tbc, 2026
Wellington

This workshop will help you adapt Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) ideas so they can be used effectively and practically with children, adolescents and parents struggling with a range of difficulties.

No previous ACT experience or training is necessary, Lisa will guide you through all the components step by step. You will explore how to use ACT to enhance psychological flexibility by supporting curiosity, willingness, mindfulness, and values-guided trial and error learning.

Dr Coyne is known throughout the ACT world as one of the most compassionate and caring trainers and therapists. In these two days, she will introduce a transdiagnostic, process-based, developmental model of ACT (Hayes & Ciarrochi’s DNAv) and discuss how to shape psychological flexibility through incorporating specific ACT strategies in exposure-based treatment. Clinical examples, role play demonstrations, and opportunities for participants to practice will accompany the didactic teaching. Particpants will understand the ideas with their minds and their hearts and have specific techniques to take into their clinical work.

Clinicians will leave the workshop with an understanding of how to identify and address skills deficits contributing to disorders of childhood and adolescence. The practical skills in contextual behavioral, process-based assessment and treatment they will gain can be used as stand-alone interventions or may be incorporated within other cognitive behavioural or behavioural approaches.

This workshop is fully catered.

Designed for:

Clinicans of any discipline. Previous ACT training will be an advantage.

Register:

 

 

About your trainers:

Lisa W. Coyne, PhD, is an assistant professor of psychology in the Department of Psychiatry, part-time, at Harvard Medical School, and is a senior clinical consultant at McLean Hospital. She is also a licensed clinical psychologist, and an internationally recognized acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) trainer.

Dr. Coyne has published numerous peer-reviewed articles and chapters on anxiety, OCD, and parenting. She is the author of The Joy of Parenting: An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Guide to Effective Parenting in the Early Years, a book for parents of young children. She is an international speaker and has appeared on radio, local television, and newspapers.