Mon, Oct 10, 2016 to Mon, Nov 14, 2016
7:30 - 9:00 pm
Type: 
Course
CE Credits: 
9.00
Participant Limit: 
15
Tuition: 

$315 General Public
$225 Full Members
$198 CMH Members
$180 Friend of NCSPP Member
$180 Associate Members
$135 Student Members
$135 Scholarship (prior approval required to register at this fee)

Tuition listed above is for early registration ($40 discount off full fee, $15 discount for NCSPP Student Members). For registrations received after the deadline, full tuition will be applied to all registrations.

Tuition does not include the cost of readers.

Registration Notes: 

REGISTRATION CLOSED - COURSE FULL.
If you would like to be added to our wait list please email us at info@ncspp.org

 

FOUNDATIONS:
More About Winnicott

Course Overview: 

Winnicott made unique contributions to psychoanalysis, offering a two-person model of psychoanalysis. In this seminar, we will further examine his innovative theoretical ideas, such as understanding the mother/infant dyad as a metaphor for the importance of environment in adult clinical theory. We will look at how he saw play as a key method of communication and movement for therapist and patient; how he linked aggression with growth leading to the patient developing “a capacity for concern” (the depressive position); and think about his contribution in terms of race, gender, and sexuality.

Course Objectives: 
  1. Participants will understand the self as a paradoxical relationship between communicating and the need to preserve a private inviolable core which is understood through the process of holding and use clinical examples from their work.
  2. Participants will be able to elucidate how Winnicott revised Klein’s theories of aggression and of the depressive position.
  3. Participants will explain the key elements of play and how to utilize it in clinical hour.
  4. Participants will list key elements in the use of the squiggle technique and how to use it with children.
  5. Participants will describe how Winnicott views aggressiveness as a key component in use of an object.
  6. Participants will list essential feelings in psychotic processes.
  7. ​Participants will explain the underlying communication of anti-social tendencies.
Empirical Reference: 

Fonagy, P. (2015). The effectiveness of psychodynamic psychotherapies: an update. World Psychiatry14, 137–150.

Instructor(s): 

Reyna Cowan, Psy.D., LCSW, is a psychoanalyst, a personal and supervising analyst at PINC, and is on faculty at both PINC and SFCP. She teaches widely throughout the Bay Area and has a private practice in Oakland, where she works with adults, couples, adolescents, and children.

Target Audience & Level: 

This course is targeted towards clinicians interested in thinking more intensively about foundational psychoanalytic ideas and how they apply to clinical work. The class is appropriate for beginning, intermediate, and advanced students of psychoanalytic psychotherapy.

Cancellation & Refund Policies: 

Enrollees who cancel at least SEVEN DAYS prior to the event date will receive a refund minus a $35 administrative charge. No refunds will be allowed after this time.  Transfer of registrations are not allowed.

Contact Information: 

For program related questions contact Morgan Lloyd, LCSW at morganlloyd.lcsw@gmail.com or 510-852-9013.

For questions related to enrollment, locations, CE credit, special needs, course availability and other administrative issues contact Michele McGuinness by email or 415-496-9949.

Committee: 

Education Committee

The Education Committee is responsible for the development of a variety of courses and workshops given throughout the year in San Francisco and the East Bay.

Ronna Milo Haglili, Psy.D., Chair
Elana Guy, Psy.D.
Jasmine Khor
Natasha Oxenburgh, MA