Missing Fathers: The Absent Parent Trauma
Fri, Dec 17
|Online Event
Pamela Parkinson, Ph.D., LCSW
Time & Location
Dec 17, 2021, 10:00 AM – 4:30 PM PST
Online Event
About the Event
Pamela Parkinson, Ph.D., LCSW
Training Description
Develop a better understanding of the importance of fathers to the youth with whom we work in our systems of care. This epidemic of the often-absent father doesn’t mean that the father doesn’t fulfill an important role in a child’s and family’s life. We often leave the paternal side of the youth’s family completely out of service planning with youth in out of home care even though the father is very much a part of the youth’s “picture” and impacts their day-to-day functioning. Remember, the pain of the missing father is a big reason for the symptoms that we are trying to ameliorate so we can’t forget this area of pain.
Learning Objectives
This course is designed to help participants:
1. Identify the reasons that fathers are important and the barriers as to why they don’t get included, in a meaningful way, within our continuums of care that serve system-involved youth: child welfare, juvenile justice, mental health and school systems.
2. Ability to assess, using a family tree and historical timeline, the extent of the absence of the father and the other “half” of whom that child is.
3. Learn the connection between the Pain in the Heart (PITH) Theory and the absent father trauma and how to reach out and include fathers.
Agenda
10:00 AM – 10:10 AM Sign In
10:10 AM – 10:30 AM Overview of family history and trauma with an emphasis on the
absent father.
10:30 AM – 10:45 AM Group work practice on family trees and timelines.
10:45 AM – 11:00 AM Video about the Myth of the Absent Black Father and discussion.
11:00 AM – 11:45 AM Brainstorming and discussion of reasons that fathers are important in
the healthy development of system-involved youth.
11:45 AM – 12:00 PM BREAK (CEUs will not be offered during this time)
12:00 PM – 12:30 PM Group work on ID’ing the barriers to including fathers in our work.
12:30 PM – 1:00 PM Discussion of the barriers to including fathers meaningfully in our work.
1:00 PM – 1:30 PM LUNCH (CEUs will not be offered during this time)
1:30 PM – 2:30 PM Applying PITH to the absent father trauma.
2:30 PM – 3:00 PM Cultural barriers to including fathers.
3:00 PM – 3:15 PM BREAK (CEUs will not be offered during this time)
3:15 PM – 3:45 PM Small group work to creatively develop strategies for how to include
the youth’s “other half” in our work.
3:45 PM – 4:20 PM Review & discussion regarding these strategies for outreach to fathers.
4:20 PM – 4:30 PM ADJOURNMENT
Meet Our Trainer
Pamela Parkinson, PhD, LCSW, is a clinical psychologist and clinical social worker, whose specialty area is working with youth and their families. Dr. Parkinson has spent most of her career working with system involved youth in our Continuum of Care (foster care, juvenile justice, mental health and the kids struggling in our school systems). She is a certified PCOMS evidence-based practice trainer. Pamela currently works as a child/family consultant to CBO’s in the Bay Area and has worked in level 14 residential, NPS, hospitals, and a variety of community-based settings including outpatient clinics, schools, diversion, kinship, etc.
This course meets the qualifications for (5.5) BBS CEUs for LCSWs and MFTs as required by the California Board of Behavioral Sciences & is provided by Fred Finch Youth Center, CAMFT Provider #045295.