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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260112T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260112T143000
DTSTAMP:20260525T222016
CREATED:20251203T011709Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251203T011716Z
UID:3087-1768222800-1768228200@floridacentertraining.org
SUMMARY:Families Moving Forward Foundations:  FASD Informed Care in Your Community
DESCRIPTION:Introducing the Families Moving Forward (FMF) Foundations Intervention:  A CDC-recognized\, evidence-based treatment designed for children with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD) and Prenatal Alcohol Exposure (PAE).  Learn about the skills\, tools\, and knowledge that support families affected by FASD/PAE with this proven model of care.  \n  \nLive Q & A Online 1:00 – 2:00 p.m. ESTFor Health Professionals & Providers \nLearn the steps to becoming a fully trained FMF Foundations Specialistand how to launch services in your community. \n  \nLive Q & A Only2:00 – 2:30 p.m. ESTFor Caregivers & Providers \nDiscover how a trained FMF interventionist can support your family and why working with one can make a difference. \n  \nFeaturing Dr. Anika Trancik\, who will: \n\nIntroduce steps to becoming a fully trained FMF Foundations Specialist\nWalk through the application process for FMF training\nShare real-world funding strategies used by past participants\nOffer practical guidance for launching FMF services in your community\nExplain how FMF can help families and what to expect from working with a specialist.\n\n  \nThe FMF Specialist Training is offered by The Florida Center Training Institute in partnership with the Families Moving Forward Program Office.
URL:https://floridacentertraining.org/training/families-moving-forward-foundations-fasd-informed-care-in-your-community/
LOCATION:Zoom\, FL\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://floridacentertraining.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Copy-of-2024-05-07-FMF-Q-and-A-8.5-x-11-in-8.5-x-5.5-in-1.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260120T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260120T150000
DTSTAMP:20260525T222016
CREATED:20251216T163023Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251216T185940Z
UID:3113-1768914000-1768921200@floridacentertraining.org
SUMMARY:ALC of FASD Changemakers: Behind the Mask - Unravelling Grief in People with FASD: It's Complicated
DESCRIPTION:Live Interactive Online Training offered on Zoom \nDate:  Tuesday\, January 20\, 2026Time:  1:00 – 3:00 pm EST\, 12-2pm Ct\, 11-1pm MT\, 10-12pm PSTCost:  FREE \nTraining Description: \nThe grief attached to FASD is something individuals with FASD experience across their lifetimes in almost every area of life\, starting in childhood. There is little awareness of how this has impacted those with FASD across the ages\, particularly by adulthood. With it goes an unrecognized\, unacknowledged\, and almost always avoided on-going process of grieving multiple losses that continue to occur in the absence of recognition. Rarely ever talked about\, let alone understood\, by professionals\, families or by those with FASD themselves\, this is a missed opportunity often at the root of so many failures and difficulties those with FASD experience. Understanding the “don’t ask\, don’t tell\, never talk about it boxes of denial”\, what they are\, what they look like and why they happen\, is essential for providing better mental health services for individuals with FASD. Their quality of life\, especially by adulthood\, has been significantly negatively impacted by ignorance of the need to deal with these kinds of losses. This workshop is developed from the personal experience and expertise of the ALC of FASD Changemakers\, and their work and interactions with other adults who have experienced these losses while growing up and across their lifespans. It is what they wish adults had understood when they were children but were too young to understand and could not give voice to. It will bring needed representation of the different types of grief experienced by those with FASD into the mainstream of FASD professional work\, support\, and service delivery. It will underscore the importance of complicated grief\, as an essential mental health issue to address\, and the importance of recognizing\, allowing\, and supporting individuals with FASD themselves to grieve so they can move on with their lives\, regardless of their ages. \nThe Florida Center for Early Childhood\, home to Florida’s only FASD Diagnostic Clinics\, located in Sarasota\, Orlando\, and the panhandle. \nLearning Objectives: \n\nIdentify common forms of lifelong grief experienced by individuals with FASD.\nRecognize denial patterns that prevent acknowledgment of FASD-related grief.\nApply grief-informed approaches to support individuals with FASD in professional practice.\n\n  \nALC – FASD Changemakers \n The International Adult Leadership Collaborative (ALC) of FASD Changemakers is a well known group of citizen researchers and experts who each have diagnosed FASD. It is made up of 16 members. As a group\, they have experienced all the events commonly associated with FASD but have learned how to overcome obstacles\, maximize potential and re-define success. They use their combined living experience to work together as consultants\, advisors\, trainers\, presenters\, mentors\, group moderators\, bloggers\, and as research project team members for universities and national organizations\, centres and associations in several countries.   They have organized\, initiated\, designed\, developed and led full 3-day program conferences for teens and adults with FASD in both Vancouver and Seattle since 2014.  As well\, they develop and lead their own survey research\, which has received wide interest by researchers\, institutions\, organizations\, systems\, and government and is currently being used to help focus research directions and questions.  Their first survey on the health of 500 adults with diagnosed FASD was published in 2020\, and their second survey on the quality of life of 450 adults with diagnosed FASD was published in 2024.  A third Lay of the Land survey is currently in the initial stages of discussion. \nPresenters: \nCJ Lutke – CanadaCJ Lutke\, who is 41\, was diagnosed with full FAS at birth and adopted by her foster family at age five\, who had already adopted her older brother and sister who also have FASD.  She is a well-known speaker on FASD\, having presented at and participated in many conferences\, seminars\, training sessions and other events for over 20 years.  CJ is a systems changer and advocate\, provides advice and consultation and participates as an advisor and team member for different research projects.  She currently sits on various committees\, including one to make changes to the family court system in British Columbia (BC)\, chaired by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of BC\, and has just been asked to be on a research project on suicidality in those with FASD by the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health\, the national centre in Canada.  She provides mentoring to younger adults with FASD and is the author of an on-line blog that is hosted by NOFASD Australia which is followed globally.  As well\, CJ has been a member of the Adult Leadership Collaborative (ALC) of FASD Changemakers for 15 year and was one of its founders.  She was the co-lead on their first ground-breaking Lay of the Land Survey on the health and physical issues of adults with diagnosed FASD that has received wide international attention and was published in 2020.  CJ was the lead author on their second Lay of the Land Survey on the Quality of Life of Adults with diagnosed FASD\, results of which have been presented widely including to NIAAA and were published in 2024.  As well\, CJ became an adoptive parent when she adopted her now 12-year-old son (with FASD) from foster care when he was seven. CJ believes that those with FASD must challenge perceptions about possibilities and outcomes\, find their purpose and change the future.  Her goal is to help others with FASD find their voice and to understand that we are greater when we work together. \nMaggie May – IrelandMaggie May\, who is 29 years old\, was diagnosed at the age of five with FAS in foster care\, where she grew up.  She was born in and has lived her entire life in Ireland.  She is a well-known speaker on FASD\, having presented widely\, moderates several on-line groups including the largest global online support group for teens and adults with FASD and provides online mentoring to teens with FASD in several countries.  Maggie  is a systems changed and advocate and has been a member of the ALC for 5 years.  She works for FASD UK.  She is currently an expert advisory committee member for the development of a health app for adults with FASD by the University of Rochester\, USA.  Maggie’s goal is to help audiences change the way they view FASD\, educate society to build environments for success\, and empower those with FASD to find their own voices\, purpose and the courage to be who they are and achieve what they want to do. \n 
URL:https://floridacentertraining.org/training/alc-of-fasd-changemakers-behind-the-mask-unravelling-grief-in-people-with-fasd-its-complicated/
LOCATION:Zoom\, FL\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://floridacentertraining.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/2026-01-20-Changemakers-Behind-the-Mask-1.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260121T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260121T140000
DTSTAMP:20260525T222016
CREATED:20250831T020115Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251110T191050Z
UID:2936-1768996800-1769004000@floridacentertraining.org
SUMMARY:Early Childhood Court (ECC):  A Collaborative Approach to Child Well-Being
DESCRIPTION:This is a Live Virtual Zoom webinar \nWednesday\, January 21\, 202612-2pm EST / 11-1pm CST / 10-12pm MST / 9-11am PST \n$10 – 2 CEs for LCSW\, LMHC\, LMFT\, and CMSW through Florida CEBrokers. \nCost:  $39.00 \nDescription: \n\nEarly Childhood Court\, an adapted approach modeled after Safe Babies Court Teams\,  is a collaborative approach among community partners to ensure trauma and FASD-informed care\, child well-being\, and achieving permanency more quickly. \nEarly Childhood Court is modeled from Safe Babies\, a program of ZERO TO THREE™\, helps states and communities strengthen child welfare and early childhood systems to support healthy development. Using the Safe Babies approach\, the program works at multiple levels—child and family\, community\, and state—to promote early childhood well-being and long-term system improvements. Rooted in the court system\, it also fosters collaboration across agencies to better serve families. This approach is especially valuable for supporting young children and families affected by Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD). \n\nLEARNING OBJECTIVES: \n\nUnderstand the core components of the Early Childhood Court\, modeled from the Safe Babies Court Team (SBCT) approach and its positive impact on infants\, toddlers\, families\, and communities.\nIdentify the short- and long-term risk factors for babies prenatally exposed to alcohol.\nRecognize the importance of a trauma-informed\, FASD-informed court system for children involved in or at risk of entering child welfare.\n\n  \nPresenters: \nAnne Marie IrvingEarly Childhood Court Coordinator\, 12th Judicial Circuit\, Florida \nAnne Marie Irving holds degrees in Psychology and Social Work and has earned professional certifications in Trauma and Resilience. With over 20 years of experience in child welfare\, she has dedicated her career to supporting children and families through complex challenges with compassion and evidence-based practices. For the past six years\, Anne Marie has worked directly with the Early Childhood Court in Florida’s 12th Judicial Circuit\, where she applies her expertise in trauma-informed care\, child development\, and family systems to promote healing\, stability\, and long-term well-being for young children and their caregivers. \nKathryn Shea\, LCSWFASD United Board Member \nKathryn has over 40 years of experience working with children with serious emotional and behavioral disorders and fetal alcohol and drug effects.  She received her Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and her Master’s degree in Social Work from the University of Kentucky.  She served as the President and CEO of the Florida Center for Early Childhood in Sarasota\, Florida for 12 years.  Kathryn is a past president of the Florida Association for Infant Mental Health and has been very involved in developing and expanding Florida’s Early Childhood Court Initiative.  Ms. Shea currently serves on the board of FASD United (formerly NOFAS) and is an independent consultant at the local\, state\, and national levels.  Kathryn has received numerous awards for her work in infant mental health\, FASD\, and child advocacy. \nThis training may help prepare you for competencies related to the Florida Association for Infant Mental Health Endorsement. (For those outside Florida\, check your state’s requirements).
URL:https://floridacentertraining.org/training/early-childhood-court-ecc-a-collaborative-approach-to-child-well-being/
LOCATION:Zoom\, FL\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://floridacentertraining.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/Safe-Babies-Court-photo-1.png
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