Event

On-Demand FAN Awareness Webinar

When & Where

Date and Time

By request

Location

Virtual Training – Zoom Video Conferencing

How to Request

Contact Tracey Kock at tracey.kock@unl.edu for more information.

Registration

Please review registration details before registering.

Register

About This Event

The Nebraska Center on Reflective Practice offers on-demand trainings and webinars - including the FAN Awareness Webinar - to organizations and systems interested in imbedding reflective practice into their work.

The FAN Awareness Webinar provides a one-hour overview of the Facilitating Attuned Interactions (FAN) model for reflective practice.

Professionals who work in human services and the court system are engaged in work that is both rewarding and emotionally intrusive. Reflective practice is a relationship-based practice which assists in mitigating the effects of emotionally intrusive work by helping individuals examine their current and past actions, emotions, experiences, and responses to evaluate their performance and learn to improve in the future. This overview training will outline the foundations for reflective practice and introduce the FAN model for reflective practice.

Attendees will:

  • Gain a deeper awareness of what reflective practice is and why it’s important for the human services and early childhood workforces.
  • Learn about the core components of the FAN model of reflective practice.
  • Learn about what the Nebraska Center on Reflective Practice offers in terms of training program and reflective consultation.
  • Learn about some of our initial findings from our program evaluation.

Speaker(s)

Dayna L. Goff is the Reflective Practice Outreach and Training Specialist with the Nebraska Resource Project for Vulnerable Children at UNL’s Center for Children, Family and the Law. Dayna earned her Bachelor’s and Master’s in Social Work from the University of Kansas and her Juris Doctorate from University of Nebraska College of Law. She previously worked as a therapeutic case manager at a child welfare agency, as the associate director of a visitation agency and as an attorney practicing in estate planning, family and juvenile law. She continues to practice juvenile law in Lancaster County.

Questions?

Contact Tracey Kock at tracey.kock@unl.edu