The Edmonton Conference | Day Three

Presented by Carolyn Coker Ross, M.D.

Live Streaming November 14, 2025

$244.00

6 Hours  |   Pre-approved for CEU’s

Description

LIVE STREAM: November 12 – 14, 2025 from  8:30am – 4:00pm (Edmonton, AB) Please adjust your start time according to your specific time zone. 

ON-DEMAND: Recorded footage & course content (certificate, videos, quiz) will be available until December 15, 2025. Please allow 3 – 10 business days for footage to be processed. Extensions cannot be granted under any circumstances.


November 14, 2025  |  Day Three

Generations of Healing: Culturally-Informed Responses to Address Intergenerational Trauma for Educators, Mental Health Professionals and Community

PRESENTED BY Carolyn Coker Ross, M.D.

Intergenerational trauma doesn’t impact just one person—it weaves through families, classrooms, and entire communities. Educators, counselors, and mental health professionals alike witness its ripple effects: students who struggle to regulate emotions, families locked in cycles of adversity, and communities burdened by the legacies of historical and cultural trauma.

Extensive research has shown a direct link between early life trauma and long-term mental health outcomes, including substance use disorders (SUD) and eating disorders while traits such as compulsivity, impulsivity and emotional dysregulation are promoted. More than two-thirds of individuals with SUD report childhood experiences of abuse, neglect, or toxic stress. Emerging evidence now confirms that trauma’s effects can be passed biologically and behaviorally from one generation to the next, contributing to cycles of substance use, mental illness, eating disorders and family disruption.

While trauma-informed care has helped many individuals begin their healing journey, few programs offer tools to address the collective and generational dimensions of trauma—especially within Indigenous and historically marginalized communities.

In this informative and thought-provoking workshop, Dr. Carolyn Coker-Ross will explore the neurological, relational, and cultural impacts of trauma across generations. Drawing on case studies and culturally grounded approaches, she will equip educators, therapists, and community leaders with strategies to break the cycle of trauma, foster resilience, and support whole-family healing.

  • List two ways trauma affects neurodevelopment and attachment, with implications for behavior, learning, and mental health.
  • Define intergenerational trauma and its role in the development of substance use, eating disorders and mental health disorders.
  • Identify and apply three culturally-informed strategies for interrupting the transmission of trauma across generations in educational, therapeutic, and community-based settings.

Education and Clinical Professionals: K–12 Classroom Teachers, School Counsellors/Psychologists, Learning Assistance/ Resource Teachers, School Administrators, School Paraprofessionals including Special Education Assistants, Classroom Assistants and Childcare Workers. All other professionals who support students including but not limited to: Nurses, Social Workers, Psychologists, Clinical Counsellors, Family Therapists, Occupational Therapists, Speech Language Pathologists, Addiction Counsellors, Youth Workers, Mental Health Workers, Probation Officers, Police Officers, and Early Childhood Educators.

Parents, Caregiver, Foster Parents, Grandparents, and Extended Family raising a child.

Carolyn Coker Ross, MD, MPH, CEDS is an African American author, speaker, expert the treatment of eating disorders, trauma and addictions.  Dr. Ross is a graduate of The University of Michigan Medical School.  She completed a residency in Preventive Medicine and a Master’s in Public Health (MPH) at Loma Linda University and a fellowship in Integrative Medicine at the University of Arizona.  She is board certified in Preventive Medicine and in Addiction Medicine.  Dr. Ross also completed certification by Cornell University in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. Dr. Ross has been an international speaker and consultant on issues of mental health, trauma and workplace productivity.  She received an award for Outstanding Service in Addiction Medicine in 2022 from Friendly House Los Angeles and the Dr. Peter Hayden Diversity, Inclusivity and Racial Equity Award from the National Association of Addiction Treatment Providers (NAATP) in 2023. Dr. Ross presented a TEDx Pleasant Grove talk on “Historical and Intergenerational Trauma in January 2020. She is a co-founder of the Institute for Antiracism and Equity (antiracismandequity.com), a consulting group that offers trainings to organizations on diversity and equity in the workplace.

RegistrationEarly bird FeeRegular Fee
Individual 1 Day Enrollment$244.00N/A
Individual 2 Day Enrollment$484.00N/A
Individual 3 Day Enrollment$664.00N/A

All fees are in Canadian dollars ($CAD) and per person.

Group rates and student discounts are available. Please contact webinars@jackhirose.com for more information.

Fees are per person, seat sharing is not allowed. Please respect this policy, failure to comply will result in termination of access without a refund. For group rates please contact webinars@jackhirose.com

  • Canadian Psychological Association
    The Alberta College of Social Workers (ACSW) and the Newfoundland and Labrador Association of Social Workers (NLASW) accept CPA-approved continuing education credits