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PACT has been the most helpful training I have experienced in over 24 years of practice as a therapist.

-Katie Graham

PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples Global Online Training

Level 1 graduates, are you ready to increase your confidence and take your PACT skills to the next level? Do you sometimes feel intimidated or unsure when facing difficult couples with complex issues?

PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples teaches more advanced PACT skills and helps you increase self-confidence while integrating PACT into your clinical practice and dealing with challenging cases.

Building on what you learned in Level 1, you’ll gain new insight, hone your assessment strategies and intervention techniques, and gain confidence in learning when and how to work more deeply with the most conflicted couples.

What’s new in PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples

In PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples, you will learn how to: 

  • Maintain the therapeutic frame and clarify therapeutic boundaries for both therapist and client safety
  • Work more effectively with couples who act out
  • Quickly assess clients’ collaboration skills and get couples on board with treatment plans 
  • Find partners developmentally, understand what people can and cannot do based on their development, and work with potential deficits
  • Work strategically and with less effort to conserve your energy, avoid burnout, and have more fun
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Curious about PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples

Listen to hear more from our PACT Level 2 graduates.

 

High-Level Training

PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples is a rigorous training program and requires commitment on your part — before the training begins, during the live weekend training sessions, and in between course modules. For example, you will have a number of reading assignments and videos to watch before the first meeting, and you will have assignments between course modules. These assignments allow you to clarify your understanding of PACT principles and participate more meaningfully while in the live training with instructors and colleagues.

High-Level Participation

PACT is an experiential model of therapy. As a PACT therapist, you must bring your whole self into the therapy room — face, mind, body. When learning to use PACT, you must do the same in class — as an engaged, active participant. 

As a result, PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples is a highly participatory training. Students get the most out of the training when they engage with their peers and colleagues. The focus and value of the live training is in the practice of new skills and receiving constructive, respectful feedback. 

PACT training encompasses demonstrations, small group processing, large group processing, and role playing, in which you will play a therapist as well as a member of a couple. Participation in these exercises is required, and video cameras must be on throughout the training. Only those who are willing to be active learners and participate in the exercises should register for the training.

Our Inclusive Student Culture at the PACT Institute

When we bring our whole selves into our training — face, mind, body — we also bring our hearts. Everything we do as PACT faculty and staff, we strive to do with kindness, empathy, and respect for all.

In the past year, as the PACT Institute has grown, our training has gained a wider national and international audience from diverse cultures. We have also made a commitment to serve systemically marginalized communities in the mental health field. We’re truly honored to teach PACT to therapists with different backgrounds, perspectives, and lived experiences. 

While PACT is a highly rigorous and experiential training, our instructors and staff strive to create safe and supportive learning environments. We expect PACT students to join us in wholehearted learning and in their support of a positive and  inclusive student culture for all colleagues.

Rich Training Resources 

PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples includes a comprehensive training manual and an extensive library of videos that accompany each module. We encourage you to take advantage of these resources before, during, and after your training.

When you register, you gain access to course materials so you can watch the videos in advance and fully prepare for the live training. Our aim is to help you remain focused and on-topic so you are ready to engage with the material — and your colleagues in class — and remember what you learn. Watching the videos at your own pace helps you better retain the information shared and also helps cut down on screen fatigue.

As a student, you’ll have access to PACT training assistants and opportunities in between modules to ask questions and get answers to real-life issues. You’ll also maintain unlimited continued access to the PACT video library. You will have easy access to any video even after the training. If you want to review a specific concept or see an intervention in action, you can go back and watch it again.

Here’s the value you receive with PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples Online Training:

  • Three 2-day live online training sessions (30 hours of live training), taught by PACT developer Dr. Stan Tatkin and longtime PACT faculty members, Dr. Hans Stahlschmidt and Dr. Patricia Hart
  • Assessment strategies that get to the real issues, no matter what the couple tells you
  • Advanced interventions that work more deeply — learn exactly when and how to use them
  • Clinical video presentations and case enactments designed to show you more advanced skills for assessment and intervention 
  • Experiential exercises and small group discussion to help you integrate PACT techniques into your clinical practice
  • Opportunities to ask questions and get answers to real-life issues
  • Digital copy of the PACT training manual
  • Unlimited lifetime access to the PACT Institute’s video library, including recordings from the live training and 34 PACT training videos that demonstrate new techniques and skills
  • Membership in an online discussion group so you can connect with colleagues from around the world
  • 30 CE hours sponsored by APA, NBCC or NYSED

Detailed training objectives 

Welcome to PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples from Stan Tatkin

 

Early Registration Advantage

Sign up early for PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples training to gain access to course materials as soon as they are available — including the PACT manual and video library — so you can be prepared for the live training.

Because of the work we know you need to prepare for the first module, we will close registration two weeks before the start of Level 2 training. Sign up now to gain the earliest possible access to course material and get a jump start on your training.

Small Class Sizes in PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples

PACT training encompasses demonstrations, small group processing, large group processing, and role playing. We keep class sizes small. Smaller classes allow for more individual attention and more time to practice new skills. Smaller classes also mean seats are limited, so sign up early to ensure your spot!

Taking PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples More Than Once

Because the PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples training is a rigorous training and includes more advanced skills and techniques, it’s common for clinicians to take the Level 2 training multiple times. Level 2 training and resources are so packed with rich content that clinicians say they get more out of the Level 2 course each time they take it. They also say that taking Level 2 more than once helps them feel more comfortable and confident integrating PACT into their clinical practice.

If you plan to take PACT Level 3; Advanced Practicum in the future, the PACT Institute especially recommends taking Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples more than once.

2024 PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples Days/Times


September 14 - 15 | October 26 - 27 | November 9 - 10

All times are 7am - 12:30pm (Pacific)

 Convert to your time zone here

Registration closes August 30, 2024

Pay in Full

$1,899 USD

ONE TIME PAYMENT

Register

Payment Plan

$522 USD

PER MONTH FOR 4 MONTHS

Register

The PACT Institute offers a 15% discount for those who repeat Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples and those who take Level 1 & Level 2 in the same calendar year. Please email us at [email protected] for details.

Train with your colleagues! We are offering a 15% discount for groups of 5 or more. Email [email protected] for details

Requirements for PACT Level 2: Working with Difficult Couples

The training is intended for licensed and pre-licensed marriage and family therapists, professional counselors, social workers, psychologists, and psychiatrists.

To qualify for attendance in the PACT training, a pre-licensed clinician must (a) be in the final year of graduate school, (b) actively see clients as a supervisee and/or intern, and (c) have a supervisor’s approval to attend the training.

PACT Attendance & CE Eligibility Policy

When you successfully complete Level 2 training, you can identify yourself as a PACT Level 2 clinician/therapist, indicating a strong foundation in PACT skills and principles.

To receive a status of PACT Level 2, along with a certificate of completion, and be eligible to move on to the next level of PACT training, students must attend training with their camera on and fully participate in all live training sessions and breakout room practices. Students must also complete all coursework in their student portal, including training videos and module quizzes.

To receive CE credit for PACT Level 2 training, students must attend all modules with their camera on and fully participate in all live training sessions and breakout room practices. Students must also complete all module quizzes in their student portal.

CE credits are awarded for the full training. As per accreditation board requirements, PACT is unable to offer partial CE credits for partial completion of the training.

"I remain astounded by your capacity to make hours of virtual learning compelling. "

PACT Level 2 Online student

"I have taken PACT Level 2 many times. Each time I learn more. The course material is more refined and relevant....I was really looking forward to hearing how PACT is being adapted for telehealth. I came out of the training feeling so much more confident!"

PACT Level 2 Online student

"I don’t think the [online] format handicapped us at all. The training weekend was much less expensive than traveling… and much less disruptive for both work and family time. I’d gladly sign onto this format again without any worry of loss of educational content or collegial experience. Many thanks to all!"

PACT Level 1 Online student

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CE Information 

Level 2 training is sponsored by the PACT Institute (ACEP #6641, PCE #5551, and SW CPE #0104) for 30 continuing education hours.

New York Social Workers: PACT Institute SW CPE is recognized by the New York State Education Department’s State Board for Social Work as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed social workers #0104. 

New York Social Workers & Mental Health Practitioners: PACT Institute, LLC is recognized by the New York State Education Department’s State Board for Mental Health Practitioners as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed mental health counselors. #MHC-0114

Psychologists: The PACT Institute is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. The PACT Institute maintains responsibility for this program and its content.

Marriage and Family Therapists, Licensed Professional Clinical Counselors, Licensed Educational Psychologists, Licensed Clinical Social Workers, and Certified Counselors: 

 

Training Objectives:

After completing Level 2 Online Training, you will be able to achieve the following in your work with couples.

Module 1

  1. Justify the use of containers in couples therapy. 
  2. Demonstrate the skills to put a couple in a container. 
  3. Explain the overarching principles for the first session of PACT.
  4. Apply the principles for forming a therapeutic alliance.
  5. Identify and describe a couple’s acting-out behaviors.
  6. Practice the mindset of a PACT therapist.
  7. Demonstrate the skills for supportive confrontation.
  8. Apply basic PACT principles when working with a couple.

Module 2

  1. Analyze a client’s defenses. 
  2. Identify and question when transference is occurring in session. 
  3. Demonstrate the skills for assessment with projections and projective identification.
  4. Demonstrate the skills for intervention with projections and projective identification.
  5. Demonstrate the ability to apply PACT principles when working with clients with narcissistic personality disorder.
  6. Demonstrate the ability to apply PACT principles when working with clients with borderline personality disorder.
  7. Demonstrate the ability to apply PACT principles when working with clients with schizoid personality disorder.
  8. Demonstrate the ability to apply PACT principles when working with clients with antisocial personality disorder.

Module 3 

  1. Integrate PACT skills into clinical practice.
  2. Assess and formulate interventions when working with betrayal.
  3. Assess and formulate interventions when working with deal breakers.
  4. Demonstrate the skills for assessment and intervention with empty chair work. 
  5. Compare and contrast approaches to working with trauma.
  6. Demonstrate advanced skills for assessment and intervention with PACT posing and staging.
  7. Apply the principles and demonstrate the skills for the end session of PACT.
  8. Create a treatment plan based on PACT principles.
  9. Justify the distinguishing characteristics of a PACT therapist.
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