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  • Product not yet rated Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live Web Event on 11/12/2026 at 5:30 PM (EST)

    Lead with confidence when the path forward isn’t clear. Explore how academic leaders can navigate competing demands, ethical tensions, and incomplete information with transparency and compassion. You’ll gain practical decision‑making frameworks and strategies to sustain faculty morale, productivity, and trust, even when no perfect solution exists.

    Thursday, November 12, 2026
    5:30 PM – 7:00 PM ET
    .15 ASHA CEUs

    Academic leadership increasingly requires navigating uncertainty, external pressure, and competing demands with incomplete information. This session focuses on the emotional and ethical complexity of leadership when choices have tradeoffs and unintended consequences. Participants will explore frameworks for decision‑making under uncertainty, strategies for sustaining faculty productivity and morale, and ways to lead with transparency, steadiness, and compassion when no perfect answers exist.

    Learning Objectives

    - Analyze leadership challenges arising from uncertainty, competing demands, and institutional pressure.

    - Apply ethical, transparent decision‑making frameworks when outcomes are unclear.

    - Lead with steadiness and compassion while sustaining momentum and acknowledging the emotional labor of leadership.

    Time Ordered Agenda
    5:30 - 5:40 PM ET Welcome, Framing, and Objectives
    5:40 - 6:00 PM ET  Uncertainty in CSD Leadership
    6:00 – 6:15 PM ET  Decision-Making Frameworks for Imperfect Choices
    6:15 - 6:30 PM ET Leading Through the Human Side of Decisions
    6:30 - 6:45 PM ET Sustaining Productivity and Momentum
    6:45 - 7:00 PM ET Leading with Steadiness, Compassion, and Integrity and Q/A

    For questions about this webinar, please contact us at admin@capcsd.org. Once registered, you will receive a confirmation e-mail with a link to log in.

    If you can't attend the live webinar, register now and receive a recording of the webinar to view at your convenience. Please note that only registrants who attend the live webinar are eligible for ASHA CEUs.

    Jennifer P. Taylor, AuD, CCC-A

    Jennifer P. Taylor, AuD, CCC-A

    University of Memphis

    Jennifer P. Taylor, AuD, CCC-A, is Associate Dean of Academic Programs and a Clinical Professor in the School of Communication Sciences and Disorders at the University of Memphis, where she has served since 2003. A Past President of the Council of Academic Programs in Communication Sciences and Disorders (CAPCSD), she is committed to advancing academic and clinical education. She also co-advises the university’s NSSLHA chapter and volunteers extensively in both community and professional settings. Her expertise includes diagnostic audiology, pediatric hearing assessment, and aural rehabilitation across the lifespan, with teaching interests centered on core clinical concepts.

    Disclosures

    Financial: University of Memphis salary and Speaking honorarium with CAPCSD
    Non-Financial: None

    Jennifer M. Simpson, AuD CCC-A

    Jennifer M. Simpson, AuD CCC-A

    Central Michigan University

    Jennifer Simpson is Dean of The Herbert H. and Grace A. Dow College of Health Professions at Central Michigan University.   

    Disclosures

    Financial: Central Michigan University salary and speaking honorarium with CAPCSD
    Non-Financial: She served as CAPCSD President in 2023-2024 and Past President in 2024-2025

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    This course is designed with a participation requirement that ensures meaningful engagement and learning. Participants must be present for the entire 90-minute webinar to receive the assessment. The assessment is a key component in obtaining both their certificate of completion and ASHA CEUs. In addition to standard assessments of the speaker's effectiveness and the overall content quality, participants are challenged to demonstrate practical application of the knowledge gained. The required question prompts participants to articulate and list two specific action items they plan to implement. This promotes critical thinking about how to apply new information in their professional practice with a forward-thinking response.

  • Product not yet rated Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live Web Event on 10/08/2026 at 5:30 PM (EDT)

    Discover how leadership takes shape in the moments that matter most, your everyday interactions. This session will explore practical, compassionate strategies for mentoring, delivering meaningful feedback, and navigating difficult conversations while promoting growth and accountability. You’ll leave with actionable frameworks to support autonomy, foster psychological safety, and intentionally cultivate a strong, thriving program culture.

    Thursday, October 8, 2026
    5:30 PM – 7:00 PM ET
    .15 ASHA CEUs

    Leadership is less about formal authority and more about how we grow people through everyday interactions. This session explores compassionate leadership, mentoring as a leadership act, and practical frameworks for feedback and difficult conversations. Participants will examine how culture is shaped and how leaders can intentionally develop leadership capacity in faculty, staff, and students.

    Learning Objectives

    - Identify leadership practices that promote autonomy, professional growth, and shared responsibility.

    - Use structured frameworks for feedback and difficult conversations that support accountability and psychological safety.

    - Analyze how routine leadership behaviors shape culture, team functioning, and professional identity within CSD programs.

    Time Ordered Agenda 

    5:30 - 5:40 PM ET Welcome, Framing, and Objectives
    5:40 - 5:55 PM ET  Everyday Influence
    5:55 – 6:15 PM ET  Autonomy, Growth, Shared Responsibility
    6:15 - 6:35 PM ET Feedback & Difficult Conversations
    6:35 - 6:50 PM ET What Leaders Shape Every Day
    6:50 - 7:00 PM ET Commitment to Program/Self & Q/A

    For questions about this webinar, please contact us at admin@capcsd.org. Once registered, you will receive a confirmation e-mail with a link to log in.

    If you can't attend the live webinar, register now and receive a recording of the webinar to view at your convenience. Please note that only registrants who attend the live webinar are eligible for ASHA CEUs.

    Jennifer P. Taylor, AuD, CCC-A

    Jennifer P. Taylor, AuD, CCC-A

    University of Memphis

    Jennifer P. Taylor, AuD, CCC-A, is Associate Dean of Academic Programs and a Clinical Professor in the School of Communication Sciences and Disorders at the University of Memphis, where she has served since 2003. A Past President of the Council of Academic Programs in Communication Sciences and Disorders (CAPCSD), she is committed to advancing academic and clinical education. She also co-advises the university’s NSSLHA chapter and volunteers extensively in both community and professional settings. Her expertise includes diagnostic audiology, pediatric hearing assessment, and aural rehabilitation across the lifespan, with teaching interests centered on core clinical concepts.

    Disclosures

    Financial: University of Memphis salary and Speaking honorarium with CAPCSD
    Non-Financial: None

    Jennifer M. Simpson, AuD CCC-A

    Jennifer M. Simpson, AuD CCC-A

    Central Michigan University

    Jennifer Simpson is Dean of The Herbert H. and Grace A. Dow College of Health Professions at Central Michigan University.   

    Disclosures

    Financial: Central Michigan University salary and speaking honorarium with CAPCSD
    Non-Financial: She served as CAPCSD President in 2023-2024 and Past President in 2024-2025

    image

    This course is designed with a participation requirement that ensures meaningful engagement and learning. Participants must be present for the entire 90-minute webinar to receive the assessment. The assessment is a key component in obtaining both their certificate of completion and ASHA CEUs. In addition to standard assessments of the speaker's effectiveness and the overall content quality, participants are challenged to demonstrate practical application of the knowledge gained. The required question prompts participants to articulate and list two specific action items they plan to implement. This promotes critical thinking about how to apply new information in their professional practice with a forward-thinking response.

  • Product not yet rated Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live Web Event on 10/06/2026 at 6:00 PM (EDT)

    CSD faculty will want to attend this webinar to learn practical, ready-to-use strategies for integrating SDOH into their teaching and clinical training. Participants will leave with actionable ideas to enhance student learning and better prepare future clinicians for real-world, patient-centered care.

    Tuesday, October 6, 2026
    6:00 PM – 7:30 PM ET
    .15 ASHA CEUs

    This presentation focuses on practical methods for integrating social determinants of health (SDOH) and public health evidence into didactic and clinical training within Communication Sciences and Disorders (CSD) programs. Presenters will highlight applied strategies and simulation, including the use of community-based learning, case-based instruction, and population-informed data, to strengthen student understanding of SDOH. Attendees will engage in discussion on leveraging program strengths to translate knowledge of SDOH into meaningful clinical practices, ultimately improving student awareness of populations affected by upstream health factors. 


    Learning Objectives

    - Describe active learning activities to engage CSD students in clinical decision making within a SDOH framework.

    - Apply SDOH concepts to case-based and data-driven clinical training scenarios within CSD programs.

    - Evaluate program strengths and design strategies (e.g., community-based learning, population-informed instruction) to integrate SDOH into clinical education and practice.


    Time Ordered Agenda
     

    6:00 - 6:05 PM ET Introductions and Disclosures
    6:05 - 6:25 PM ET Applied strategies: Case-based instruction and population-informed data
    6:25 - 6:45 PM ET Applied strategies: Community-based learning models
    6:45 - 7:05 PM ET Aligning strategies with program strengths and learning objectives
    7:05 – 7:20 PM ET Interactive discussion: translating SDOH into clinical teaching and practice
    7:20 - 7:30 PM ET Questions and Wrap-up

    For questions about this webinar, please contact us at admin@capcsd.org. Once registered, you will receive a confirmation e-mail with a link to log in.

    If you can't attend the live webinar, register now and receive a recording of the webinar to view at your convenience. Please note that only registrants who attend the live webinar are eligible for ASHA CEUs.

    Teresa Anthony, PhD, MHA, MA, CCC-SLP

    Teresa Anthony, PhD, MHA, MA, CCC-SLP

    University of South Florida

    Teresa Irene Anthony, PhD, is a Courtesy/Collaborative Assistant Professor in CSD and Public Health at the University of South Florida with expertise at the intersection of public health and CSD. Trained as a speech-language pathologist and health services researcher, she combines clinical, academic, and healthcare leadership experience to advance health equity. Her research and teaching emphasize integrating social determinants of health into CSD education and practice, with a focus on hearing health, access to care, and outcomes across the lifespan. Dr. Anthony also serves as Director of Clinical Automation and Innovation for a major healthcare organization, where she develops evidence-based solutions to improve care delivery and patient experiences.

    Disclosures

    Financial: Teresa is an employee of the University of South Florida and will be receiving an honorarium for this webinar from CAPCSD.
    Non-Financial: None

    Leslie C. Lopez, PhD, CCC-SLP, BCS-CL, CHES, PNAP

    Leslie C. Lopez, PhD, CCC-SLP, BCS-CL, CHES, PNAP

    Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans

    Leslie C. Lopez, PhD, CCC-SLP, BCS-CL, CHES, PNAP is a speech-language pathologist (SLP) with expertise in communication health at the population level. She serves as an Associate Professor and Program Director for the Speech-Language Pathology program in the Department of Communication Disorders at LSU Health (LSUHSC), New Orleans.

    Disclosures

    Financial: Leslie is a full-time, salaried faculty member at LSU Health, New Orleans and Program director of a Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) grant. Leslie will be receiving an honorarium for this webinar from CAPCSD.
    Non-Financial: None

    image

    This course is designed with a participation requirement that ensures meaningful engagement and learning. Participants must be present for the entire 90-minute webinar to receive the assessment. The assessment is a key component in obtaining both their certificate of completion and ASHA CEUs. In addition to standard assessments of the speaker's effectiveness and the overall content quality, participants are challenged to demonstrate practical application of the knowledge gained. The required question prompts participants to articulate and list two specific action items they plan to implement. This promotes critical thinking about how to apply new information in their professional practice with a forward-thinking response.

  • Product not yet rated Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live Web Event on 09/29/2026 at 6:00 PM (EDT)

    CSD faculty should attend this webinar to explore a practical framework for integrating social determinants of health (SDOH) into existing curricula without overhauling their programs. Participants will learn how to align instruction with Bloom’s Taxonomy to move students from awareness of social drivers of health to higher-level clinical reasoning and application.

    Tuesday, September 29, 2026
    6:00 PM – 7:30 PM ET
    .15 ASHA CEUs

    Social determinants of health (SDOH) are non-medical upstream and downstream factors that shape overall health, including communication health and well-being. While public health evidence offers valuable insight into these influences, training future Audiologists (AuDs) and Speech-Language Pathologists (SLPs) as epidemiologists or public health specialists is not practical. Instead, CSD programs can prioritize developing clinicians’ awareness and responsiveness to SDOH. This presentation introduces a comprehensive framework for embedding SDOH into academic and clinical training, intentionally aligned with Bloom’s Taxonomy to support progressive learning. The framework scaffolds student development from foundational knowledge (remembering and understanding SDOH concepts), to application and analysis through case-based learning and clinical decision-making, and ultimately to evaluation and creation via reflective practice and community-engaged experiences. 

    Learning Objectives

    - Describe SDOH concepts and how to align these concepts with current SLPs and AuDs competencies.

    - Identify public health evidence that could inform CSD practices and describe how to integrate such evidence into data-driven clinical decision making and training in CSD.

    - Discuss mechanisms to enhance student understanding of SDOH by leveraging program strengths.


    Time Ordered Agenda

    6:00 - 6:05 PM ET Introductions and Disclosures
    6:05 - 6:30 PM ET Defining SDOH Concepts and Relevance to Populations We Serve
    6:30 - 6:45 PM ET SDOH Competencies in CSD
    6:45 - 7:20 PM ET Integration into Didactic Coursework and Clinical Training
    7:20 - 7:30 PM ET Questions and Wrap-up

    For questions about this webinar, please contact us at admin@capcsd.org. Once registered, you will receive a confirmation e-mail with a link to log in.

    If you can't attend the live webinar, register now and receive a recording of the webinar to view at your convenience. Please note that only registrants who attend the live webinar are eligible for ASHA CEUs.

    Teresa Anthony, PhD, MHA, MA, CCC-SLP

    Teresa Anthony, PhD, MHA, MA, CCC-SLP

    University of South Florida

    Teresa Irene Anthony, PhD, is a Courtesy/Collaborative Assistant Professor in CSD and Public Health at the University of South Florida with expertise at the intersection of public health and CSD. Trained as a speech-language pathologist and health services researcher, she combines clinical, academic, and healthcare leadership experience to advance health equity. Her research and teaching emphasize integrating social determinants of health into CSD education and practice, with a focus on hearing health, access to care, and outcomes across the lifespan. Dr. Anthony also serves as Director of Clinical Automation and Innovation for a major healthcare organization, where she develops evidence-based solutions to improve care delivery and patient experiences.

    Disclosures

    Financial: Teresa is an employee of the University of South Florida and will be receiving an honorarium for this webinar from CAPCSD.
    Non-Financial: None

    Leslie C. Lopez, PhD, CCC-SLP, BCS-CL, CHES, PNAP

    Leslie C. Lopez, PhD, CCC-SLP, BCS-CL, CHES, PNAP

    Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans

    Leslie C. Lopez, PhD, CCC-SLP, BCS-CL, CHES, PNAP is a speech-language pathologist (SLP) with expertise in communication health at the population level. She serves as an Associate Professor and Program Director for the Speech-Language Pathology program in the Department of Communication Disorders at LSU Health (LSUHSC), New Orleans.

    Disclosures

    Financial: Leslie is a full-time, salaried faculty member at LSU Health, New Orleans and Program director of a Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) grant. Leslie will be receiving an honorarium for this webinar from CAPCSD.
    Non-Financial: None

    image

    This course is designed with a participation requirement that ensures meaningful engagement and learning. Participants must be present for the entire 90-minute webinar to receive the assessment. The assessment is a key component in obtaining both their certificate of completion and ASHA CEUs. In addition to standard assessments of the speaker's effectiveness and the overall content quality, participants are challenged to demonstrate practical application of the knowledge gained. The required question prompts participants to articulate and list two specific action items they plan to implement. This promotes critical thinking about how to apply new information in their professional practice with a forward-thinking response.

  • Product not yet rated Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live Web Event on 09/10/2026 at 5:30 PM (EDT)

    Academic leaders deserve tools that make leadership feel intentional and not reactive. In this session, you’ll learn how to protect your time and energy while strengthening trust and communication across your teams. Join us to build leadership habits that last.

    Thursday, September 10, 2026
    5:30 PM – 7:00 PM ET
    .15 ASHA CEUs

    Academic leaders often feel trapped in reactive mode, responding to inboxes, meetings, and competing priorities without time to think. This session reframes intentional use of time, attention, and communication as foundational leadership skills. Participants will learn how to choose communication formats more intentionally, and how to model boundaries that protect energy while strengthening trust and clarity. 

    Learning Objectives

    - Implement evidence informed strategies for setting and communicating boundaries that support leadership and professional well being.

    - Apply clear criteria to choose communication formats (email, meetings, asynchronous tools) that improve efficiency and shared understanding.

    - Demonstrate healthy communication norms and workload management within academic, clinical, and administrative teams.

    Time Ordered Agenda

    5:30 - 5:40 PM ET Welcome and session overview
    5:40 - 5:55 PM ET Time, Attention, Communication
    5:55 – 6:15 PM ET Choosing Communication Pathways that Work
    6:15 - 6:35 PM ET Setting Boundaries as a Leader
    6:35 - 6:50 PM ET Setting Healthy Team Norms
    6:50 - 7:00 PM ET Action Items & Q/A

    For questions about this webinar, please contact us at admin@capcsd.org. Once registered, you will receive a confirmation e-mail with a link to log in.

    If you can't attend the live webinar, register now and receive a recording of the webinar to view at your convenience. Please note that only registrants who attend the live webinar are eligible for ASHA CEUs.

    Jennifer P. Taylor, AuD, CCC-A

    Jennifer P. Taylor, AuD, CCC-A

    University of Memphis

    Jennifer P. Taylor, AuD, CCC-A, is Associate Dean of Academic Programs and a Clinical Professor in the School of Communication Sciences and Disorders at the University of Memphis, where she has served since 2003. A Past President of the Council of Academic Programs in Communication Sciences and Disorders (CAPCSD), she is committed to advancing academic and clinical education. She also co-advises the university’s NSSLHA chapter and volunteers extensively in both community and professional settings. Her expertise includes diagnostic audiology, pediatric hearing assessment, and aural rehabilitation across the lifespan, with teaching interests centered on core clinical concepts.

    Disclosures

    Financial: University of Memphis salary and Speaking honorarium with CAPCSD
    Non-Financial: None

    Mark DeRuiter, MBA, PhD, CCC-A/SLP

    Mark DeRuiter, MBA, PhD, CCC-A/SLP

    University of Pittsburgh

    Mark DeRuiter, MBA, PhD, CCC-A/SLP, is Professor and Vice Chair for Academic Affairs in the Department of Communication Science and Disorders at the University of Pittsburgh. A distinguished leader in the discipline, Dr. DeRuiter brings a rare combination of clinical, academic, and administrative expertise spanning both audiology and speech-language pathology. He has a distinguished record of service and leadership to the profession, including significant contributions to the Council of Academic Programs in Communication Sciences and Disorders (CAPCSD) and the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA). His award-winning commitment to advancing education and leadership in communication sciences and disorders continues to shape the field.

    Disclosures

    Financial: Mark is a paid employee of the University of Minnesota. He receives royalties from Plural Publishing and Taylor and Francis Group. He will be receiving an honorarium for this webinar.
    Non-Financial: Mark is a member of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association and has a service role in ASHA. He is also a member of the American Academy of Audiology. Mark has had a long history of service to CAPCSD.

    image

    This course is designed with a participation requirement that ensures meaningful engagement and learning. Participants must be present for the entire 90-minute webinar to receive the assessment. The assessment is a key component in obtaining both their certificate of completion and ASHA CEUs. In addition to standard assessments of the speaker's effectiveness and the overall content quality, participants are challenged to demonstrate practical application of the knowledge gained. The required question prompts participants to articulate and list two specific action items they plan to implement. This promotes critical thinking about how to apply new information in their professional practice with a forward-thinking response.

  • Product not yet rated Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live Web Event on 08/12/2026 at 4:00 PM (EDT)

    Often students identify an academic and clinical gap in their educational programs. This webinar will help programs identify how to best support students in interprofessional practice skill development in a clinical experience.

    Wednesday, August 12, 2026
    4:00 PM - 5:00 PM ET
    .1 ASHA CEUs

    In clinical practice professionals are expected to collaborate with a variety of related service professionals, or interprofessional practice (IPP). Students might receive some instruction on such interactions via interprofessional education (IPE), but may fail to identify opportunities for putting their knowledge of interprofessional issues into practice in clinical settings. This webinar will provide attendees with strategies for bridging this "academic-clinical divide" to bring students' knowledge of interprofessional interactions into their clinical experiences. 

    Learning Objectives

    - Identify how their educational program provides students with interprofessional education (IPE) experiences.

    - Develop two ways to bridge students' learning from program IPE experiences to clinical experiences.

    - Identify one way to measure students' perceptions of IPE during their clinical experience.

    Time Ordered Agenda

    4:00 - 4:10 PM ET Introduction
    4:10 - 4:20 PM ET Interprofessional education (IPE) in SLP preparation programs
    4:20 - 4:30 PM ET Interprofessional practice (IPP) and IPP frameworks
    4:30 - 4:50 PM ET Scaffolding student's learning from IPE to IPP
    4:50 - 5:00 PM ET Q&A

    For questions about this webinar, please contact us at admin@capcsd.org. Once registered, you will receive a confirmation e-mail with a link to log in.

    If you can't attend the live webinar, register now and receive a recording of the webinar to view at your convenience. Please note that only registrants who attend the live webinar are eligible for ASHA CEUs.

    Kristina A. Curro, Ph.D., CCC-SLP

    Kristina A. Curro, Ph.D., CCC-SLP

    Worcester State University

    Dr. Curro is associate professor, department chair, and a certified and licensed speech-language pathologist with an interest in the scholarship of teaching and learning in CSD, speech-sound production and its disorders, pragmatic language, and inter-professional education. She completed her MA and PhD at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst where she focused on the use of eyetracking to measure the pragmatic language comprehension abilities of children on the autism spectrum. Prior to joining Worcester State University, she worked in a variety of clinical settings, including home health, skilled nursing facilities, psychiatric facilities, inpatient and outpatient clinics, public schools, and private practices.

    Disclosures

    Financial: I received a salary from my employment at Worcester State University. I received an honorarium for this webinar.
    Non-Financial: I am a member of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association.

    image

    This course is designed with a participation requirement that ensures meaningful engagement and learning. Participants must be present for the entire 60-minute webinar to receive the assessment. The assessment is a key component in obtaining both their certificate of completion and ASHA CEUs. In addition to standard assessments of the speaker's effectiveness and the overall content quality, participants are challenged to demonstrate practical application of the knowledge gained. The required question prompts participants to articulate and list two specific action items they plan to implement. This promotes critical thinking about how to apply new information in their professional practice with a forward-thinking response.

  • Product not yet rated Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live Web Event on 08/04/2026 at 2:00 PM (EDT)

    Program-level assessment doesn’t have to feel like a compliance task. This webinar will help you reframe assessment as a practical, manageable way to reflect on student learning and strengthen your program. Participants will leave with clear strategies and tools they can immediately apply to support continuous improvement.

    Tuesday, August 4, 2026
    2:00 PM – 3:00 PM ET
    .1 ASHA CEUs

    Graduate programs are expected to demonstrate alignment among program goals, student learning outcomes, curriculum, and institutional priorities as part of ongoing assessment and accreditation processes. This interactive webinar positions program-level assessment as a structured opportunity for regular reflection on curriculum, student learning, and program functioning. Participants will explore practical approaches for clarifying program mission, goals, and student learning outcomes, and will learn how to map these elements to curricular and institutional expectations to identify gaps, redundancies, and opportunities for improvement. Through guided reflection and applied planning activities, attendees will evaluate current practices and identify next steps tailored to their program context. Emphasis is placed on sustainable, program-centered approaches that support meaningful review, informed decision-making, and ongoing improvement.

    Learning Objectives

    - Describe the key components of program-level assessment, including program goals, student learning outcomes, and curricular alignment.

    - Apply curricular mapping techniques to identify gaps, redundancies, and areas for improvement within academic programs.

    - Develop actionable next steps for implementing sustainable, program-centered assessment practices that support continuous improvement.

    Time Ordered Agenda
    2:00 - 2:05 PM ET Welcome, objectives, and framing assessment as scheduled reflection
    2:05 - 2:15 PM ET Program-level assessment and its role in supporting student learning
    2:15 - 2:28 PM ET Aligning program goals, student learning outcomes, and curriculum
    2:28 - 2:43 PM ET Using curricular mapping to inform program review and decision-making
    2:43 - 2:55 PM ET Practical strategies for organizing and sustaining assessment processes
    2:55 – 3:00 PM ET Key takeaways, resources, and final questions

    For questions about this webinar, please contact us at admin@capcsd.org. Once registered, you will receive a confirmation e-mail with a link to log in.

    If you can't attend the live webinar, register now to receive a recording to view at your convenience. Please note that only registrants who attend the live webinar are eligible for ASHA CEUs.

    Carrie Childers, Ph.D., CCC-SLP

    Carrie Childers, Ph.D., CCC-SLP

    East Tennessee State University

    Carrie Childers is an Assistant Professor and Program Director at East Tennessee State University with a background in program-level assessment, curricular alignment, and continuous improvement in higher education. She previously served as an Institutional Effectiveness Specialist at a private university, where she coordinated assessment initiatives and supported faculty through training and consultation. Her passion is to help academic programs use assessment as a practical tool to improve student learning, inform decision-making, and enhance program outcomes.

    Disclosures
    Financial: Carrie Childers receives a salary from East Tennessee State University and will be receiving an honorarium for providing this presentation.
    Non-Financial: None

    image

    This course is designed with a participation requirement that ensures meaningful engagement and learning. Participants must be present for the entire 60-minute webinar to receive the assessment. The assessment is a key component in obtaining both their certificate of completion and ASHA CEUs. In addition to standard assessments of the speaker's effectiveness and the overall content quality, participants are challenged to demonstrate practical application of the knowledge gained. The required question prompts participants to articulate and list two specific action items they plan to implement. This promotes critical thinking about how to apply new information in their professional practice with a forward-thinking response.

  • Product not yet rated Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live Web Event on 07/30/2026 at 1:00 PM (EDT)

    Faculty burnout is a growing challenge in higher education, impacting well-being, effectiveness, and retention. This webinar offers an overview of burnout in CSD programs and presents practical, evidence-based strategies for reducing occupational stress through holistic resilience building, supportive leadership, and thoughtful workload management. Designed for both faculty and academic leaders, the session emphasizes fostering healthier, more sustainable work environments.

    Thursday, July 30, 2026
    1:00 PM - 2:30 PM ET
    .15 ASHA CEUs

    Faculty burnout, a critical issue in higher education, is characterized by emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal accomplishment. This session will provide an overview of the issue and discuss strategies that may help faculty and academic leaders address occupational stress and burnout within CSD programs. Specific strategies aimed at reducing the impact of occupational stress will be discussed and framed within the need for faculty to consider a holistic approach to resilience building. Administrative strategies associated with workload management, fostering a supportive work environment, and promoting work-life balance will be discussed.

    Learning Objectives

    - Describe the three major components of burnout and the impact of burnout.

    - Summarize three specific strategies that can be used by faculty to mitigate the impact of occupational stress and support wellbeing.

    - Discuss three specific strategies that can be implemented by academic leaders to support faculty in their efforts to mitigate occupational stress.


    Time Ordered Agenda

    1:00 - 1:05 PM ET Introduction
    1:05 - 1:30 PM ET Stress & burnout (definitions, research findings on prevalence, impact, and outcomes of resilience building initiatives in healthcare environments.)
    1:30 - 2:00 PM ET Individual resilience building strategies
    2:00 - 2:20 PM ET Strategies for academic leaders to support faculty wellness
    2:20 - 2:30 PM ET Summary/Q&

    For questions about this webinar, please contact us at admin@capcsd.org. Once registered, you will receive a confirmation e-mail with a link to log in.

    If you can't attend the live webinar, register now and receive a recording of the webinar to view at your convenience. Please note that only registrants who attend the live webinar are eligible for ASHA CEUs.

    Diana C. Emanuel, Ph.D., CCC-A

    Diana C. Emanuel, Ph.D., CCC-A

    Towson University

    Diana C. Emanuel, Ph.D., CCC-A, is a professor in the Speech-Language Pathology & Audiology Department at Towson University. She has 32 years of teaching experience and received the USM Regent’s Award for excellence in teaching. She has two decades of academic leadership experience, including serving as founding director of TU’s AuD program and as department chairperson. She has mentored faculty, program directors, and department chairpersons. Much of her scholarship has focused on teaching, including a textbook (Hearing Science), book chapters, tutorials, webinars, and an open-access video training system (Pure Tone Hearing Screening in Schools). Her current research focus is the Lived Experience of the Audiologist project, which is an exploration of audiologists’ perspectives through survey and qualitative research methods. This project has explored various aspects of the lived experience of audiologists and AuD students including occupational stress, burnout, reaction to change, and resilience building.

    Disclosures

    Financial: Diana receives a salary from Towson University and CAPCSD is providing an honorarium for this webinar.
    Non-Financial: None

    image

    This course is designed with a participation
    requirement that ensures meaningful engagement and learning. Participants must
    be present for the entire 90-minute webinar to receive the assessment. The
    assessment is a key component in obtaining both their certificate of completion
    and ASHA CEUs. In addition to standard assessments of the speaker's
    effectiveness and the overall content quality, participants are challenged to
    demonstrate practical application of the knowledge gained. The required
    question prompts participants to articulate and list two specific action items
    they plan to implement. This promotes critical thinking about how to apply new
    information in their professional practice with a forward-thinking response.

  • Contains 4 Component(s), Includes Credits Recorded On: 09/16/2025

    Attendees will learn tangible ways to utilize feedback mechanisms and how to best prepare the clinical supervisors associated with their clinical education programs to utilize the feedback tool.

    Feedback is the most powerful and diverse tool supervisors use when providing clinical instruction, guidance, and mentorship; however, it is also the most misused tool. Feedback is not a “one size fits all” approach but one impacted by factors such as generational differences, purposeful application of learning theories, and should be provided with the intent and purpose to encourage the development of clinical expertise and clinical reasoning skills. This session will discuss feedback methodology through the lens of learning theory, supervision frameworks, and aspects of generational differences. Attendees will learn tangible ways to utilize feedback mechanisms and how to best prepare the clinical supervisors associated with their clinical education programs to utilize the feedback tool. 

    Learning Objectives

    - Identify a supervision style and a feedback methodology on each stage of a supervision continuum.

    - Name three types of feedback to use in order to effectively communicate and navigate difficult clinical conversations with a student.  

    - Examine at least two generational trends which shape our feedback and impact our approach to mentorship.

    Time Ordered Agenda

    45 Minutes - Supervision Styles and Stages of Supervision  
    30 Minutes -  Types of Feedback  
    35 Minutes -  Utilizing this Feedback with Generational Trends 
    10 Minutes -  Questions

    Jessica Carter, MS CCC-SLP

    Jessica Carter, MS CCC-SLP

    The University of Texas at Dallas

    Jessica Carter, M.S. CCC-SLP, is the Director of Clinical Education for the Master of Science Program in Speech-Language Pathology at the University of Texas at Dallas. In addition to this role, she teaches courses in preschool assessment & intervention, pediatric motor speech disorders, and bilingual articulation & phonology; and supervises graduate students in pediatric programs in clinical and educational settings. Ms. Carter currently serves as the President-Elect for the Texas Speech-Language Hearing Association

    Disclosures

    Financial: Jessica is receiving an honorarium for this presentation.
    Non-Financial: None

    Angela J. Kennedy, SLPD, CCC-SLP

    Angela J. Kennedy, SLPD, CCC-SLP

    UT Health San Antonio

    Angela Kennedy, SLP.D., CCC-SLP, is currently an Assistant Professor and Director of Clinical Education at UT Health Science Center in San Antonio in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders. She currently directs all clinical education aspects of graduate students in speech-language pathology across their program of study including clinical preparation, clinical practicums and community-based clinical practice. Her current areas of research interest include increasing access to rehabilitative services for pediatric patients with communication disorders in under-resourced areas, examining the training and equipping of speech-language pathologists specifically in the area of speech sound disorders and the implementation of interprofessional clinically based activities in graduate-level curriculums.

    Disclosures
    Financial: Angela is receiving an honorarium for this presentation. Co-author of Goal Setting in Speech-Language Pathology: A Guide to Clinical Reasoning; receives royalties from Plural Publishing
    Non-Financial: None

    Robyn Martin, MS, CCC-SLP, BCS-SCF

    Robyn Martin, MS, CCC-SLP, BCS-SCF

    University of St. Augustine for Health Sciences

    Robyn Martin is Director of SLP Clinical Instruction for the USAHS MS-SLP Program.  She is a board-certified stuttering, cluttering and fluency specialist and has an interest in pediatric speech and language disorders. Professor Martin has practiced as a speech-language pathologist in a variety of settings, and she is very passionate about teaching and mentoring graduate students. She is involved with the Texas Speech-Language Hearing Association serving as Past President and she has served on several committees with ASHA. When off campus, she enjoys spending time with her husband and two children, working out, and traveling.

    Disclosures
    Financial: Robyn is receiving an honorarium for this presentation.
    Non-Financial: None

    Jacqueline Towson

    Jacqueline Towson

    Moderator

    University of Central Florida

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    This course is designed with a participation requirement that ensures meaningful engagement and learning. Participants must be present for the entire 120-minute course to receive the assessment. The assessment is a key component in obtaining both their certificate of completion and ASHA CEUs. In addition to standard assessments of the speaker's effectiveness and the overall content quality, participants are challenged to demonstrate practical application of the knowledge gained. The required question prompts participants to articulate and list two specific action items they plan to implement. This promotes critical thinking about how to apply new information in their professional practice with a forward-thinking response. 

  • Contains 9 Component(s), Includes Credits

    This course discusses a variety of key issues central to becoming an effective, evidence-based clinical educator/supervisor/preceptor. By completing the six modules in this course, learners will explore basic principles and obligations of clinical education. They will be introduced to evidence-based strategies for effective clinical instruction.

    Access Information to the course Key Principles in CSD Clinical Education

    This course is available at no cost (a $100 value) to:

    • CAPCSD Members: Log in with your CAPCSD credentials, add the course to your cart, and it will be free. Member programs are encouraged to share this resource with clinical educators at both on- and off-campus sites. Discount codes for nonmember supervisors are available in the Info Hub after logging into your membership account here.
    • Clinical Instructors Supervising for CAPCSD Members: You are eligible for free access using a discount code provided by your CAPCSD university liaison. Please obtain this code before registering, as refunds will not be issued after purchase. Once you have the code, add the course to your cart, apply the code, and the fee will be waived.

    ASHA CEUs: To ensure your ASHA CEUs are properly reported, you must provide your ASHA number. Without it, CAPCSD cannot submit your CEU information to ASHA.

    CAPCSD Members click here, login and update your ASHA # under My Info. 

    If you are a nonmember, update your profile by clicking on "Profile" in the left hand navigation. 

    Abstract

    The education of audiologists and speech-language pathologists is dependent upon clinical instruction that is provided in an effective, evidence-based manner. The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) recognizes clinical supervision as a distinct area of clinical practice. It requires those serving as clinical educators/supervisors/preceptors to engage in formal training to gain the specialized knowledge and expertise needed to serve effectively in this role. They must have at least 9 months of full time / part time equivalent clinical experience prior to supervising a student and must complete a minimum of 2-hours of professional development in clinical instruction. It is recognized that clinical educators/supervisors/preceptors commit to ongoing learning to grown and refine their skills in clinical education. This course discusses a variety of key issues central to becoming an effective, evidence-based clinical educator/supervisor/preceptor. By completing the six modules in this course, learners will explore basic principles and obligations of clinical education. They will be introduced to evidence-based strategies for effective clinical instruction. Learners will examine the importance of effective communication, feedback and relationship building to the clinical education process. They will consider their obligation for ethical and culturally responsive engagement. Learners will have opportunities to reflect on how principles and techniques discussed in the course can be integrated into their own work in clinical education.

    Learner Objectives 

     By completion of the six modules in this course, the learner will be able to: 

     Module 1 - Precepting in Clinical Education

    • Describe the roles and responsibilities of the preceptor and clinical learner.
    • Identify at least three characteristics of an effective preceptor.

    Module 2 - Strategies for Clinical Teaching

    • Describe common models of clinical supervision.
    • Utilize the ‘One Minute Preceptor’ approach to feedback.

    Module 3 - Relationships in the Clinical Education Process

    • Describe communication strategies that enhance preceptor-clinical learner relationships.
    • Explain strategies to productively manage conflict.

    Module 4 - Cultural Dynamics in Clinical Education

    • List aspects of their culture and identity that are relevant to clinical education/precepting. 
    • Describe strategies related to culturally responsive teaching that they can incorporate into precepting for clinical learners.

    Module 5 - Assessment and Feedback

    • Define and explain feedback, debriefing, and assessment/evaluation in clinical education.
    • Discuss examples of how to engage in feedback, debriefing, and assessment in as a preceptor.
    • Describe the role of clinical learner feedback for the preceptor and several ways to engage in that discussion.

    Module 6 - Ethics in Clinical Education

    • Identify key ASHA Code of Ethics issues that relate to clinical education. 
    • Describe a situation common to working with clinical learners that may present an ethical challenge. 
    • Recognize opportunities that may require the preceptor to initiate a challenging discussion. 

    Acknowledgments 

     Content Development:

    • Wendy Chase 
    • Andy Clare
    • Christi Masters 
    • Jonette Owen 
    • Hannah Siburt 
    • Anu Subramanian
    • Chizuko Tamaki

    Production Editors

    • Andy Clare
    • Mandie McKenzie
    • Kevin McNamara

    Sound Editing

    • Kevin McNamara

    Narrator

    • Michael G. Sayers

    Audience
    These courses are provided at no cost to CAPCSD member programs in Communication Sciences and Disorders (CSD). Member programs are encouraged to share access to these resources with individuals engaged in the clinical instruction of graduate students in on-campus and off-campus sites.

    Module Availability
    Users have 30 days from the date of the $0 purchase to complete this course. Your access to the course content will expire after 30 days. If you have not completed the course by that time, you will be required to re-register and start over. Users will have access to the system and their earned certificate of completion after the 30 days.



    Wendy Chase

    Wendy Chase

    Director of Clinical Education/Assistant Professor

    Rocky Mountain University of Health Professions

    Wendy Chase Wendy Chase joined Rocky Mountain University of Health Professions in July 2017 as Director of Clinical Education/Assistant Professor. Ms. Chase earned her B.S. at Central Michigan University and her M.A. at Northwestern University. She has over 30 years of experience in clinical positions treating clients from infancy through geriatrics. Her interests are focused on clinical education, gender-affirming communication treatment, and management of swallowing and voice in clients with ventilator dependency. Her current challenge is to finish her dissertation in competency-based education. 

    Financial Disclosure: Rocky Mountain University of Health Professions: Employee (Ongoing) Non-Financial Disclosure: CAPCSD Clinical Education Committee member (2023/24): Received no compensation

    Andy Clare

    Andy Clare

    Assistant Director of Clinical Education and Clinical Associate Professor

    George Washington University

    Andy Clare, M.S., CCC-SLP, CBIS, serves as the Assistant Director of Clinical Education and Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Speech & Hearing Sciences at George Washington University. His clinical areas of expertise include Dysphagia, Aphasia, Cognitive-Linguistic Disorders, and Aural Rehabilitation. He teaches classes in Dysphagia, Aural Rehabilitation and Clinical Methods for Speech-Language Pathology. His research interests center on refining clinical education processes for students and supervisors in Communication Sciences and Disorders. He currently serves as the chair of the CAPCSD Clinical Education Committee. 

    Financial Disclosure: The George Washington University: Employee (Ongoing) Non-Financial Disclosure: CAPCSD Clinical Education Committee Chair (2023/24): Received no compensation

    Christi Masters

    Christi Masters

    Clinical Associate Professor

    Purdue University

    Christi Masters, M.S., CCC-SLP, is a Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences at Purdue University. She provides clinical education to graduate students, and her primary areas of clinical practice are early intervention and pediatric stuttering. She also teaches the Introduction to Communicative Disorders course at the undergraduate level. She serves as a member of the CAPCSD Clinical Education Committee.

    Financial Disclosure: Purdue University: Employee (Ongoing) Non-Financial Disclosure: CAPCSD Clinical Education Committee member (2023/24): Received no compensation

    Jonette Owen, Au.D., M.H.A., FNAP, CH-AP

    Jonette Owen, Au.D., M.H.A., FNAP, CH-AP

    Associate Dean of Clinical Education

    Salus University

    Jonette Owen, Au.D., M.H.A., FNAP, CH-AP, obtained her Au.D. from Salus University and an M.H.A. from Penn State University. Dr. Owen has a long history of leadership at the state level. ON the national level, she is a subject matter expert in precepting, clinical education, and guidelines/strategic document development. Dr. Owen's multifaceted clinical experience specializes in advanced diagnostics and amplification rehabilitation. As Associate Dean of Clinical Education, Dr. Owen oversees clinical education at the Osborne College of Audiology. Dr. Owen is experienced in developing policies, establishing a Standardized Patient Program, and representing audiology on interprofessional committees. Dr. Owen is a National Academies of Practice Fellow and an Audiology Alumna of the Year at Salus University

    Financial Disclosure: Salus at Drexel University: Employee (Ongoing)
    Non-Financial Disclosure: CAPCSD Clinical Education Committee member (2023/24): Received no compensation

    Hannah Siburt

    Hannah Siburt

    Associate Professor and Director of the Division of Speech and Hearing Sciences

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

    Hannah Siburt, Au.D., Ph.D., is an Associate Professor and Director of the Division of Speech and Hearing Sciences at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is also the director of the UNC Audiology LEND Program. Her primary areas of interest include supporting children and families with hearing loss and developmental disabilities, and rural healthcare. She provides service to the profession through several professional organizations including CAPCSD, AAA, and the NC-EDHI Advisory Committee.

    Financial Disclosure: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Employee (Ongoing)
    Non-Financial Disclosure: CAPCSD Clinical Education Committee member (2023/24): Received no compensation

    Financial Disclosure: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Employee (Ongoing)
    Non-Financial Disclosure: CAPCSD Clinical Education Committee member (2023/24): Received no compensation

    Anu Subramanian, Ph.D., CCC-SLP,

    Anu Subramanian, Ph.D., CCC-SLP,

    Clinical Associate Professor

    University of Iowa

    Anu Subramanian, Ph.D., CCC-SLP, is a Clinical Associate Professor at the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders at the University of Iowa. She supervises graduate students in stuttering and early childhood clinical placements. Her interests are in clinical practice in early childhood, stuttering, and clinical education. Anu serves the CAPCSD Clinical Education Committee

    Financial Disclosure: University of Iowa: Employee (Ongoing)
    Non-Financial Disclosure: CAPCSD Clinical Education Committee member (2023/24): Received no compensation

    Chiz Tamaki, Au.D., Ph.D.

    Chiz Tamaki, Au.D., Ph.D.

    Professor and Director of Audiology

    Gallaudet University

    Chiz Tamaki, Au.D., Ph.D., is Professor in the Department of Hearing, Speech, and Language Sciences, School of Human Services and Sciences; and Director of AuD Program; at Gallaudet University in Washington, DC. She teaches Diagnostic Audiology, Vestibular Studies, Clinical Supervision, and Professional Issues courses; and coordinates off-site clinical experiences for the AuD Program. Additionally, she mentors students in the HSLS PhD Program. Her area of research involves vestibular and balance functions, especially in deaf older adults.

    Financial Disclosure: Gallaudet University: Employee (Ongoing)
    Non-Financial Disclosure: CAPCSD Clinical Education Committee member (2023/24): Received no compensation

    ASHA CEUs
    The materials are at an introductory level. Continuing education units are available through ASHA.

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    ASHA CE Provider approval and use of the Brand Block does not imply endorsement of course content, specific products, or clinical procedures