CDLI: Trauma-Informed Supervision Framework

Make supervision your organization’s super power!

PACDC Community Development Leadership Institute

Thursday, February 16, 1:00pm-2:30pm | Via Zoom

Weekly supervision is the most substantive way to shape organizational culture.

Supervision is essential in the workplace because it provides employees with guidance and support, helps to ensure that work is completed effectively and safely, and promotes open communication in a safe space to address concerns.

This workshop will provide participants with a tool to aid in systemic changes that promote resilience, support, and collaboration to mitigate toxic stress, burnout, and turnover.

The Supervision Framework Tool integrates performance management, self-care, goal setting, and collaboration practices for a trauma-informed approach to supervision. Participants will learn how to practice trauma-informed supervision using a supervision framework tool.

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Discounted and free tickets are available for this workshop. Please email Joanna at jwinchester@pacdc.org for a promo code, no questions asked.

Register Here

Presenter: Alia Sutton-Bey

Alia Sutton-Bey is the Owner and Principal Consultant of A Sutton Bey LLC, a boutique consulting firm that assists nonprofits and municipal sectors with program development and evaluation to address the problem of racial and structural inequalities in the workforce system. She sees workforce development as an anti-poverty strategy and uses DEIB, trauma-informed practices, and economic justice as her guide. She understands that systems-level change creates better spaces, safer spaces, and spaces that promote healing, growth, and prosperity.

Alia’s work has allowed her to draw on her profound sense of community and justice to promote the development of high-quality programs for underserved and underrepresented communities.

Alia spent 19 years with the Philadelphia Department of Parks and Recreation, where she is known for her legacy of performing and cultural arts programming. Through her 15 years of work in the School-based behavioral health system as a Behavior Specialist, she developed a deeper understanding of the importance of using a trauma-informed lens to promote resilience and well-being. A teacher at heart, she has taught at Orleans Technical College and Ashford University.

Alia holds a B.S. in Sport Management and Leisure Studies from Temple University, M.S. in Human Services from Springfield College, and a Certificate in Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion: Building a Diverse Workforce from Cornell University.