Choose Your Path

3-Day Becoming Method® Intensive Training

🕒 3 Days

Live | In-Person Delivery

Anyone Interested in Psychotherapy

Apply Now

RN-Psychotherapist Program

🕒 6–8 Months

On-line + Live 3-Day Intensive

For Registered Nurses including NPs, CNSs & PSWs

Apply Now

Trauma Recovery Certificate Program

🕒 12 Months

On-line + Live 3-Day Intensive

For Nurses & Allied Health Professionals

Apply Now

WORK WITH THE BECOMING INSTITUTE

No matter who you are—individuals, practitioners, or system partners— we build your capacity to respond to trauma effectively.

We partner with employers and system leaders to strengthen the nursing workforce, implement trauma-informed work environments, and support restorative practices across communities.

FOUR PATHWAYS DESIGNED TO BUILD YOUR CAPACITY

Designed for public-serving practice: capacity-building, supervision structures, and implementation support within existing professional scopes.

A Foundational Truth

Trauma is a universal human experience, not a specialized condition.

At any point in time, trauma exposure—acute or cumulative—can disrupt the autonomic nervous system, with downstream effects that are physiological, psychological, relational, and, as emerging research confirms, biological and intergenerational.

As this reality becomes increasingly visible across health, workplace, and community settings, systems must be reorganized—not to manage pathology, but to function effectively in a world where trauma is a constant feature of human life.

When systems are not designed to account for trauma, the burden shifts onto individuals, practitioners, and families—leading to fragmentation, burnout, and preventable harm.

Trauma-Informed Workplace Certification

The Communities of Excellence Program

A standards-based certification pathway that helps organizations align policy, leadership practice, and operational decision-making with trauma-informed principles—so care, productivity, and accountability can coexist.

Schedule an Organizational Consultation
Free, no-obligation consult. We’ll clarify fit, scope, and next steps.

What it is

A structured certification process that strengthens trauma-informed governance and practice at the system level.

How it works

We review policies and workplace expectations, identify gaps, and support implementation through clear standards and accountability.

What changes

Trauma-informed practice becomes embedded across leadership and frontline teams—rather than relying on individual discretion.

Workforce Support
  • Support staff working with complex trauma
  • Protect professional standards and role clarity
  • Reduce avoidable escalation and burnout
Policy & Practice Alignment
  • Align expectations with ethical trauma-informed practice
  • Strengthen governance and decision pathways
  • Improve consistency across teams and sites
Measurable Implementation
  • Clear standards and documentation
  • Practical implementation supports
  • Evaluative accountability for sustainability

Voices From the Field

Trauma-informed environments are not defined by intention alone, but by how people experience learning, care, and work within them.

Field reflection

“What changed for me was not just skill acquisition, but how responsibility was held. Expectations were clear, supervision was structured, and I was never asked to carry more than my role allowed.”

Debra

RN–Psychotherapist

Field reflection

“For the first time in my training, accountability felt supportive rather than punitive. The environment was rigorous, but it was also humane.”

Margie

RN–Psychotherapist

Field reflection

“We saw a shift in staff retention and decision-making clarity. When people knew what was expected—and what was not— the environment became calmer and more productive.”

Claire

Nurse Manager

Field reflection

“The result was stronger adherence to practice standards, more consistent service delivery, and clearer leadership accountability for supporting safe and effective care.”

Kim

HR Manager

Client experience

“I didn’t feel rushed or managed. The process was clear, the boundaries were steady, and that helped me trust the work enough to actually do it.”

Amandeep

Client

Client experience

“Accessing care without cost mattered—but what mattered more was feeling safe, respected, and listened to. The structure around the care gave me confidence to stay engaged.”

Trevor

Client

Trauma Recovery Hub

Supervised Community Psychotherapeutic Care

A referral-based access pathway for public health, income support, and primary care systems. We provide supervised psychotherapeutic care through a nationally governed practicum model designed to support public systems managing complex trauma-related need.

Care is delivered through Becoming Institute practicum offices—coordinated nationally and delivered locally—and is available at low cost to referred clients through a supervised, publicly accountable practicum model. Psychotherapy is provided by advanced trainees practising within a clearly defined institutional framework that governs scope of practice, clinical supervision, ethical accountability, and risk management.

This pathway offers public health units, income and social support programs, and family health teams a reliable referral option for clients who require psychotherapeutic care but face barriers to access within existing services. Referring systems are not required to assume clinical oversight, supervision, or additional risk.

Through this practicum model, we:

  • Attach clients to timely, low-cost psychotherapeutic care when services are limited or unavailable
  • Reduce service cycling, escalation, and unmet need by providing a stable therapeutic access point
  • Support safe, ethical care delivery without diverting resources from existing programs or services

Supervised practicum care functions as both a public access mechanism and a system-stabilizing support, maintaining clinical governance, public accountability, and service integrity across jurisdictions.

Psychotherapist Training Pathway

Build Psychotherapeutic Capacity Within Regulated Practice (Ontario)

In Ontario, the controlled act of psychotherapy is restricted to members of specific regulated professions. This pathway strengthens education, supervision, and governance within existing authorizations.

Primary Focus: The RN–Psychotherapist Pathway

RN capacity-building

For nurses who are legally authorized to perform the controlled act of psychotherapy, the RN–Psychotherapist pathway provides a sequenced, regulator-aligned training and practicum structure designed for public, community, and health system settings.

Education

Advanced psychotherapy learning built for nursing practice contexts.

Supervision

Structured clinical supervision and a governed practicum environment.

Governance

Clear expectations for competence, documentation, and ethical accountability.

The program is designed to strengthen psychotherapeutic capacity within nursing, while remaining aligned with Ontario’s regulatory framework and organizational risk management needs.

Who can perform the controlled act of psychotherapy in Ontario?

The controlled act may be performed by registrants/members of the following regulatory colleges (within their respective scopes):

  • College of Registered Psychotherapists of Ontario (CRPO)
  • College of Nurses of Ontario (CNO)
  • College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO)
  • College of Psychologists of Ontario (CPO)
  • College of Occupational Therapists of Ontario (COTO)
  • Ontario College of Social Workers and Social Service Workers (OCSWSSW)

This pathway does not expand scope of practice. It supports structured preparation and oversight for practitioners who are already authorized to practise psychotherapy.

Community Healing Partnership

Men of Peace, Men of Power

A culturally grounded, trauma-informed community healing program for Black men—delivered with community partners to strengthen connection, accountability, and collective wellbeing.

Format 8-week cohort (daily rhythm)
Delivery Daily app practice + Weekly gatherings
Focus Truth-telling • Healing • Restorative Justice

Partnership-first delivery

We co-design the local pathway including location, recruitment, facilitation support, referral pathways, and community accountability, so the work is trusted, sustainable, and community-anchored.

What the program offers men

A structured, supportive process that helps men move from silence and disconnection toward steadiness, dignity, and intentional living—supported by daily guidance and weekly community connection.

  • Weekly Zoom gatherings that build accountability and belonging
  • Practical tools for emotional regulation and relational strength
  • Decolonized leadership grounded in the spirit of Ubuntu—“I am because we are”

What partners bring

  • Trusted community access and culturally grounded context
  • Space for monthly in-person gatherings and local recruitment pathways
  • Identification of emerging leaders to train as future program facilitators

This aligns with a partnership model that strengthens community capacity while intentionally addressing the specific needs of Black men.

The program is designed to support individual transformation and create measurable outcomes for families, communities, and future program growth. Evaluation ensures the journey delivers meaningful impact and provides evidence for expansion.

How we deliver (together)

  • Becoming Institute delivers the program pathway and weekly facilitation structure
  • Daily app teachings and prompts support practice between sessions
  • Trauma-informed training, Ubuntu orientation, and quality oversight

Delivery snapshot

2 months

A two-month cohort supported by daily practice and weekly gatherings—designed to strengthen emotional steadiness, relational capacity, and community-rooted leadership.

Male-Centred weekly themes (context-specific design)

A weekly sequence that supports stability, dignity, and relational strength—adapted to the needs men bring into the space.

Naming the Silence Understanding silence as a survival strategy while opening pathways to connection.

This work supports Black men in understanding silence as a learned survival strategy shaped by social and historical conditions. Through relational, choice-based engagement, men are supported in moving from isolation toward connection as a foundation for wellbeing and collective resilience.

Rewriting the Inherited Story Bringing awareness to intergenerational patterns that shape relationships and self-understanding.

Generations of structural disruption have interrupted the transmission of stable relational models, influencing how identity, belonging, and relationships are navigated today. This work supports men in consciously rewriting inherited patterns through awareness, choice, and relational healing.

Authentic Masculinity Redefining strength beyond dominance, control, and emotional suppression.

Cultural myths that equate masculinity with dominance and emotional restraint have left many men disconnected from themselves and others. This work supports men in reclaiming authentic strength rooted in humility, accountability, peace, and the capacity to nurture self and community.

Power, Agency, and Self-Determination Reclaiming power as self-guidance, responsibility, and intentional choice.

For over four centuries, Black men have been primary targets of oppression, resulting in deep disruption to family systems and expressions of masculine leadership. This work supports men in recognizing how power, control, and choice have been used against them—and in reclaiming these capacities with intention, self-guidance, and purpose.

Building Strong Partnership Restoring the foundations for healthy, enduring relationships.

Structural disruptions to Black family life have limited access to lived models of stable partnership and shared purpose. This work supports men in restoring what was historically disrupted—building relationships grounded in intention, accountability, and mutual respect.

Intentional Creation Moving from unconscious desire to intentional life-building.

Many men inherit unconscious patterns around desire that blur the distinction between impulse, intimacy, and creation, making intentional life-building more difficult within existing social conditions. This work supports men in reclaiming sex and creativity as distinct, purposeful forces that guide conscious choice and meaningful connection.

These themes are delivered in a culturally grounded way and are adapted to the real-life needs and concerns men bring into the space.

This is community healing—built through partnership. Our aim is not only individual change, but intergenerational impact as healed men show up differently in families and communities.

Let’s Stay Connected

Stay connected with the Becoming Institute for reflections, resources, and updates that support ethical, trauma-informed practice across care, workplace, and community contexts.

Get Certified in Trauma-Informed Practice

Get the guide to explore certification pathways, part-time workshops and learning outcomes.