Transform your skills in building clients’ motivation to gaining employment.
This training is brought to you by the Mayors Taskforce for Jobs – Supporting Mayors to strive for zero youth unemployment.
Motivational Interviewing is a collaborative, goal-oriented style of communication with particular attention to the language of change. It is designed to strengthen personal motivation for, and commitment to, a specific goal, by eliciting and exploring the person’s own reasons for change within an atmosphere of acceptance and compassion.
When: Monday, 18 May 2025, 9. am – 3.30 pm
Where: Gallagher Academy of Performing Arts, Knighton Road,
University of Waikato, Hamilton
For more information and to register, please contact Tammie Metcalfe – 021 915 900 / [email protected]
- Understand the fundamental spirit and processes of MI
- Directly experience the MI approach and contrast it with others
- Be acquainted with relevant evidence of efficacy
- Learn practical guidelines for exchanging information/giving advice “in the spirit of MI”
- Learn a MI strategy for assessing and building motivation
- Have direct practice in, and experience of, these particular applications
Who should attend - anyone who works to support youth enter into employment including case workers, social workers, counsellors, teachers, youth workers, community mental health nurses, school counsellors, school leadership.
Eileen Britt is a member of the Motivational Interviewing Network of Trainers, an international collective of MI trainers (MINT) who promote excellence in the training, research, practice and implementation of Motivational Interviewing (MI). Eileen is also a MINT Certified MI Trainer.
Based in Christchurch, where she is a Professor in the School of Psychology, Speech and Hearing at the University of Canterbury (UC), she has worked as a Clinical Psychologist in mental health, health, criminal justice and research settings.
In her role at UC, Eileen teaches MI to postgraduate clinical psychology students, and psychiatric registrars, and in the past has also taught dietetic and health science students. She conducts research on MI, including: its use with different populations (e.g., youth and adults with diabetes); as a pre-treatment engagement intervention (e.g., for youth with mental health disorders or perpetrators of intimate partner violence); in different settings (e.g., sports coaching and Work and Income); it's mechanisms of change; and the training of MI. Eileen is also one of the authors of Takitaki Mai: A guide to Motivational Interviewing for Māori practitioners.
In addition, Eileen provides MI training (introductory to advanced), supervision and coaching, and coding training for a range of NGO services, governmental and professional organisations. In 2022 Eileen was the recipient of a National teaching award - Te Whatu Kairangi