Training and Education

This training and education hub was created to help Edmontonians come together to support one another in living happier, more meaningful lives. Whether you're caring for family, friends, coworkers, or even strangers, we all play a role in looking out for each other.

These courses are designed to support your growth—whether you're a peer, a service provider, or someone just trying to help. Topics include mental health and addictions, suicide prevention, peer support, poverty and housing, parenting, and more. All trainings emphasize approaches that are fair, trauma-informed, culturally sensitive, and rooted in community values. See a calendar view of upcoming locally offered training →

 
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Building Trust and Resilience Through Relationship-Based Supervision – The Family Centre

In this 3-hour workshop, participants will acquire the tools and skill sets necessary to become effective leaders within their organizations.

By embracing trauma-informed values and adopting relationship-based supervision models, they will cultivate environments of trust, empathy, and support. Acknowledging the diverse past experiences of their staff members, participants will gain insight into how these experiences may influence their work with their service users. Participants will be equipped to intervene proactively to avoid burnout, fostering a culture of well-being and resilience.

Participants will develop essential skills to ensure that their teams can thrive in even the most challenging circumstances. Through this comprehensive approach, participants will not only enhance their leadership capabilities but also contribute to supporting their agency’s service users through an effective supervision model.

To register: TFC – Leadership Development

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Principles of Trauma-Informed Supervision – The Family Centre

In this 3-hour workshop, participants will engage in an in-depth exploration of the five values of trauma-informed care, examining their critical role in fostering safe and effective supervision practices.

Through this workshop, attendees will gain an understanding of how these components intersect with and enhance the supervisory process. Participants will develop a proficiency in nurturing the growth and development of their staff. Additionally, they will learn to assess their supervisees' quality of life in relation to their work, ensuring a holistic approach to staff well-being and professional growth.

By nurturing qualities such as humility, hunger, and emotional intelligence, participants will foster cohesive, high-performing teams.

The content presented in this workshop is based on the Creating Cultures of Trauma-Informed Care model (CCTIC) developed by Community Connections.

To register: TFC – Leadership Development

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Protocol Teachings – The Family Centre

Learn about the significant of protocol in Indigenous culture and how to offer it respectfully.

In the nêhiyaw worldview, health and wellness are understood as miyo pimâtisiwin, or ‘living the good life,’ and is achieved by seeking mental, emotional, spiritual, and physical balance. miyo pimâtisiwin is a way of being and a commitment to living and practicing in accordance with nêhiyaw ceremonies, teachings, and values.

Through active participation in this 1-hour workshop, participants will:

  • Develop an understanding of the relationship between ceremony and healing

  • Understand the significance of and meaning behind offering protocol

  • Learn how to respectfully approach Elders and offer protocol

To register: TFC – Indigenous Teachings

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Seven Sacred Teachings – The Family Centre

Join our knowledge holder as they guide participants in discussing what each of the Seven Sacred Teachings means and their application to the work with Indigenous children, youth, and families.

The Seven teachings provide the foundational directions for living miyo pimâtisiwin (living the good life). Each animal has shared teachings with us, and it is through them that we learned how to behave in the world.

In this 2-hour workshop, participants will:

  • Experience a smudge and understand how smudging places oneself in a sacred space, readying the participants to enter into a healing relationship

  • Receive teachings on the Seven Sacred Teachings

  • Learn how the Seven Sacred Teachings are applicable in many different contexts and how they can be used to better support and engage Indigenous children, youth, and families

To register: TFC – Indigenous Teachings

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Smudge Teachings – The Family Centre

We believe that any individual who has been given the gift of the smudging ceremony by an Elder or knowledge holder has the responsibility to practice that gift with the children, youth, and families they work with.

In this 1-hour workshop, participants will:

  • Experience a smudge and understand how smudging places oneself in a sacred space, readying the participants to enter into a healing relationship

  • Receive smudging teachings and understand how to respectfully enter into ceremony

  • Gain the confidence to lead a smudge with groups of people

  • Participants who attend will be able to better support and engage Indigenous children, youth, and families through ceremony.

To register: TFC – Indigenous Teachings

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Teaching Traditional Parenting – The Family Centre

Discover the rich traditions of Indigenous parenting (miyo opikinawasowin) with our workshop, "Teaching Traditional Parenting".

This immersive experience, facilitated in ceremony, provides an overview of Indigenous parenting concepts and practices, including the history, legacy, and intergenerational impacts of colonization on parenting.

In this 6-hour workshop, participants will:

  • Learn about moss bags, cradleboards, swings, baby rattles, Indigenous stories, and tipi teachings

  • Gain a deeper understanding of nêhiyaw parenting from an Indigenous worldview

  • Acquire practical tools to help their service users integrate these concepts into their homes

The core of this workshop was developed by the late Janet Fox from the Onion Lake Cree First Nation.

To register: TFC – Indigenous Teachings

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Parenting Toddlers and Pre-Schoolers – The Family Centre

The Parenting Toddlers and Preschoolers workshop helps take some of the guesswork out of parenting by helping you better understand why children behave the way they do up to the age of five.

As a parent of a child under five, every day is an exciting challenge full of surprises. You never really know what to expect next when it comes to things like language, learning, or physical activity. And then there are those temper tantrums that seem to flare up out of nowhere! At times, you may feel like nothing you do as a parent is working. We’ll offer positive strategies to help you guide your children’s behaviour and provide a nurturing home, while you take care of yourself.

Who can attend:

  • Any caregiver who is parenting a child between 18 months and five years old.

  • Caregivers interested in establishing positive parenting practices in toddlers or preschoolers.

You will build skills for parenting toddlers and preschoolers by understanding:

  • What to expect as your child develops

  • Your parenting style and how it affects your child

  • Why children behave the way they do

  • How to positively guide behaviours

  • What bonding is and why it’s important

  • How ‘play’ helps develop physical, intellectual, and social skills

  • How to encourage confidence

  • How to better communicate with children

  • How to deal with misbehaviour and tantrums

  • How to potty train

  • How to care of yourself

By the end of the session, you will feel more comfortable:

  • Creating effective parenting strategies and giving positive feedback

  • Addressing misbehaviour or other issues

  • Setting boundaries, limits, and guidelines

  • Communicating with your child or children

  • Providing a nurturing home environment

  • Minimizing the negative effects of divorce or separation (if applicable), and

  • Solving day-to-day problems and challenges

Cost:

Group workshop: $150 per person.

Private session: $325



We are dedicated to supporting families of all income levels. We offer a subsidy for attending the group workshop for this class, thanks to funding from the City of Edmonton Family and Community Support Services.

If needed, you can apply for a subsidy by selecting one of the subsidy options in the registration form.

To register: TFC – PTPS

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Parenting School Age Children – The Family Centre

Learn how to support your child when they are between the ages of 5 and 11.

When your child turns 5, they start to gain a new level of independence. Between the ages of 5 and 11, they spend more time at school, with friends, and participating in extra-curricular activities. This means they are spending less time with you under your direct supervision and care.

Since you can’t be there to solve all of your child’s problems as they occur, you need skills to teach them to be independent and make positive choices. The Parenting School Age Children workshop offers a way to help you understand how they’re growing up and the type of role you should have with them as they go through the school years.

Who can attend:

  • Any caregiver who is parenting a child between 5 and 11 years old

  • Caregivers interested in establishing positive parenting practices or addressing challenges in school age children

You will build skills for parenting school-age children by understanding:

  • What to expect as your child grows and develops

  • Your parenting style and how it affects your child

  • Why school-age children behave the way they do

  • How to positively guide behaviours

  • How to better communicate with your child

  • What bonding is and why it’s important

  • Ways to teach your child problem-solving skills

  • The ins and outs of self-esteem

  • Discipline strategies

  • Internet safety

  • Chores – what to expect and when

  • What drives power struggles and how to address them

  • How to care for yourself during this stage

By the end of the session, you will feel more comfortable:

  • Creating effective parenting strategies and giving positive feedback

  • Addressing misbehaviour or other issues

  • Setting boundaries, limits, and guidelines

  • Communicating with your child

  • Providing a nurturing home environment

  • Minimizing the negative effects of divorce or separation (if applicable), and

  • Solving day-to-day problems and challenges

How much does it cost?

Group workshops: $150 per person.

Private session: $325

We are dedicated to supporting families of all income levels. We offer a subsidy for attending the group workshop for this class, thanks to funding from the City of Edmonton Family and Community Support Services.

If needed, you can apply for a subsidy by selecting one of the subsidy options in the registration form.

To register: TFC - PSAC

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Birth & Babies – Alberta Health Services

A prenatal education program for pregnant women and their partners in Edmonton and Area.

This program is available in varying durations, from 2 weeks to 5 weeks, or on weekends. Each class is two hours long. Classroom topics are determined in real time and may change from group to group and class to class. Topics often include when to go to the hospital, the labour process, coping strengths & strategies for both mom and the support person, postpartum care, newborn feeding & care basics, finding credible information on the internet and more.

We recommend bringing with you: water bottle/snacks, a mat (to try out labor positions/massage) and printed resources sent to you by your facilitator for activities. Hand sanitizer and disinfecting wipes will be provided in class.

It is recommended that a series ending approximately 4 weeks prior to the expected due date be selected whenever possible. If this is not possible, please choose a class that works best for you.

If you require financial support to attend a class please call 780-342-2833 or email birthandbabiesedmonton@albertahealthservices.ca.

To register: AHS – B&B

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Best Beginning Program - Alberta Health Services

Best Beginning is a free supportive health service for pregnant women who are facing challenges.

This program is designed for women who:

  • Need information to make healthy choices during pregnancy

  • Feel alone and isolated

  • Face language or cultural barriers

  • Are living on a low income

We offer:

  • Support from social workers, nurses, dietitians, and outreach workers

  • Group health education and peer support

  • Children's programming (1-6 yrs)

  • Healthy snacks and time to connect with other pregnant women

  • Community and Health Resources

To register: AHS - BBP

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Introduction to Family Literacy – Centre for Family Literacy

A 2-part training prerequisite for certificate training that covers the fundamentals of building literacy in families.

Part One – Family Literacy Fundamentals

Explore the fundamentals of Family Literacy and expand your understanding of the role literacy plays in the life of children, their parents/caregivers, and the community.

The workshop will explore:

  • A brief history of literacy

  • What is literacy?

  • Core concepts of family literacy

  • Best practices in family literacy

  • Explore the different types of family literacy programs

Part Two – Connecting How We Learn

Examine the connection between the family and emergent literacy, early literacy and adult literacy.

This workshop looks at the process of early literacy development in children starting at birth and connects to best practices in working with adults. We will explore why both are important in family literacy programs and how these connections, and therefore the learning, can be strengthened.

To register: CFL – Certificate Training

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Rhymes that Bind – Centre for Family Literacy

Rhymes that Bind training provides participants with the necessary information, resources and skills to facilitate their own Rhymes that Bind program in their community.

Rhymes that Bind promotes oral language development in babies and toddlers, as parents/caregivers learn how to support and enjoy learning through rhymes, finger plays, songs and simple movement games with their children in a safe, supportive peer group.

To register: CFL – Certificate Training

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Books for Babies – Centre for Family Literacy

Books for Babies training provides participants with the necessary information, resources and skills to facilitate their own Books for Babies program in their community.

Books for Babies is a facilitated program for parents/caregivers and their babies, up to 12 months old. The program introduces parents/caregivers to various ways they can support their child’s early literacy and language experiences, encourages daily book sharing and, in doing so, helps promote healthy family relationships.

To register: CFL – Certificate Training

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Books Offer Our Kids Success – Centre for Family Literacy

B.O.O.K.S is a facilitated program for parents/caregivers of preschoolers. This program models book sharing strategies, explores book themes and the connections to everyday life and extends on book content by incorporating a variety of different literacy activities into the sessions.

Some of these activities include: crafts, journaling, cooking and more! Parents/caregivers are given the opportunity to borrow books to share at home with their children along with ideas for extending and practicing the learning. The B.O.O.K.S program provides an informal setting where parents and caregivers develop their understanding of their role in their children’s literacy development.

To register: CFL – Certificate Training

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Storysacks – Centre for Family Literacy

Storysacks training provides the participant with the necessary information, resources and skills to facilitate their own Storysacks program in their community.

Storysacks is a program in which parents/caregivers, volunteers and community members work together to make Storysacks as a means of supporting the early literacy skills of preschool children in their community.

Participants learn how to create props and scenery related to a storybook, representations of its main characters, an audio recording and a game based on the book. Storysacks may be used in a variety of settings, including family literacy programs, the classroom, children’s organizations, daycares, libraries and in the home. The program encourages parents/caregivers who may be facing barriers, such as low income, literacy issues, and lack of resources, to spend time together in a safe and constructive environments.

To register: CFL – Certificate Training

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Science and Literacy – Centre for Family Literacy

Learn about the role science plays in family literacy.

Parents and primary caregivers hold the key to early literacy skills for their children. This workshop takes a closer look at what family literacy is, with the focus on science, and shares ideas on how parents can enhance and build on their child’s emergent literacy and language skills.

To register: CFL - Workshops

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Skills for Learning – Centre for Family Literacy

Learn essential skills for your child’s development.

Do you know what the 9 essential skills are and why they have been deemed as skills everyone needs to have to be successful? We use them at work and at home and you may be surprised to learn how often you use them. These are skills that can help your child navigate in their world. The workshop will look at new ways to help you enhance these skills for your child in fun and creative ways.

To register: CFL - Workshops

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