Clinical Training Program

We are not currently accepting new applications. Please visit this page in the future for updates on upcoming training opportunities.

We are therapists, trainers, professors, authors, podcasters, and researchers who are united in a mission to provide the most rigorous and innovative psychotherapy training program in the country. Our outcome-focused program is 100% online and we are the first counseling center to fully integrate Deliberate Practice into all aspects of training and supervision.

Counselors at Sentio receive training and mentorship in skills from trauma-informed therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, motivational interviewing, emotionally focused therapy, schema therapy, systemic therapy, and more.

What do we mean by “rigorous and innovative?”

 

“I’ve had a wonderful experience at Sentio! The support and learning I have experienced is beyond what I expected at a site. Everyone feels like family.”

Training Commitments

 
  • Minimum of one year

  • Minimum of 18 hours per week, including:

    • Two hours of group supervision on Wednesdays from 3-5

    • Two hours of clinical training on Thursdays from 9-11

    • One hour of individual supervision

    • One hour of Deliberate Practice homework

  • Minimum caseload of 12 clients per week after an initial ramp-up period

Training Benefits

 
  • Experience: Opportunity to work with individuals and couples (please note that we cannot guarantee that trainees from COAMFTE-accredited programs will accrue 100+ relational hours in one year)

  • Mentorship and Skill Building: Personalized guidance via Deliberate Practice training and expert feedback as you practice foundational psychotherapy interventions

  • Flexibility: Make your own client schedule and gain hours from the comfort of your home

  • Affordability: No monthly fees or required expenses

  • Top-Quality Supervision: Sentio supervisors go through an unparalleled supervisor training program that includes over 50 hours of video review

  • Free Training Resources: All SCC counselors gain free access to our live webinars and library of recorded webinars

Training Requirements

 
  • Appropriateness for telehealth, including:

    • Private physical space

    • Reliable internet service

    • Secure technology

  • Training program is open to trainees (MFT, PCC) and volunteer associates (MFT, PCC, CSW)

    • Trainees must have good standing in a master’s-level graduate program or higher

    • Trainees must be enrolled in a practicum class by the training program start date

    • Associates must be registered and in good standing with the BBS

We are committed to excellence in psychotherapy training.

Sentio Counseling Center provides the highest possible standard of mentorship for counselors through innovative and rigorous training methods to positively transform the lives of our clients and the communities we serve.

We work to achieve this mission through values of innovation, mentorship, humility, and transparency, and by prioritizing the cyclical relationship between:

Deliberate Practice

  1. Cultivating personalized routines for each counselor to identify and develop areas of clinical growth.

  2. Improving skills through the use of video recording and analysis, a focus on cultural humility and multicultural orientation, and commitment through rehearsal and consistency.

Client Outcomes

  1. Using routine outcome monitoring to gather data on client results, establish baseline effectiveness rates of SCC and its counselors, and evaluate client and counselor progress.

  2. Soliciting feedback to ensure that client needs are met.

Revise Methodology

  1. Continual evolution of SCC policies and practices based on counselor experience, client feedback, and outcome data.

  2. Transparency about effectiveness at all levels of SCC (counselor, supervisor, SCC as a whole) and clinic policies and procedures.

 Training Approach FAQs


What is Deliberate Practice?

Deliberate Practice (DP) is arguably the most evidence-based method we know of to improve performance in an effective and reliable manner. The principles of DP systematically target an experiential and procedural type of learning that defines top performers. In fact, decades of research have demonstrated that lengthy engagement in DP is associated with expert performance across a variety of professions. What sets DP apart from other training methods is a rigorous sequence of ongoing performance assessment, tailored goal-setting, and systematic skill-building informed by expert feedback. 

Deliberate Practice is not a substitute for high-quality psychotherapy training, supervision, and other investments such as the therapist’s own therapy or a commitment to self-care. DP is best seen as complementary to all of these. It is, in our opinion, a necessary complement to maximize professional development and clinical expertise. While more traditional training and supervision methods help us to effectively learn models and theory, the principles of DP help us consolidate key learnings from declarative knowledge to a more experiential or procedural level. This is important because many trainings today help trainees to reliably talk or write better about therapy, but not to actually perform it better. And when there is a performance component (e.g. use of roleplays), it is usually unstructured and not tailored to the trainee’s current capacity. 

What do you mean by ‘rigorous training methods’?

Rigorous training methods include:

  1. Skill Rehearsal - Counselors engage in weekly Deliberate Practice as part of supervision and training. Counselors who wish to engage in recorded Deliberate Practice outside of Sentio Counseling Center are supported by supervisor review and feedback of recordings.

  2. Expert Feedback - Counselors show videos of their clinical work to supervisors and peers for feedback. Try to imagine a surgeon, dancer, or any type of athlete learning without observation and feedback, but instead by simply talking about what they recalled from their performance. It simply wouldn’t work!

What is Routine Outcome Monitoring (ROM)?

ROM is when therapists track their clients’ self-reported outcome data on a session-by-session basis.  At SCC, everyone shows their ROM data to their supervisors and peers so we can all learn from each other. ROM is valuable for many reasons, including:

  1. Research has shown that tracking outcomes can help you identify clients at risk for clinical deterioration.

  2. Tracking outcomes can help you identify your personal clinical strengths and challenges, so you can target these areas with Deliberate Practice.

  3. Tracking your outcomes lets you accumulate sufficient data to get a big-picture look at your clinical effectiveness.

  4. Transparency around outcome data helps create a culture of openness and non-defensiveness about our clinical outcomes.

Why is client feedback so important?

Studies have shown that client feedback can significantly improve the effectiveness of psychotherapy, including reducing dropout rates and shortening the length of treatment. Clients are the ultimate expert of their own experience in psychotherapy. Thus, client feedback is essential for:

  1. Assessing the effectiveness of therapy for each client.

  2. Identifying the strengths and weaknesses of each counselor.

  3. Ensuring that training is improving counselors’ skills and performance.

Why is SCC focused on doing things differently?

Psychotherapy is very effective for psychological distress (more so than Ibuprofin is for headaches!), yet research over the last half-century shows that our field is no more effective than it was in the 1970s. We believe that Deliberate Practice can point the way to better training methods, better results, and most importantly, better mental health in our communities. 

Illustrative Example: Sentio Counseling Center Mentorship in Action

 
Counselor wearing headphones at desk on a video call

Kim is a counselor who had been at SCC for six months. While her outcome data was above average, she had gotten feedback from multiple clients that her sessions often ended in an unstructured manner that left them unsure of what to work on during the week.

In supervision, Kim showed video recordings of her sessions with supervisors and peers, and received additional feedback that supported her clients’ comments about her challenges with the end of sessions.

 
View of counselors laptop showing her advisor on video call.

Kim’s supervisor created personalized Deliberate Practice exercises to help her end sessions in a way that feels clear, supportive, and includes information about client homework.

Kim practiced these exercises in weekly supervision and at home for a three-week period. Soon after, Kim began receiving more positive feedback from her clients about her approach to ending sessions, and her supervisor reviewed her videos to ensure that her progress was reflected in her clinical work. In time, Kim’s outcome data showed positive growth in her results with clients.

 

After seeing the impact Deliberate Practice had on Kim’s ability to end sessions more effectively, Kim’s supervisor spoke with the clinic director about the significance of including related exercises to the weekly trainings for all counselors.

These changes were implemented soon after, and new counselors at SCC are now provided with exercises designed to support their ability to end every session in a manner that contributes to better client results.

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