
Introduction to Using Internal Family Systems for Trauma (2HR)
$32.00
This training will provide mental health professionals with a beginning understanding of the Internal Family Systems (IFS), a therapeutic model developed by Dr. Richard Schwartz. IFS views the mind as a system of parts, often including younger, wounded versions of ourselves that hold trauma, unmet needs, and protective mechanisms. Participants will learn how to integrate Internal Family Systems into treatment, with a special focus on working with clients experiencing complex or acute trauma. This training will emphasize trauma-informed, compassionate, and strengths-based interventions, offering both theoretical foundations and experiential exercises. Participants will leave with practical tools to help clients foster self-compassion, reduce internal conflict, and build emotional resilience.
Upon completion of this training, participants will be able to:
- Describe the basic concepts of Internal Family Systems and how the mind is viewed as a system of “parts.”
- Explain how IFS can be applied when working with clients who have complex or acute trauma.
- Identify trauma-informed and strengths-based IFS strategies that support self-compassion and reduce internal conflict.
- Apply introductory IFS tools to help clients increase emotional resilience and improve trauma symptoms
Social workers completing this course receive 2 Clinical asynchronous continuing education credits.
For other board approvals, this course qualifies for 2 hours of Clinical continuing education training.
Course Instructor: Ashley Esry, LCSW, LCAS
Recording Date: 01/23/2026
NBCC ACEP # 7091, CE Training Workshops has been approved by NBCC as an Approved Continuing Education Provider, ACEP #7091. Programs that do not qualify are clearly identified. CE Training Workshops is solely responsible for all aspects of the programs. CE Training Workshops designates this continuing education activity for 3 continuing education hours.
CE Training Workshops, LLC, #1770, is approved as an ACE provider to offer social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program. Regulatory boards are the final authority on courses accepted for continuing education credit. ACE provider approval period: 08/02/2025 to 08/02/2028. Social workers completing this course receive 3 Clinical continuing education credits.

Ashley is a natural leader, published researcher, and compassionate clinician with over five years’ experience in the social work field, specializing in mental health and substance use. MSW graduate and currently pursuing licensure for clinical social work and clinical addiction specialist. She graduated from Lesley University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, obtaining a B.S. in Counseling and a minor in Expressive Arts Therapy. In her time there, she was involved in a research study on social fear and learning and published in the Journal of Education and Training Studies in April of 2014. After working in the substance abuse field at the inpatient, residential, and outpatient level, she focused her efforts on mental health and connecting people with quality services as a community liaison for two years. She currently works as a residential therapist at UNC Horizons, working with pregnant women and mothers in early substance use recovery.
Introduction
This course provides an introduction to Internal Family Systems (IFS) and its application in trauma treatment. Participants will explore the foundational principles of IFS, including the concept of the mind as a system of parts, and examine how this framework supports trauma-informed and strengths-based clinical practice. Emphasis is placed on practical integration of IFS strategies into therapy sessions with clients experiencing complex or acute trauma.
Objective I: Foundations of Internal Family Systems
Participants will review the origins of IFS and its connection to General Systems Theory. The course explores the core assumption that the mind is made up of interconnected parts that function within a larger internal system. Emphasis is placed on understanding how parts interact and influence one another.
Objective II: Understanding Parts and the Internal System
Participants will examine how IFS conceptualizes the mind as a system of parts, each with a role and purpose. The course introduces the functions of different parts within the internal system and how these roles develop, particularly in response to trauma.
Objective III: IFS and Trauma
This section focuses on how trauma impacts the internal system. Participants will explore how protective parts develop in response to complex and acute trauma and how IFS provides a non-pathologizing, strengths-based framework for working with trauma survivors.
Objective IV: Trauma-Informed and Strengths-Based IFS Strategies
Participants will identify practical, trauma-informed IFS strategies to support client healing. The course highlights methods for safely engaging parts, increasing internal awareness, and fostering regulation within sessions.
Objective V: Integrating IFS into Clinical Practice
Participants will learn introductory tools for integrating IFS into therapy sessions. This section provides guidance on how to begin working with parts in a structured, ethical, and supportive manner.
Summary
The course concludes with a review of core IFS concepts, trauma applications, and practical strategies for implementation in clinical settings. Participants will leave with foundational knowledge and tools to begin incorporating IFS into their trauma work.


