Practicum Placements: Dr. Perna has been training psychology interns, social work interns, and psychiatric residents for years. He began supervising trainees at McLean Hospital, which is Harvard Medical School's largest psychiatric teaching site-located in Belmont, MA. At CCS, he has partnered co-supervisors Caitlyn Rinaldi, LICSW and Kaeley Majewski, PsyD, in developing a multifaceted training program that covers a wide range of clinical interventions. Please take a look each of their training profiles as supervisors as well as our expectations related to potential trainees: |
Candidate Expectations: Competitive trainees typically have prior experience in school settings, inpatient psychiatry placements, residential programs, court clinics, and/or college counseling centers. Experience in writing comprehensive testing reports/clinical summaries is essential and writing samples are reviewed and discussed within the interview process. Critical thinking skills are evaluated throughout the interview process based on a clinical case presentation. We encourage trainees to present their case using a powerpoint presentation, however, a handout is acceptable. We look for clarity of thought and a firm grasp of all clinical facts in presentations as well as the integration of evidence-based interventions. Warmth, rapport, and interpersonal sensitivity are all critical components to a successful candidate interview.
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"We felt that we used to talk about ourselves too much in our interviews-so we created this training page-now we spend more time focusing on each candidate and learning about their past training experiences and expectations for their career." |
Caitlyn Rinaldi, LICSW
Licensed Clinical Social Worker Social Work Systems Supervisor Approach: My approach to training is based on my background in systems-centered interventions that include family therapy, collateral agency coordination, and the complete integration of treatment throughout the patient's outpatient treatment team. My direct supervision of trainees focuses on a process recording approach to supervision (Click Link). I ask trainees to pick one of their more challenging clients and record every detail of their weekly sessions. The goal of supervision is to teach trainees how to attend to relevant clinical details, note the chronological role-out of clinical/relational information throughout the session, and connect the session's material to prior sessions or historical information that was discussed at intake. I apply a variety of treatment models to this process, including DBT-informed treatment, CBT interventions, family-systems work, and community-based systems processes. I also work closely with trainees to help them understand how they can integrate Copernican's cloud-based clinical documentation software and group collaboration software into their practices. |
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I tell all of our trainees, "Sometimes we worry, but we never worry alone." We rely on our team for support and direction every day. . .
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Multi-Modality TreatmentTrainees also see group participants in individual/family therapy treatments and in their roles as Clinical Tutors (click). We discuss how to harvest relevant clinical information via a thorough, developmentally informed intake and a review of prior testing. This information is integrated into a comprehensive treatment plan that coordinates all aspects of the patient's treatment.
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Clinical WritingTrainees produce written reports related to typical clinical interactions (Treatment plans, Weekly clinical notes) in addition to psychological testing, single case-agreements, IEP development, developmentally specific educational reports, criminal court litigation documentation, behavioral plans, documents related to educational litigation, and single case agreements requests filed with insurance companies, Completion of Department of Developmental Services (DDS) and Department of Mental Health Services (DMH) referrals with a schedule of attached supporting documentation is also standard.
Clinical Tutoring: Please refer to the Clinical Tutoring Page (click) in order to understand how learning and clinical interventions are combined to address the unique needs of our adolescent and college transition populations. Many of our trainees learn a tremendous amount in these sessions. Specifically, how expressive writing impacts a patient's stress levels and learning progress in their school placements. |
TestingTrainees also complete customized testing batteries that are designed to clinically track onto our Anger Management Treatment Program's curriculum. Batteries may include:
School meetings typically include a review of school-based reports including:
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