December 8, 2026

WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION 

Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental difference that influences how individuals experience, process, and interact with the world around them. While autistic individuals possess strengths, talents, and unique perspectives, they are often misunderstood in educational and counselling settings. Behaviours that may appear oppositional, withdrawn, rigid, or socially inappropriate are frequently rooted in differences in communication, sensory processing, emotional regulation, executive functioning, and social understanding rather than a lack of motivation or willingness.

This engaging and practical workshop helps educators and counsellors move beyond stereotypes and develop a deeper understanding of Autism Spectrum Disorder through a strengths-based, neurodiversity-affirming lens. Participants will learn to recognize common indicators of ASD, understand how autism may present differently across individuals and age groups, and explore practical strategies that promote inclusion, belonging, emotional well-being, and success.

Through interactive activities, case studies, simulations, and reflective discussions, attendees will gain tools to better support autistic students and clients while fostering compassionate, meaningful relationships.

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LEARNING OBJECTIVES 

  • Understand the characteristics, diversity, and strengths associated with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD).
  • Recognize common indicators of ASD across age groups and settings.
  • Reframe behaviours through a neurodevelopmental and neurodiversity-affirming lens.
  • Apply practical strategies that support communication, emotional regulation, learning, and participation for neurodiverent learners.
  • Build capacity in autistic individuals by fostering self-awareness, self-advocacy, independence, and adaptive skills that support long-term success and well-being.
  • Foster supportive, respectful, and inclusive relationships that promote belonging and well-being.
Denise Nowicki, Ph.D., B.Ed., B.Sc.

4. Therapeutic Relationship Strategies to Treat Challenging Trauma Clients
Presented by Robert T. Muller, Ph.D., C. Psych.

8:30am - 4:00pm   December 8, 2026

WORKSHOP DESCRIPTON 

This practical workshop, led by Dr. Robert T. Muller, author of psychotherapy bestsellers, “Trauma & the Struggle to Open Up,” as well as “Trauma & the Avoidant Client, builds our understanding of the therapeutic relationship with challenging trauma clients.

As therapists, we try to maintain a strong therapeutic relationship, but this is easier said than done.  Drawing on attachment theory and research, and using a relational, integrative approach, the workshop follows the ups and downs of the therapy relationship in trauma work.  We look at choices therapists make in navigating the process, examining how they affect outcome.

Specifically, we look at relationship patterns in trauma work, and how these can lead to troubling therapist-client enactments.  When left unchecked, such patterns lead to ruptures in the relationship.  In trauma work, how do we repair a ruptured alliance?  And how can we help clients grow from the experience?  This workshop looks at such issues in detail.

Theory is complemented by case examples and therapy segments.  We draw particularly from Dr. Muller’s book, Trauma and the Struggle to Open Up, winner of the 2019 ISSTD award for the year’s best written work on trauma.

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LEARNING OBJECTIVE 

  • Use an attachment theory framework in relational trauma work
  • Recognize therapist-client relationship patterns in trauma treatment
  • Consider their own (therapist’s) feelings in the therapeutic process (e.g. the wish to rush into trauma work, or the wish to avoid it)
  • Notice problematic relational enactments
  • Navigate conflicts and relational ruptures to get treatment back on track
  • Use conflicts and relational ruptures to bring about posttraumatic growth
Robert T. Muller Ph.D., C. Psych.

Robert T. Muller, Ph.D., C.Psych. is on faculty as a Full Professor of Clinical Psychology at York University, is a Fellow of the International Society for the Study of Trauma & Dissociation (ISSTD); and both of his books have won…

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Day Three – December 9, 2026


5. Working with Children and Youth who are High-Risk, Marginalized and Engage in Self-Harming Behaviour
Presented by Caroline Buzanko, Ph.D., R. Psych

8:30am - 4:00pm   December 9, 2026

WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION

For anyone who know that “safety contracts” don’t work and want to know what does. Self-harm among youth isn’t rising because young people are more fragile. It’s rising because the conditions they’re navigating create psychological states where harming one’s own body makes functional sense. This intensive 6-hour workshop is designed for anyone who work with the youth carrying the heaviest burdens: those at the intersection of marginalization, trauma, and self-injury.

You’ll move beyond risk management checklists to understand the why beneath the behaviour. Drawing on the established theories and evidence-based interventions for self-harm, this training provides the clinical precision needed when the stakes are highest.

This workshop addresses the reality that therapy fails when it replicates the same power dynamics that harm youth in the first place. You’ll learn how to structure engagement that honours adolescent autonomy, conduct chain analyses that reveal intervention points invisible in standard assessments, and teach physiological regulation skills that work when cognitive strategies fail. We’ll tackle the specific dialectical dilemmas of adolescent treatment: how to involve parents without breaking confidentiality, how to validate pain without reinforcing dysfunction, and how to adapt evidence-based protocols for youth who experience standard therapeutic language as minimizing and unhelpful.

You’ll also confront the parts of this work that textbooks skip: how to stay regulated when a 14-year-old shows you fresh burns, how to respond when a family’s exhaustion manifests as rage, and how to maintain therapeutic boundaries while practicing the “moral courage” required to witness historical trauma.

This workshop is key to develop enough technical skill and relational capacity that young people choose to stay alive long enough to discover they want to.

WORKSHOP OUTLINE

Module 1: Understanding Self-Harm Through Intersectional and Biosocial Frameworks

  • Personal mapping
  • The crisis in context
  • Biosocial theory
  • Ecology of marginalization
  • Developmental versus pathological
  • Under-regulation versus over-regulation

Module 2: Engagement, Assessment, and Building Alliance Across Difference

  • Why youth hide
  • Trauma-informed engagement
  • Beyond tick-box assessment
  • Structural engagement for autonomy
  • Cultural safety strategies
  • Fidelity versus flexibility

Module 3: Core Clinical Skills—The Technical Architecture of Intervention

  • The “Power Tools” of DBT-A
  • Crisis survival skills
  • Dialectical thinking & function question

Module 4: Safety Planning, Family Systems, and Ethical Harm Reduction

  • Collaborative safety planning
  • Harm reduction strategies
  • Family systems and the middle path
  • Systemic context

Closing: Develop an implementation plan for one current high-risk client

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LEARNING OBJECTIONS

  • Analyze intersectional risk through biosocial and structural lenses
  • Differentiate self-harm typology and match intervention to regulation profile
  • Deploy crisis-specific physiological regulation skills
  • Conduct behavioural chain analysis to identify micro-intervention points
  • Navigate adolescent-family dialectical dilemmas
  • Implement culturally responsive adaptations without compromising fidelity
Caroline Buzanko, Ph.D., R. Psych

Caroline Buzanko, Ph.D., R. Psych, is a psychologist. Mother. Professor. International Speaker. Yoda of Anxiety. ADHD Superhero. And Changer of Lives. With nearly three decades of experience, she is a recognized expert in resilience and the social, emotional, and behavioural well-being…

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6. Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder: Reframing Behaviours to Support Strengths and Promote Success
Presented by Denise Nowicki, Ph.D., B.Ed., B.Sc.

8:30am - 4:00pm   December 9, 2026

WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION 

Did you know that Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) is one of the most common neurodevelopmental disabilities in Canada, affecting an estimated 4% of the population (CanFASD, 2024)? Despite its prevalence, FASD often goes unrecognized or misunderstood, leaving those working with these individuals wondering why traditional strategies are not working and why some continue to struggle despite their best efforts.

Join us for an engaging and practical presentation designed specifically for those working with challenging children and youth who want to better understand, identify, and support individuals with FASD. This session moves beyond labels and challenges us to dig deeper into behaviour to understand the brain-based differences that influence learning, emotional regulation, social interactions, and executive functioning.

Participants will learn about the prevalence and characteristics of FASD, common signs that may indicate an individual is struggling with neurodevelopmental challenges, and the impact these differences can have on individuals across the lifespan. Most importantly, we will explore how reframing our perspective—from asking “What’s wrong with this individual?” to “What does this individual need to succeed?”—can transform relationships, reduce frustration, and improve outcomes for both the individuals impacted by FASD and those working with them.

This presentation emphasizes a strengths-based, compassionate approach that recognizes the unique abilities, creativity, resilience, and potential of individuals with FASD. By understanding how the brain works and adapting our expectations and supports accordingly, attendees will leave with practical strategies to create supportive environments, foster positive behaviour, and build meaningful connections that help students thrive.

Whether you are a classroom teacher, educational assistant, administrator, counsellor, or support professional, this session will provide valuable insights and tools that can be applied immediately in educational settings.

Together, we can move beyond behaviours, recognize hidden strengths, and create communities where individuals with FASD are understood, supported and empowered to thrive.

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LEARNING OBJECTIVES 

  • Understand the prevalence and characteristics of FASD.
  • Recognize indicators of FASD across settings.
  • Reframe challenging behaviours through a neurodevelopmental and strengths-based lens.
  • Apply practical, strengths-based strategies that promote engagement, success, and belonging.
  • Foster more effective and compassionate relationships with individuals affected by FASD.

Registration & Fees

Registration Super Early Bird Fee Early Bird Fee Regular Fee
ONE DAY ENROLLMENT --
Individual 1 Day Enrollment $279.00 $299.00 $319.00
1 Day Group 3-7 $229.00 $249.00 $269.00
1 Day Group 8-14 $209.00 $229.00 $249.00
1 Day Group 15+ $189.00 $209.00 $229.00
1 Day Full-Time Student $189.00 $209.00 $229.00
--
TWO DAY ENROLLMENT --
Individual 2 Day Enrollment $499.00 $519.00 $539.00
2 Day Group 3-7 $459.00 $469.00 $489.00
2 Day Group 8-14 $429.00 $449.00 $469.00
2 Day Group 15+ $399.00 $419.00 $439.00
2 Day Full-Time Student $399.00 $419.00 $439.00
--
THREE DAY ENROLLMENT --
Individual 3 Day Enrollment $669.00 $689.00 $699.00
3 Day Group 3-7 $619.00 $639.00 $659.00
3 Day Group 8-14 $599.00 $619.00 $629.00
3 Day Group 15+ $469.00 $489.00 $509.00
3 Day Full-Time Student $469.00 $489.00 $509.00

All fees are per person and in Canadian Dollars ($CAD)

Fees do not include applicable taxes (5% GST).

Super early bird cutoff date: October 7, 2026
To receive the super early bird rate, registration and payment must be received by Wednesday, October 7, 2026.

Early bird cutoff date: November 7, 2026
To receive the early bird rate, registration and payment must be received by Saturday, November 7, 2026.


Please review our Registration Terms and Conditions for information on our cancellation policy, payment policies, rebates, and more. You must agree to our Terms and Conditions to register for a workshop or conference.


Register Online     Register your Group



Recommended Accommodation

Holiday Inn Express Edmonton Downtown

10010 104 Street NW, Edmonton, AB T5J 0Z1

phone:  780.423.2450

 Full map & directions


Our rates:

Please contact the hotel directly for the best available rates.



Continuing Education Credits

This workshop has been formally approved by the following associations:
  • Canadian Psychological Association (CPA)

     Jack Hirose & Associates is approved by the Canadian Psychological Association to offer continuing education for psychologists. Jack Hirose & Associates maintains responsibility for the program.

† The Alberta College of Social Workers (ACSW) and the Newfoundland and Labrador Association of Social Workers (NLASW) accept CPA-approved CEUs.

* Participants will receive a certificate of completion after every workshop. Workshops are pre-approved for 5.5 or 6 credits per day unless otherwise specified.

Please check back closer to the conference date for more information.