MEET OUR KEYNOTE SPEAKER: DR. JOSE TAPIA, JR PHD, CRC, LPC, RPT, NCC
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Strengthening Sisterhood: Empowering Girls to Resist Societal Pressures, Fight Unrealistic Standards, and Develop a Healthy Sense of SelfDr. Julia Taylor is an Associate Professor of Counselor Education in the School of Education and Human Development at the University of Virginia and co-directs the Virginia Partnership for School Mental Health (VPSMH) with Dr. Michael Lyons. The VPSMH is a statewide collaborative effort with the Virginia Department of Education aimed to recruit and retain school mental health professionals and improve evidence-based practices. Dr. Taylor's research, service, and advocacy efforts focus on (1) improving K-12 mental health service delivery, (2) effective data-based decision making, and (3) equity issues concerning the preparation, implementation, and evaluation of comprehensive school counseling programs. Presentation Description Girls are inundated with confusing messages that often interfere with their ability to learn, lead, and develop authentic relationships. This presentation will address these important issues, with a focus on helping girls develop leadership skills to help revive a generation that has become exhausted by social media saturation and unattainable, unrealistic standards. |
Comapassion and Ethics: Intersectionality in ActionDevika Dibya Choudhuri is a Professor and the Program Coordinator of Counseling Programs at Eastern Michigan University. A Licensed Professional Counselor, Board-Certified Clinical Mental Health Counselor, Approved Clinical Supervisor, and Certified EMDR Therapist, she has 20 years of clinical experience with refugees, immigrant and multicultural populations, as well as trauma survivors on violence, sexuality, grief and loss. She uses narrative, somatic, and EMDR approaches in working with trauma. Her scholarship focuses on multicultural and social justice issues in counseling, supervision and pedagogy, as well as cultural competency in trauma counseling, group work, and ethics. She has published textbooks on Multicultural counseling, LGBTQ+ issues, and articles on pedagogy and multicultural issues. She served on the National Board of Certified Counselors from 2009-2015, the Minority Fellowship Advisory Council from 2015-2018, as President of the Association for Specialists in Group Work in 2020 and is currently serving on the American Counseling Association Governing Council. She is a recipient of various awards and a 2015 American Counseling Association Fellow. She serves as an Editorial Board member for the Journal for Specialists in Group Work, the Journal of LGBT Issues in Counseling, a Reviewer for Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology and has served on the Editorial Board of the Journal of Multicultural Counseling & Development as well as the Journal for Counseling & Development. Currently, her research includes a phenomenological study of group process observers; and validation of an instrument to measure historic trauma across diverse clients, explore multigenerational effects of trauma due to racism and colonization and develop community-based interventions. Most recently, together with Dr. Christopher McCarthy, she published an edited book entitled Fundamentals of Group Process Observation Presentation Description With a case study to focus on, participants will examine the ethical and legal dictates that pertain, followed by an intersectional discussion that reveals the inability of rigid ethical directives to allow compassion and equity. We will discuss how to develop an ethical compass leavened with compassion. |