Professional Training for Psychotherapists
Who
Should Attend? | Level I | Level II | Level III | Admission | Locations
Sensorimotor
Psychotherapy is a conceptually elegant, powerfully effective body therapy that
involves a broad repertoire of somatic interventions specifically designed to
help clients tap into the wisdom of their bodies. The SPI Training Program offers
ingeniously taught intensive courses for clinicians seeking to deepen their understanding
of the body.
Martha Stark,
M.D., Author of Working with Resistance
and Modes of Therapeutic Action
The
training program consists of three levels, each being a prerequisite for the next.
A student may take only Level I, Level I and II, or all three.
Who
Should Attend?
- Psychotherapists
- Psychiatrists
- Psychologists
- Social
Workers
- Licensed Professional Counselors
- Nurses
- Pastoral
Counselors
- Marriage and Family Therapists
- Drug and Alcohol Counselors
- Crisis Intervention Counselors
- Rape Crisis Counselors
- Guidance Counselors
- Dance
Therapists
Level 1. Training for the Treatment of Trauma
Traditional
psychotherapy addresses the cognitive and emotional elements of trauma, but lacks
techniques that work directly with the physiological elements, despite research findings
that trauma profoundly affects the body and that many symptoms of traumatized individuals
are somatically driven.
Level I of the Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Training presents simple
body-oriented interventions for tracking, naming and safely exploring
trauma-related somatic activation, creating new competencies and
restoring a somatic sense of self. Students will learn effective,
accessible interventions for identifying and working with disruptive
somatic patterns, disturbed cognitive and emotional processing,
and the fragmented sense of self experienced by so many traumatized
individuals. Techniques are taught within a phase-oriented treatment
approach, focusing first on stabilization and symptom reduction.
The length of this training is approximately 90 hours.
Curriculum (Level I)
- Including
the Body in Psychotherapy Practice How to track and name somatic experience and work with physical action.
- Trauma and the Body The role of the body in perpetuating PTSD symptoms.
- Developmental and Attachment Issues The effects of trauma, attachment failure, and developmental arrests on mind and body.
- Hierarchical Information Processing Somatic
interventions that expand the capacity to integrate traumatic experience.
- The Use of Mindfulness The role of mindfulness in the treatment of trauma and how to teach mindfulness to clients.
- Self-Regulation How to stabilize traumatic activation and restore autonomic equilibrium.
- Somatic
Resources Identification of missing somatic resources and interventions to help clients develop new resources.
- Boundaries How trauma affects boundary styles and techniques to restore healthy somatic and psychological boundaries.
- Orienting
and Defensive Responses Interventions to reinstate effective orienting and defensive
responses truncated in the wake of trauma.
- Treatment of Traumatic Memory Somatic approaches to overcoming the fear of traumatic memory and interventions to process and integrate memories.
- Dissociation Interventions to work with alterations
of consciousness and structural dissociation of the personality.
Training Application
Forms
Level II. Development, Attachment and Trauma
Sensorimotor Psychotherapy identifies
two general kinds of interrelated psychological issues: developmental and traumatic.
Developmental issues result from disturbed early attachment relationships that
lead to limiting beliefs about oneself and the world, while post-traumatic stress disorder
results from overwhelming experience that remains unintegrated. When combined with unresolved trauma, early attachment
disturbances can lead to a wide variety of adult relational problems. Level II of the SPI
training program builds on the curriculum of Level I, emphasizing how traumatic, attachment, and developmental issues
influence one another, and how to provide effective treatment given their inevitable
intertwining. The length of this training is approximately 175 hours.
Curriculum
(Level II)
- Translating the Language of the Body
- Working with the Organization of Experience
- Working with State-Specific Memory
- Attachment Issues: Dependency and Differentiation
- Therapeutic Use of States of Consciousness
- Body Reading
- Characterological Barriers to Adaptive Action
- Somatic Transference and Countertransference
- Working with Physical and Mental Action Tendencies
- Psychobiological Action Systems
- Character Strategies and their Interactions with Trauma
- Modulation Patterns and Correlation with Trauma
- Somatic Resources for Character and Attachment Issues
- Character and Structural Dissociation
- Working with Regressed Ego States
- The Therapeutic Relationship, Attunement, and the Body
- Systems Theory: Developmental and Traumatic
- Restoring a Somatic Sense of Self
Level III. Certification Skills Training
(a graduate of this course is called a Certified Advanced Practitioner)
This program is designed as an advanced training towards certification in Sensorimotor Psychotherapy. The focus of the training is the refinement of Sensorimotor Psychotherapy skills at each stage of the therapy process. Each weekend includes exercises, practice, video assessment, review of homework assignments, demonstrations and individual feedback to each student. The length of this training is approximately 140 hours. Certification is an individualized process for each trainee, and attainment of all the necessary skills for certification status may require work beyond this training.
Curriculum (Level
III)
- Practice techniques through exercises and role-play with classmates.
- Consultation
and feedback from instructors regarding practicum with clients and skills necessary
for certification.
- Individual troubleshooting, consultation and assessment
to assist each student in certification.
- Written homework that includes
completing certification worksheets, analysis of video tapes, and individual assignments
to help each student achieve certification.
- Attention to each student's
character strategies, countertransference tendencies, and traumatic patterns as
they interfere with certification skills.
- Experiential exercises, individual
processing as well as relevant didactic material
and discussion are included.
- Monthly
videotape review of each student's sessions.
- Conference with faculty every
few months to assess progress.
- An advisor from the SPI faculty will be
assigned to each student for the duration of the training.
Teaching
Methods at SP Institute Trainings
Lectures
Didactic material is
taught through lectures
accompanied by slides.
Exercises
Role
play and practice vignette exercises are
designed to give students the opportunity
to practice
techniques.
Demonstration
Faculty demonstrates techniques
through
role-play, vignettes with students, and review of video
sessions
with patients.
Discussion
Both large and small group discussion
offer opportunities to explore topics in depth and ask questions.
Consultation
Case
consultation is provided by instructors to facilitate integrating Sensorimotor
Psychotherapy interventions into clinical practice. Faculty provide consultation
regarding Sensorimotor Psychotherapy interventions only, and not comprehensive
client or case consultation or supervision.
Feedback
Faculty observe
and critique students' skills during class exercises.
Video Library
Tapes
of Sensorimotor Psychotherapy therapy sessions as well as lecture tapes on various
topics by faculty are available for students to review at home.
Reading
Assignments
Each training has its own training manual containing articles
to accompany course material.
Writing Assignments
Workbooks are
provided that contain study exercises and written homework designed to facilitate
application of course content.
Peer Partner Assignments
Students
team up with one other student in the training for educational purposes to practice
elements of the method.
Practicum
Practicum is designed for students
to practice SP with patients. Requirements for practicum include completion of
note-taking forms and presenting cases in class.
Admission
to SP Institute
SPI provides adjunct training and continuing education. SPI is
not authorized to grant licensure, nor is it board certified or
accredited. A written application for each training is required. Application forms can be
downloaded here in PDF form, or requested from the SPI administrative
office, and returned with a non-refundable application fee.
Requirements for Admission
SP Training Level I: Trauma Treatment
Appropriate
for psychotherapists, psychiatrists, psychologists,
social workers, licensed
professional counselors, marriage and
family therapists, psychiatric nurses,
pastoral counselors,
addictions counselors, dance therapists, rape crisis
counselors,
guidance counselors, and students in one of the above disciplines.
SP
Training Level II: Development, Attachment and Trauma
Completion of Level
I.
SP Training Level III: Certification
Completion of both Level I
and Level II.
Locations
Trainings
are regularly offered throughout the world, including
- Lincoln, United Kingdom
- Dublin,
Ireland
- Toronto, Canada
- Vancouver, Canada
- Boulder, Colorado
- Tulsa,
Oklahoma
- Boston, Massachusetts
- Minneapolis, Minnesota
- Berkeley, California
- Washington, DC
- Berlin,
Germany
Please contact the local organizer for upcoming trainings in your areas.
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© 2002 Sensorimotor Psychotherapy
Institute. All rights reserved.
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