Dyadic Developmental Practice (DDP): Level 1
Multiday
Hannah Sun-Reid
START DATE
Tuesday, 14 Oct 2025
END DATE
Friday, 17 Oct 2025
Time
9:00am - 4:00pm
Venue
The Parnell Hotel & Conference Centre
10/20 Gladstone Road
Auckland 1052
Inclusions:
Lunch & Tea Break Catering
Workshop Notes
Certificate
Bookshop at Seminar
$1985.00
incl GSTDyadic Developmental Psychotherapy (DDP) was created by US clinical Psychologist Dan Hughes as an intervention model for families with adopted or fostered children who had experienced neglect and abuse in their birth families & suffered from significant developmental trauma. DDP is based on and brings together attachment theory, what we understand about developmental trauma, the neurobiology of trauma, attachment and caregiving, intersubjectivity theory and child development. It focuses on facilitating the child’s readiness & ability to establish a secure attachment with their caregivers and is family-based. It is called Dyadic Developmental Practice to focus attention on the importance of reciprocity in parenting, caregiving and therapy, but also to draw attention to the fact that abuse, neglect and trauma can seriously impact on the child’s developmental age and stage.
It is an approach that:
- Integrates current research in the areas of trauma neurobiology, early child development & attachment theory, to produce a therapeutic & parenting approach that assists professionals to understand & support children with trauma-attachment problems, and their families.
- Communicates Playfulness, Acceptance, Curiosity & Empathy (PACE) in order to help the child regulate their feelings of fear, shame or anger associated with past experiences, and to create together a new autobiographical narrative to integrate into their life story.
- Recognises and guides the vital roles which adoptive parents, foster carers and residential workers play in the recovery of traumatised, attachment-resistant children.
- Provides a set of practice principles that enrich parenting and inform the professional networks that support the child outside of the home e.g. in residential settings and at school.
By the end of this course participants will understand:
- The impact of secure developmental attachment on neurological, affective, cognitive, and behavioural development.
- How developmental trauma (abuse and neglect) create insecure and disorganised attachment patterns which impede normal development.
- Principles of psychotherapy, effective communication and parenting that facilitate the development of attachment security.
- Specific strategies of parenting and communication that facilitate the development of a secure attachment and help children integrate past trauma and abusive experiences.
- How the caregiver’s attachment history and attachment patterns can be important factors when providing care for children who have experienced developmental trauma.
This training will be of interest to therapists and other professionals whose work involves supporting families, parents and caregivers (adoptive parents, foster parents, kinship carers or residential carers), whose children have experienced developmental trauma and show attachment and relationship difficulties with their caregivers. DDP principles and interventions will be presented via lecture format, formal discussion, case examples, videotape of therapy sessions, role-play, and hand-outs. This Level One (Introductory) 28-hour (4-day) intensive training course is a pre-requisite to becoming a certified DDP practitioner and is strictly limited to only 24 participants. We expect it will be fully subscribed and encourage you to register early to avoid disappointment.
Hannah Sun-Reid is a certified DDP practitioner, consultant and trainer. She is also certified or trained in Theraplay, Trauma Therapy, Sandtray Worldplay, EMDR and TIR. Hannah has more than 25 years experience working with children and families who experience life challenges including developmental and emotional difficulties, trauma and loss. Hannah provides supervision and consultation to therapists and organisations, and conducts workshops internationally. Hannah is also the author of children’s books and therapeutic games. Hannah lives and works in Ontario, Canada.
""This DDP Level 1 training was interactive & informational. All of it was relevant & beneficial for my practice. It was incredibly well organised!""
Social Worker
""I thoroughly enjoyed this Level 1 training with Hannah, I learnt heaps and really enjoyed the interactions and the inclusiveness of how it was run.""