Training

Understanding and Screening for Trauma in Young Children - May 2025

When & Where

Date and Time

May 9, 2025 | 9:00am - 12:00pm CDT

Location

Zoom

Ticket

Cost

Free

Registration

Please review registration details before registering.

Register

About This Training

Many young children experience trauma. Identifying trauma symptoms and appropriately responding is critical to ensuring a child’s wellbeing.

This three-hour virtual training will focus on early childhood mental health, the impact of trauma, and provide a better understanding of the referral process to trauma-informed treatment. Understanding the importance of screening for trauma and identifying red flags will help you support young children in your role.

Participants will receive resources, an agenda, and a certificate of attendance.

Who should attend? Anyone who works with or on behalf of young children.

Continuing education: This is a 3-hour webinar. Participants will receive handouts, an agenda, and a certificate of attendance to submit for continuing education credits on their own. 

Trainer(s)

Outreach and Training Specialist
Nebraska Resource Project for Vulnerable Young Children

Lindsey Ondrak is an Outreach and Training Specialist at the Nebraska Resource Project for Vulnerable Young Children at the University of Nebraska's Center on Children, Families, and the Law. Lindsey is a Licensed Independent Mental Health Practitioner and Licensed Professional Counselor and provides outpatient treatment for children and their families with specialized training in trauma and attachment. She is trained in Child Parent Psychotherapy (CPP), Integration of Working Models of Attachment into Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (IoWA-PCIT), Trauma Focused Attachment Therapy/Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy (DDP), Theraplay (Level 1), Brainspotting and Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing (EMDR). Lindsey is also a Reflective Practice Trainer in the Facilitating Attuned Interactions (FAN) model, a Circle of Security Parenting Facilitator, a Provisional Trainer in the Diagnostic Classification of Mental Health and Developmental Disorders of Infancy and Early Childhood (DC:0-5) and she is an Endorsed Infant Mental Health Clinical Mentor.

In 2007, Lindsey received her Master of Arts in Community Counseling in Harrisonburg, VA. Prior to her current position, she worked with at risk teenagers in residential treatment in CO and worked with a foster care agency in NE.

Registration Details

Registration closes May 7, 2025.

Register

Questions?

Contact Haifaa Al-saadi at 
hal-saadi2@unl.edu