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The FLAFCC encourages intellectual discussion in areas that may not be well-defined in terms of research and practice. As such, articles published may reflect new or innovative considerations and approaches to practice. Therefore, articles published by FLAFCC are the opinions of the authors/contributors and should not be considered the official stance of FLAFCC on any one topic.

AFCC – Special Webinar Series on Parent-Child Contact Problems (Online)

Categories: Announcements, News, Parenting,

The Family Court Review April 2020 Special Issue on Parent Child Contact Problems: Concepts, Controversies, & Conundrums is now available online! Please note that because of interruptions to print operations at Wiley, the publisher of Family Court Review, distribution of the hard copy of this issue will be delayed.

Due to the cancellation of the AFCC 57th Annual Conference, a Special Webinar Series on Parent-Child Contact Problems will be presented from May 12- July 7, 2020.

What you should know:

  • There are sixteen webinars in the series, scheduled from May 12th – July 7th. Participants must register for each webinar individually. View the full schedule and make plans to attend! View AFCC Webinar Schedule
  • Registration is limited to 500 attendees for each webinar, so sign up early! You can register now on the AFCC website.
  • Each webinar is 90 minutes long and is eligible for up to 1.5 hours of continuing education for psychologists.*
  • The registration fee includes a certificate of attendance. You must attend the live webinar to receive a certificate of attendance. Members: $15 | Non-members: $50
  • Members who attend all sixteen webinars could receive 24 hours of continuing education credit for just $240, $560 less than the non-member price! Join AFCC to save on continuing education. JOIN AFCC
  • Recorded webinars will be available online for AFCC members.
  • This webinar series is sponsored by OurFamilyWizard.com

Sign Up – AFCC Webinars

* AFCC is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. AFCC maintains responsibility for the program and its content. Lawyers, judges, social workers, counselors, and other professionals seeking continuing education credits may use the AFCC Certificate of Attendance to verify attendance when applying to their state, provincial, or other regulatory or licensing agency.

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