The IRCT is pleased to promote the Attachment and Research Community 2023 Conference which is “Supporting the journey to an emotionally informed education”. This conference aims to facilitate an understanding of Early Developmental trauma and behaviours resulting from those experiences. It aims to motivate and educate a workforce to meet the needs of traumatised children. In this way “the needs of the whole school are met”. To find out more and to book, go to https://the-arc.org.uk/events/arc-2023-annual-conference-
Online event from ACAMH
We’re pleased to share this online event for January. Dan Johnson presented at our Conference in November and this session will discover how we implement changes, including Trauma Informed care.
Making change really happen: inspiration, ideas and information on how to make change in the services and systems we work in
Annual round-up – Overview of our 2021 events and speakers
We were grateful to host our third annual conference as a live event in November. We have managed to continue with a programme of Best Practice Forums which we know are important for all our members as well as others. Members can access the PowerPoint presentations in the Resource area of the website.
March 2021
Harnessing Understanding of Attachment and Trauma for Individuals, Groups and Organisations
Orit Badouk Epstein
Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist
‘The role fear plays in the severely traumatised client’
Richard Cross
Adult & Child Psychotherapist
‘Creating resiliency for professionals when working with traumatized children’
April 2021
Preventing the Permanent Exclusion of Vulnerable Children
This was a one day virtual online conference with four speakers and time for discussion in fallout groups and it served as a launch for the IRCT Campaign, led by Patrick Finegan (Virtual School Head and IRCT Trustee), to make permanent exclusion from school illegal.
Patrick Finegan
Head of Looked After & Vulnerable Children National Springboard Foundation
‘Why Permanently Exclude Children from Schools?’ Patrick put forward the case for permanent exclusions to be no longer tolerated as they are unnecessarily cruel and have been proven to the life chances of vulnerable children. He proposed alternative strategies that would be more constructive and inclusive.
Andrew Wright
Virtual School Head & Chair Attachment Research Community
Looked After Children Andrew discussed the problems facing schools as vulnerable children returned to school following lockdown. He advocated for more understanding of attachment & trauma as set out by ARC.
Janet Rose
Principal Norland College
Supporting Vulnerable Children through Emotional Coaching
Janet outlined how emotion coaching might support vulnerable and traumatized children, particularly in relation to the impact of COVID on their lives
Kate Cairns
Training Director Cairns Associates
Responding to Trauma Driven Behaviour: Social Exclusion or Community Resilience?
Trauma driven behaviour is socially challenging and currently often leads to social exclusion. Kate suggested that such exclusion is damaging not only for the traumatized individual but also for the community doing the excluding. She argued that human communities are only genuinely resilient when they operate from a base of compassionate reason, absorbing and transforming the disruption of trauma so that individuals can recover and the whole community can thrive.
The conference was a big success but sadly Patrick had to stand down from the IRCT Board shortly after the launch of the campaign due to a change in his personal circumstances. We are delighted that we have now been able to Co-opt Gareth Williams-James (ex-Virtual School Head) onto the Board to pick up the mantle and re-invigorate the campaign.
If you are willing to help with this campaign, please get in touch chair@irct.org.uk
July 2021
Perspectives on Recovery
Sylvia Duncan
Clinical Child & Family Psychologist & Chair IRCT
A Roadmap to Recovery: A Developmental Perspective
Sylvia presented a model to explain the importance of taking a developmental perspective on the impact of trauma highlighting the therapeutic needs at each stage of development to provide a roadmap for recovery.
Yvon Guest
Psychotherapist
Beyond Just Surviving
Yvon shared findings from her research to show how recovery from significant trauma is a dynamic process between the individual and the external world, initially about survival and then moving beyond.
Roland Woodward
Psychologist
Recovery Environments: The Place. The People. The Rationale.
Roland argued that for recovery to be able to take place there are some basic conditions that need to be in place. Some of these are physical but most are psychological and interpersonal. Roland outlined models and the essential components needed.
This webinar was linked to our Annual Conference on Trauma Informed Practice held later in the year
November 2021
ANNUAL CONFERENCE
Trauma Informed Practice: Environments to Promote Recovery
Dan Johnson
Forensic Psychologist & Clinical Director at Kibble Education & Care Centre Glasgow
The Implementation of Trauma Informed Care in Residential & Secure Care: Can Change Really Happen and What Makes it More Likely?
Julie Harmieson
Co-Director Trauma Informed Schools UK
School as a Place of Healing and a Pathway to Public Health
Jennifer Browner
Consultant Child Psychotherapist / Head of Therapies & Networks Team The Mulberry Bush
Trauma: Recovery or Living Alongside it?
Richard Cross
Child & Adult Psychotherapist / Head of Assessment & Therapy Services Five Rivers Child Care
Active Ingredients for the Recovery from Adversity for Children & Young People in Foster Care
ABSOLUTELY NO COST 2-day training by Arizona Trauma Institute Sponsored by Richard Cross in Trauma and the Sensory System
This is a two-day training course that will be presented from a Trauma & Occupational Therapy
Lens. This course will emphasize trauma’s effect on the physiology of the body with an
emphasis on the sensory system. Intervention approaches to using the body’s sensory system
as a channel to effective treatment will be provided and will follow the active ingredients
(Salutogenic) guidelines.
This course aims to understand better how we can utilize the body as a way to more efficiently
and effectively heal Trauma.
When: April 1st and 2nd, 2021 8:30 to 4:30 MST (the UK is 7 hours ahead, so 3.30 pm –
1130pm – please note once registered, you can come back and watch the replay on
demand).
The replay on demand will be available through the 18th of April 2021
EVENT: PREVENTING THE PERMANENT EXCLUSION OF VULNERABLE CHILDREN
CONFERENCE (online)
16th April 2012 10am-3pm
PREVENTING THE PERMANENT EXCLUSION OF VULNERABLE CHILDREN
The majority of children permanently excluded from schools are those who already have a history of adverse childhood experiences and have been traumatized. It is perverse that the children in most need of stability, understanding and support are those who are far more likely to be rejected by the very people who are paid to look after them in loco parentis and prepare them for adulthood. Currently many more children have been deeply traumatised as a result of their experiences during lockdown. They are returning to some schools that may not understand how to support the healing process needed to enable them to re-engage with learning. This conference explores this issue and suggests strategies to help all professionals who work with vulnerable children to help keep them in schools rather than excluding them.
A VIRTUAL ONE DAY CONFERENCE FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE FOLLOWING DELEGATES: –
Head Teachers and Senior Leaders
Head Teachers and staff of Virtual Schools
Teachers
Lead Members for Children’s Services
Directors of Children’s Services
Educational and Clinical Psychologists and other Child Therapists
Managers and Senior LA Officers engaged in work for Looked After Children (LAC)
University researchers
All adults interested in the education, safeguarding and welfare of vulnerable children.
Programme
10.00 – 10.10
Sylvia Duncan (Chair of IRCT)
Welcome and introductions
10.I0 – 10.40
Patrick Finegan ( Head of Looked After and Vulnerable Children Royal National Springboard Foundation)
“Why Permanently Exclude Children from Schools?”
Patrick will put forward a case for permanent exclusions to be no longer tolerated as they are unnecessarily cruel and have proven to be damaging to the life chances of vulnerable children. He will propose alternative strategies that are often ignored.
10.40 – 10.50 Q&A
10.50 – 11.10 Fallout Group Discussion.
11.10 – 11.40
Andrew Wright (Virtual School Head & Chairman of ARC)
“Looked After Children”
Andrew will discuss the practical problems facing schools and Virtual Schools as vulnerable children return to school. He will deal with the issue of avoiding exclusions by advocating for more understanding of attachment and trauma as set out by ARC (Attachment Research Community).
11.40 – 11.50 Q&A
11.50 – 12.10 Fallout Group Discussion
12.10-12.20 Comfort Break
12.20- 12.50
Janet Rose (Principal Norland College)
“Supporting vulnerable children through Emotion Coaching”
Janet will outline how Emotion Coaching might support vulnerable and traumatised children, particularly in relation to the impact of COVID on their lives.
12.50-13.00 Q&A
13.00-13.20 Fallout Group Discussion
13.20-13.40 Lunch
13.40-14.10
Kate Cairns (Training Director Kate Cairns Associates)
“Responding to Trauma-driven Behaviour: social exclusion or community resilience?”
Trauma-driven behaviour, in all its many manifestations, is socially challenging. It often leads to social exclusion. Yet such exclusion is damaging not just to the traumatised person but also to the community doing the excluding. Human communities are only genuinely resilient when they can operate from a base of compassionate reason, absorbing and transforming the disruption of trauma so that individuals can recover and the whole community can thrive.
14.10-14.20 Q&A
14.20-14.30 Fallout Group Discussion
14.30-15.00 Closing Plenary
Tickets
Members £30
Non-Members £60 (which includes the option of a one year membership of IRCT (normally £50)

Andrew is the Head Teacher of Dudley Virtual School for Children In Care supporting over 600 young people in their educational settings. He is also the Chair Of the Attachment Research Community and currently chairs the WMVS CiC Charity Foundation.
Andrew has over 40 years of teaching experience, including over 10 years as Head Teacher/Principal, in a range of secondary school across the West Midlands. A clear strategic thinker, Andrew has an expertise in school improvement within challenging settings, transforming the ethos of schools, the behaviour, attendance, and attainment of young people. He has been recognised by Ofsted as a leader who sets ‘a clear direction and vision focusing on raising aspirations and achievements.
Andrew has a keen understanding of developing an inclusive curriculum both within and across schools. He has influenced innovation in curriculum design through a range of strategic roles including chair of a collaborative network of schools, regional and national strategy groups and has directly integrated partners from the world of work into the learning experiences.
As the Head Teacher of the Virtual School, Andrew is committed to developing a sustainable system of support to enable all children to develop into independent and successful adults. He recognises the importance of strong partnerships across services, businesses and agencies and has developed a menu of support and opportunities in a ‘Learning Tool Kit’ for children in care.

Patrick Finegan is a qualified teacher with extensive experience in all phases of education. He was a highly successful Primary Head Teacher, taking two schools out of Ofsted categories, and was a School Adviser in the West Midlands as well as being a Lead Ofsted Inspector. Patrick is an experienced Virtual Head for Looked After Children (8 Local Authorities) and has been an adviser to three government ministers. He was an expert witness for the House of Commons Select Committee for Looked After Children.
Patrick was the Executive Head Teacher of Sandwell Transition Education Partnership Service (STEPS) which is a unique school for international newly arrived children. He was the treasurer of NAVSH and is a trustee of the Institute for the Recovery of Childhood Trauma (IRCT). Recently he was the Virtual Head of Wokingham and is currently the Head of Looked After and Vulnerable Children for the Royal National Children’s Springboard Foundation.

Kate Cairns is an author, speaker and trainer with an international reputation for her work around attachment, trauma and resilience, particularly in relation to vulnerable children and young people. She has been a social worker for forty years, and a trainer for twenty years
With her husband Brian and their three birth children, Kate provided a permanent family for twelve other children between 1975 and 1997. Thereafter, she worked as a trainer/consultant and writer for the British Association for Adoption and Fostering. In 2002 she published Attachment, Trauma and Resilience, which explored how these three key concepts could provide a structure for understanding ourselves and those with whom we work. The book became a bestseller for BAAF and has influenced practice around the world.
Over the past decade, Kate has concentrated on translating the insights of current neuroscientific research on brain development and function into accessible knowledge and practice skills for carers and practitioners working with children and young people, and for those who support them. She has developed online learning and vocational qualifications, and provided widely-acclaimed training and consultancy to both universal and specialist services across social work, child care, health and education.
Since conducting research for her first book, Surviving Paedophilia (now reissued as Circles of Harm), Kate has been convinced that working with vulnerable people has to be a collaborative exercise. She therefore feels it is a great privilege to be part of a group of associates who embody the shared understanding and vision, and the unity of purpose and action, that are the vital ingredients for supporting recovery and transformation after trauma.

Dr Janet Rose is a currently Principal of Norland College and a former Associate Professor and Reader in Education at Bath Spa University. She has a wealth of experience in supporting children and young people, including those who have experienced trauma. She led the national research project Attachment Aware Schools and Trauma Informed Practice, which comprised a comprehensive programme of support for children and young people affected by early attachment difficulties, trauma and neglect. She is also co-founder of Emotion Coaching UK which trains and researches the use of Emotion Coaching as a practical strategy to support the development of children’s and young people’s self-regulation, behaviour, wellbeing and resilience, including children and young people who have experience trauma. She has worked closely with numerous Virtual Schools and organisations who support Looked After Children and is currently a member of the Ministerial Care Leaver Summit. She is the author of numerous academic and professional publications related to attachment and trauma, the most recent of which is a book on Emotion Coaching. She is also an Associate for Kate Cairns Associates.
IRCT BEST PRACTICE FORUM ONLINE EVENT
YOU’RE INVITED TO THE IRCT BEST PRACTICE FORUM ONLINE EVENT!
Friday, 12th of March 2021 / 10:00 – 12:30 (GMT)
BEST PRACTICE FORUM WEBINAR: ATTACHMENT & TRAUMA INFORMED CARE
ORIT BADOUK EPSTEIN
‘The role fear plays in the severely traumatised client’
Orit will be discussing the core principles of Attachment Theory. In particular she will focus on Disorganised attachment and the way in which fear manifests itself in clients who have suffered childhood neglect and abuse.
Orit Badouk Epstein is a UKCP registered Attachment based Psychoanalytic psychotherapist, a trainee supervisor and a trainee therapist. She trained at the Bowlby Centre, London where she is the Editor of the journal “Attachment-New Directions in Psychotherapy and Relational Psychoanalysis”. She specialises in attachment theory and trauma and regularly lectures.
RICHARD CROSS
‘Creating Resiliency for Professionals when Working with Traumatised Children: harnessing understanding of attachment and trauma within organisational group and individual contexts’
Richard Cross is a UKCP registered psychotherapist and child psychotherapist. He has worked with children and young people since 1991 when he became interested in trauma, dissociation and attachment. This led him to collaboration with Dr Sandra Bloom to implement and pilot an trauma-informed approach called ‘The Sanctuary Model’ in the UK in 2004. He is Head of Assessment & Therapy at Five Rivers Child Care where he leads research and development on collaboration with AFC/UCL and supports a team of psychologists and psychotherapists developing innovative approaches such as ATIC (Attachment & Trauma Informed Care).
Resilience documentary online viewing with Q&A certificated webinar
Beverley Webb, founder of The Step Forward Recovery Practice invites fellow IRCT members to join a short presentation with a Q&A session afterwards with a guest panel of experts from most forms of trauma and beyond. They have a diverse range of working, learning and lived experience between them.
Resilience is a documentary that delves into the science of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and a new movement to treat and prevent toxic stress.
For the Q&A, Beverley will be joined by:
Carole Randell (Specialising in ME/CFS/Fibromyalgia recovery – Stress, Anxiety, Depression & Chronic Pain)
David Coulter (Therapy Lead and Senior Occupational Therapist The Complete Education Solution (TCES)
Chris Tuck (Author, Public Speaker, Activist. Founder and Director of SOB and consultant to the Independent Enquiry into Child Sexual Abuse)
Thomas Keaney (CEO and Schools’ Proprietor The Complete Education Solution (TCES)
Alethea Sterling-Chambers (Specialist Recovery Practitioner for Myalgia Encephalomyelitis (M.E.), Chronic Fatigue and Fibromyalgia)
Date: Tuesday 24 November 2020
Screening: 2pm, Q&A: 3-4.30pm
Click here to register for the event
IRCT Conference 2020 – Tickets available now!
We’re pleased to announce our 2020 online conference exploring the use of biopsychosocial models to promote recovery from trauma.
The event will be hosted online on Friday 6 November 2020 in partnership with ICTC.
- Hear about the latest neuro-developmental research
- Gain improved understanding of the importance of adopting a biopsychosocial model to promote trauma recovery
- Learn how to use a neurodevelopmental model
to inform therapeutic interventions - Learn about the benefits of a multi-disciplinary approach to trauma recovery
Click here for full event programme and speaker biographies.
Cost: £50 or £40 early bird booking by October 15th
Please book your place via eventbrite here