0681 - Context Matters: ACT for Racialized and Marginalized Populations
Course Description
Hours: 12
Clinicians are increasingly encountering:
- Race-based traumatic stress.
- Identity-based shame and internalized oppression.
- Chronic vigilance and exposure to systemic threat.
- Institutional betrayal and moral injury.
- Burnout among both clients and practitioners from marginalized communities.
Although ACT has a strong empirical base across anxiety, depression, trauma and chronic stress populations, there is a clear gap in formal training on how to apply ACT processes responsibly and effectively within the context of racial trauma and systemic inequity. This course addresses that gap through a process-based, evidence-informed and clinically grounded approach. It integrates contemporary racial trauma literature with Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, with a particular emphasis on Prosocial ACT and contextual behavioral science.
Learning Outcomes
By the end of this training participants will be able to:
- Conceptualize racial trauma using functional contextualism and psychological flexibility science.
- Differentiate acceptance from accommodation of injustice.
- Apply ACT processes to identity-based shame and internalized oppression.
- Integrate compassion and dignity-based interventions.
- Utilize Prosocial ACT to address relational and systemic dynamics.
- Develop case formulations and intervention plans specific to racial trauma presentations.
- Implement structured, immediately applicable ACT interventions in clinical practice.
Course Structure
The course progresses from theoretical foundations to advanced process-based case formulation to applied clinical strategy. Experiential exercises, case consultation and structured implementation planning are embedded throughout both days to ensure integration of learning.
Participants will leave with:
- A clear ACT-based framework for racial trauma.
- Structured case formulation templates.
- Adapted ACT exercises specific to racial trauma and identity-based stress, including defusion and compassion strategies.
- Clinical language for addressing race and systemic factors explicitly in session.
- Micro-intervention strategies for rupture, activation, and shame.
- Ethical guidance for acceptance work in contexts of oppression.
- Case-based implementation plans and structured clinical decision-making tools for immediate use.
Participants will gain both conceptual depth and practical strategies that can be applied immediately in a variety of practice settings.
Notes
Time Zone: All listed class times are held in ET (Ontario, Canada)
For more information contact the Faculty of Social Work Professional Development office:
Email: fswprofessionaldevelopment@wlu.ca
Phone: 548-889-4967
Cancellations and Transfers
Be sure to carefully review our cancellation and transfer information before registering.
Website: wlu.ca/fswpd
Prerequisites
Applies Towards the Following Certificates
- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) Certificate : Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
This course has already taken place for the current academic year (July 1, 2026 to June 30, 2027).
The 2027/2028 Faculty of Social Work Professional Development course dates will be posted on this website on July 5, 2027.