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Toronto Area Internship Consortium in School, ClinicalCounselling Psychology (TAIC)

TAIC Internship Brochure 2018 - 2019

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION:

CONSORTIUM PARTNERS:

Internship Structure:

Training Goals………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………...... .5

Consortium Partner Descriptions (School-Clinical Track):

OISE, University of Toronto

Toronto District School Board (TDSB):

Toronto Catholic District School Board (TCDSB):

Integra Program, Child Development Institute

Youthdale Treatment Centres

Broadview Psychology........ 9

North York General Hospital...... 9

Consortium Partner Descriptions (Adult Track)...... 10

Ryerson University Centre for Student Development and Counselling………………………………… 10

University Health Network

York University Psychology Clinic (YUPC)...... 11

INTERNSHIP PROGRAM – Child Track (School Clinical)...... 12

OVERVIEW OF CLINICAL ROTATIONS...... 13

INTERNSHIP PROGRAM: Adult Track...... 22

OVERVIEW OF CLINICAL ROTATIONS...... 23

EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES/DIDACTIC SEMINARS...... 27

SUPERVISION...... 29

FACULTY...... 32

EVALUATION...... 36

STIPENDS...... 37

APPLICATION PROCESS...... 37

INTRODUCTION:

The Toronto Area Internship Consortium (TAIC) is a CPA accredited pre-doctoral school, clinical and counselling psychology internship training program, hosted by OISE/University of Toronto, comprised of two tracks:

  • Child Track (6 positions): School – Clinical Psychology
  • Adult Track (2 positions): One position in Clinical-Counselling Psychology and one position in Neuropsychology/Health Psychology .

The training program takes place over a 12-month, 1600-hour internship.

The over-arching goal of the TAIC is for interns to develop competencies in the core areas of psychological practice, including psychological assessment, diagnosis, treatment/ intervention, consultation and program evaluation/research. These clinical skills will be developed and applied through the lenses of, and the various training opportunities unique to, the specific tracks and rotations of the consortium.

CONSORTIUM PARTNERS:The ten member organizations of the consortium are:

OISE, University of Toronto, Applied Psychology and Human Development Department, School and Clinical Psychology Program (OISE, SCCP) and:

School-Clinical Track

(i)Toronto District School Board (TDSB)

(ii)Toronto Catholic District School Board (TCDSB)

(iii)Integra Program, Child Development Institute

(iv)Youthdale Treatment Centres

(v)North York General Hospital (NYGH) – INACTIVE for 2018-19

(vi)Broadview Psychology

Adult Track:

(i)Ryerson University Centre for Student Development and Counselling (CSDC )

(ii)UniversityHealth Network

(iii)York University Psychology Clinic

Internship Structure:The consortium is hosted by OISE, University of Toronto (UT). The Director of Internship Training (DIT) is on faculty in OISE’s Department of Applied Psychology and Human Development and is based there. The Consortium is comprised of several partners: OISE/UT (an academic training program), two Toronto school boards, several hospitals and several community and university-based mental health settings.

Child Track - School-Clinical

The TAIC will be offering six full-time internship positions in its School-Clinical Track. Each intern will spend 2.5 days a week in one of the school boards, 2 days a week at one of the clinical training sites. In addition, all interns will come together at OISE/University of Toronto for .5 days per week throughout the year.

The central goal of the Clinical-School track is to graduate interns who have competency in both school and clinical psychology with an emphasis on children, youth, and families. This goal is pursued through the provision of training in core areas of psychological practice, including assessment, diagnosis, therapeutic intervention, psycho-educational and psychological testing and consultation within both school and clinical rotations.

The training interns receive will equip them with the skills needed to assess, diagnose and remediate learning and complex mental health problems, as well as skills to intervene effectively in both school and community settings with children and youth experiencing mental health concerns. The high quality training interns will receive will also prepare them for post-doctoral supervised practice in psychology.

Adult Track

Two full-time positions will be offered within the Adult Track:

Clinical-Counselling (One position): The intern will have two part-time rotations simultaneously at Ryerson UniversityCentre for Student Development and Counselling ( CSDC)and at the York University Psychology Clinic (YUPC).

The goal of these rotations is to prepare interns for independent practice as professional psychologists who are scientifically informed. By combining these two rotations, interns will work with clients from diverse populations, covering awide range of mental health problems.

Neuropsychology major rotation/Health Psychology, minor rotation (One position): The intern will have a full year major in clinical Neuropsychology/Rehabilitation within the Brain and Spinal Cord Rehabilitation program at Toronto Rehab and a minor rotation (six months part-time) in Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care at Princess Margaret.

In addition, all interns will come together at OISE/UT for .5 days per week throughout the year.

After the completion of these rotations, interns will have acquired the skills needed to assess, diagnose and treat complex primary psychological issues; psychological issues that are secondary to medical conditions or that contribute to medical problems or impede health recovery, as well as neuropsychological problems.

TRAINING GOALS:

In each organization, psychological services staff work within inter-professional teams. Within each organization there is a recognized need to train professionals in psychology in competencies related to the practice of psychology unique to that setting.

The following general goals of training are common to all members of the consortium:

(1) To provide interns with a broad-based training program in core areas of psychological practice – assessment, diagnosis, consultation and treatment/intervention.

(2)To facilitate the development of interns in their professionalism and professional identity as psychologists.

(3)To facilitate the development of skills necessary for functioning as psychologists working within inter-disciplinary teams and with community partners.

(4)To facilitate interns’ appreciation and understanding of individual differences, including gender and multicultural issues.

(5)To facilitate interns’ integration of research and best practices into their professional roles.

More specifically, our objectives by the end of the internship year include:

  • Assessment/consultation: Interns are expected to achieve competence in the following skills and judgments required for psychological assessment and consultation: interviewing; selecting psychological tests; administering and scoring psychological tests; interpreting test results; integrating findings from various sources; conceptualizing cases; diagnosing psychological disorders; formulating treatment recommendations; writing assessment/consultation reports; and giving feedback to clients/patients, families, and other professionals.
  • Treatment: Interns are expected to achieve competence in the following skills and judgments required for psychological treatment: evaluating treatment needs, working with clients to set realistic treatment goals, selecting interventions, operating effectively within the chosen theoretical orientation(s), responding flexibly to clients’ needs as they arise, managing crises, recognizing the need for consultation, and managing termination.
  • Sensitivity to differences: Interns are expected to demonstrate sensitivity to individual and cultural differences by taking into account ethnic, gender, and sexuality differences when conceptualizing and diagnosing, and adjusting assessment and treatment approaches to meet the needs of patients representing various cultures, lifestyles, and levels of functioning.
  • Professional identity and functioning: Interns are expected to demonstrate identification with the psychologist’s professional role and values by understanding the psychologist’s role on the multidisciplinary clinical team; participating actively in multidisciplinary clinical teams; participating in activities specific to psychologists; interacting respectfully with other disciplines; understanding the roles of other disciplines; showing awareness of ethical standards of psychological practice; showing awareness of mental-health and other relevant legislation; behaving ethically toward patients, colleagues, and other staff; managing workload responsibly; completing work promptly; integrating readings and research findings into clinical practice; and interacting with community partners (e.g., schools, probation, physicians) to facilitate client care.
  • Research grounding: Interns will be comfortable in evaluating practice-related research and will base decisions about their work (assessment, intervention, consultation) with clients on current findings. They will be able to evaluate the quality of evidence used to

support clinical decisions.

In order to ensure that this internship meets professionally agreed upon standards and ensures employment mobility for our graduates, we are members of the Canadian Council for Professional Programs in Psychology (CCPPP) and the Association of Psychology Post-Doctoral and Internship Centers (APPIC). We participate in the APPIC Computerized Matching Program, and adhere to APPIC guidelines.We are accredited by CPA and our internship training program adheresto CPA standards and criteria.

Consortium Partner Descriptions (School-Clinical Track):

OISE, University of Toronto

Located in Toronto, Ontario, the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education(OISE) of the University of Torontoisan international leader in the research, teaching and study of issues that matter in education. OISE is part of the University of Toronto, Canada's largest university, established in 1827 and recognized as a global leader in research and teaching.

The School and Clinical Psychology Program (SCCP) and the Clinical and Counselling Program ( CCP) are two CPA accredited programs within OISE’s Applied Psychology and Human Development Department, which hosts the consortium.The central mission of SCCP is to provide students with theoretical, research, and professional training in preparation for leadership in psychological practice with children, adolescents and families in school, mental health, private practice, and research settings. The child track of the consortium, organized in collaboration with the Toronto District School Board (TDSB), The Toronto Catholic District School Board (TCDSB), OISE and several community partners, is established with the same mandate.

The Clinical and Counselling Psychology program at OISE prepares students to be scientist-practitioners in both areas of counselling and clinical psychology.

Toronto District School Board (TDSB):

The Toronto District School Board (TDSB) is the largest school board in Canada, with 265,000 students and 580 schools. TDSB students come from a diverse range of ethnic and socio-economic backgrounds. Fifty-three percent have a language other than English, with more than 80 languages represented. About 17% of students receive some form of Special Education support. Given the range of needs at the TDSB, the work of psychological services providers is consistently exciting and challenging, and offers opportunities for continued professional growth.

Toronto Catholic District School Board (TCDSB):

The Toronto Catholic District School Board (TCDSB) is the largest Catholic school board in Canada, with over 90,000 students and 200 schools. TCDSB students come from a diverse range of ethnic and socio-economic backgrounds. The work of Psychological Services staff addresses the continuum of needs from prevention to assessment and intervention, and from mental health promotion and training to program design and evaluation. In addition to School Psychology as their declared area of competence, a number of Psychological Services staff are also licensed to practice in Clinical and/or Counselling Psychology (as per their registration by the College of Psychologists of Ontario).

Integra Program, Child Development Institute

Child Development Institute (CDI) is an accredited children’s mental health agency that provides community-based services for children 0 to 18 years and their families in the city of Toronto. CDI has four service streams: Early Intervention (including therapy services and child care consultation for children under age 6, day treatment / section 23 classrooms for kindergarten and primary grades, and SNAP clinical services for children and youth); Family Violence Services (including Mothers-In-Mind group intervention and services to shelters); Early Child Development (child care and Ontario Early Years centres); and the Integra Program for children and youth with Learning Disabilities/Mental Health (LDMH). In addition to evidence-informed service delivery, CDI’s mission is to develop, evaluate and disseminate innovative and effective programs for children and youth mental health.

The Integra Program at CDI is located in midtown Toronto. Integra amalgamated with the Child Development Institute in October 2014. The Integra Program at CDI is the only accredited children’s mental health organization in Canada to provide mental health services exclusively to children and youth whose mental health issues (MH) are complicated by learning disabilities (LD). Integra provides family-centred, evidence-informed intervention to children and youth with diagnosed LD ages 8 to 18 years in the Toronto region, including individual, family, and group therapy. Typically, Integra clients have complex neurobiologies: 70% have more than one diagnosis, and the majority of clients have been to more than two children’s mental health agencies before coming to the Integra program. Understanding a child’s learning profile is central to the development of the mental health treatment plan at Integra. Unique to our service, Integra tailors evidence-based practice to the child’s specific processing and regulation abilities and creates and evaluates innovative evidence-informed therapies (such as Integra Mindfulness Martial Arts or Integra Social CompetenceACES Group Program).

Youthdale Treatment Centres

Established in 1969, Youthdale is one of the founding members of the children’s mental health movement in Ontario, and continues to uphold the highest professional standards in meeting the needs of youth presenting with complex mental health needs and their families. Youthdale’s mandate also includes research into new approaches for helping troubled youth and their families Youthdale’s comprehensive mental health services include: 24/7 crisis line services, mobile crisis response, psychiatric emergency admission and hospitalization for youth up to the age of 16 (including out of province youth from Canada’s Eastern Provinces and Nunavut), residential treatment (encompassing milieu treatment, individual and family therapy, day treatment, psychiatric and psychological assessment and consultation, and summer treatment camp), as well as a range of outpatient services. The latter services include: assessment (psychiatric, psychological, neuropsychiatric, neurological, occupational therapy, and speech and language) and therapy (individual, art, and family). During the fall, 2017, Youthdale will be opening a third inpatient psychiatric unit, in order to meet the unique needs of transitional aged youth with complex mental health needs. Youthdale’s Sleep Centre also investigates and treats a wide variety of childhood and adolescent sleep disorders. Youthdale also provides an Intensive Support and Supervision Program (ISSP) for young persons with mental health needs who would likely be sentenced to custody for their criminal offenses, but who can alternatively be appropriately supported and supervised in the community.

Broadview Psychology

Broadview Psychology is a family focused and team based private clinic in central Toronto that provides DBT, CBT, ACT and EFT treatment to children, adolescents, parents, families, adults, and couples with diverse challenges. Its team currently consists of 9 psychologists, 3 social workers, 1 dietician, 2 exposure therapists, and 3 admin staff. Broadview Psychology specializes in treating transdiagnostic clients who have problems in regulating their emotions and behaviour through comprehensive and adherent outpatient DBT. Broadview Psychology associates work closely together as a team to provide a wide range of services to clients as well as to their family members, including individual, group, parent, family and sibling therapy, as well as phone/text coaching, educational and career coaching, and exposure therapy.

North York General Hospital –ON HIATUS FOR THE 2018-19 YEAR

North York General Hospital (NYGH) is one of Canada's leading community academic hospitals. NYGH offers a wide range of mental health services that meet the specific needs of individuals of all ages and their families. Our services include inpatient and outpatient assessments and treatment including individual, group and family therapy across all programs. Specific programs include Inpatient Services, Day Hospital Program, Urgent Care Clinic, Outpatient Program, Eating Disorders Program.There are two sites at NYGH: The “General Site” is located at the main hospital ( 4001 Leslie St.), and the “Branson Site” which is a satellite clinic ( 555 Finch Ave. West).

NYGH serves children, adolescents, and their families who live in the North Toronto catchment area from diverse backgrounds. Patients are referred to our programs for a variety of mental health and adjustment issues. NYGH provides an interdisciplinary approach to care; psychiatry, social work, occupational therapy, nursing, dietetics, and psychology work together to meet the needs of our patients. Evidence-based approaches guide our treatment. While Cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) is the primary modality used, treatment is tailored to the individual needs of clients using an integrative approach.

Consortium Partner Descriptions (Adult Track)

Ryerson University Centre for Student Development and Counselling (CSDC)

Set in the heart of downtown Toronto, Ryerson University is home to more than 35,000 full-time

undergraduate students and 2,300 graduate students, with a culturally diverse student population from 146 countries. The Centre for Student Development and Counselling is part of a larger department - Student Health and Wellness which consists of the CSDC, Health Promotion, and the Medical Centre. The CSDC provides direct service to over 3,000 students annually through individual therapy, group therapy, and psychoeducational workshops. The Depatment of Student Health and Wellness is a multi-disciplinary team consisting of psychologists and social workers, a health promotion nurse, psychiatrists and general practitioners

University Health Network

University Health Network (UHN) is Canada’s leading research academic hospital. Building on the strengths and reputation of each of its programs, UHN brings together the talent and resources needed to transform lives and communities through excellence in care, discovery and learning. UHN is a caring, creative and accountable academic hospital, transforming health care for our patients, our community and the world. Our primary value above all else is that patients come first. Additional values include: Safety, Compassion, Teamwork, Integrity and Stewardship. UHN is a network of teaching hospitals that comprises: the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Toronto General Hospital, Toronto Western Hospital and the five sites of the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute covering ten program areas. Each hospital is recognized for excellence in distinct areas of specialization, a long and proud history, a highly committed group of supporters and a highly committed staff. Across the four hospitals are numerous inpatient and outpatient units focusing on care in a diverse range of medical issues and complex diseases. UHN serves the needs of both young and older adults from a large catchment area with a diverse cultural background. Psychologists work within interdisciplinary team settings to provide exemplary care for patients dealing with a range of complex medical issues with a focus on assessment, diagnostics and interventional techniques.