

Attachment and Screens: The intersection of attachment, technology, and well-being
Webinar
Dr Emma Woodward
DATE
Wednesday, 26 Nov 2025
Time
9:00am - 3:00pm
Venue
Live Webinar
Inclusions:
Workshop Notes
Certificate
$280.00
incl GSTPlease note: the date and time mentioned above is New Zealand time. If you wish to join us from outside of NZ, please check the time difference for your area.
Note: Online content from Compass Seminars NZ is not available to participants residing in Australia.
Compass Seminars is thrilled to announce this live webinar with the sought after Child, Educational and Community Psychologist and presenter Dr. Emma Woodward.
Digital devices have become central to young people’s lives, but what happens when they become attachment objects for those who have already experienced trauma, loss, and disrupted caregiving?
Join Dr Emma Woodward, child psychologist, researcher, and international speaker, for an engaging seminar grounded in her influential paper ‘Screens and Looked-After Teens’ . Drawing on attachment theory and real- world practice, Dr Woodward explores how screens both soothe and strain the lives of vulnerable young people who have had limited opportunities for secure attachment.
This interactive workshop will help you:
• Learn how trauma and insecure attachment styles shape screen use in vulnerable youth
• Recognise both the risks (false self, epistemic mistrust, over-reliance) and opportunities (connection, identity exploration) of screens
• Explore how devices can act as “modern transitional objects” for young people with disrupted attachment histories
• Learn trauma-responsive strategies for supporting carers, educators, and social workers in guiding healthy digital use
• Practice applying strategies that shift focus from reducing screen time to increasing opportunities for safe, relational connection
• Co-create a practical toolkit tailored to your own role and setting
Who would benefit from attending:
Social workers, carers, youth workers, educators, psychologists, and professionals supporting vulnerable young people in New Zealand.
Dr. Emma Woodward is a Child, Educational and Community Psychologist. She completed her Doctorate in Child, Community and Educational Psychology at the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust and an Undergraduate degree in Experimental Psychology from the University of Sussex. Now based in Auckland, Emma established the “Child Psychology Service” (a national child psychology practice network) and is a sought after presenter on a range of topics relating to positive psychology. Emma is also a regular guest on network television providing expert comment on issues to do with child and adolescent wellbeing.