Professional Resume
Dan L. Mitchell, MA, Canadian
Certified Counsellor
North Vancouver,
B.C.
778-838-6824 (77-88-eTouch)
Vocational History
1994 to present |
Founder and
President, Worldwide Therapy Online Inc.
Responsibilities: pioneering an innovative form of
psychotherapeutic service delivery via the internet,
delivery of cybercounselling services, course design and
instruction of counsellor education, eSupervision,
business management, web site development, policy and
procedural development for highly
ethical and professional delivery of
online counselling.
|
1989 to present |
Counsellor, B.C.
Addictions Services, Surrey, B.C.
Responsibilities: individual, couple, family, and group
therapy, case management (intake, comprehensive
assessment, referral, treatment planning), consultation
with and educational training for community
organizations, development of comprehensive range of
services, clinical supervision, report
writing, program design, designing
computer solutions to accommodate
clinical processes.
|
1989 to 1998 |
Prevention
Coordinator, B.C. Addictions Services,
Surrey, B.C. Responsibilities:
public education, community development,
prevention and health promotion
Responsibilities: oversee and direct
counselling centre operations among a
team of commission members.
|
1987 to 2000 |
Counsellor,
Vancouver Christian Counselling Centre,
Vancouver, B.C. Responsibilities:
provide individual and couples
counselling, assessment and referral.
|
1988 - 1989 |
Research
Assistant, University of British
Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. Responsibilities:
data collection, coding, statistical
analysis, and report writing. Research
Topic: Parental Influences in the Career
Development of Adolescents.
|
1985 - 1987 |
Support Worker,
Community Living Society, Vancouver, B.C.
Responsibilities: helping
mentally challenged adults develop their
sense of integration into society,
facilitating successful employment
experiences for clients, building their
self esteem and autonomy.
|
Education
1987 - 1989 |
University of
British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. M.A.,
Counselling Psychology
- Specializing in marriage and
family therapy
- Program approved
by
the Council for the Accreditation
of Counseling and Related
Educational Program
- Thesis
title: Family environment
and young adults' evaluations of
parental influences in career
development: An exploratory
study.
|
1983 - 1985 |
University of
British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. B.A.,
Psychology.
|
1982 - 1983 |
Trinity Western
University, Langley, B.C. |
1981 - 1982 |
Okanagan College
University, Kelowna, B.C. |
Additional Training
Experiential Systemic Therapy and
Supported Feedback Therapy (Supervision). Drs.
Friesen, Grigg, and Newman; Surrey Addictions
Services. 400 hours, 1989 through 1993.
Addiction Counselling Training.
B.C. Ministry of Labour. 35 hours, 1990.
Level I Supervisor Training.
B.C. Ministry of Health. 35 hours, 1993.
Summer Institute on Health Promotion
and Planning. Dr. Larry Green et al.;
UBC Institute for Health Promotion. 35 hours,
1995.
Provincial Prevention Symposium.
Workshops and instructors including Dr. Larry
Green, Robert Simpson; B.C. Min. of Health. 28
hours, 1995.
Narrative Therapy Conference.
Workshops and instructors including David Epston,
Michael White; Yaletown Family Therapy. 24 hours,
1995.
Presentation Skills. B.C.
Min. of Health. 14 hours, 1996.
Narrative Therapy Conference.
Workshops and instructors including David Epston,
Steve Madigan; Yaletown Family Therapy. 24 hours,
1996.
International Counselling Congress.
Various workshops and instructors; Canadian
Guidance and Counselling Association. 8 hours,
1996.
Canadian Guidance and Counselling
Association National Conference. Various
workshops and instructors including William
Glasser and Albert Ellis; 24 hours, 1998.
Seventh National and Fifth
International Conference on Information
Technology and Community Health.
University of Victoria; 24 hours, 1998.
Dual Diagnosis Training. B.C.
Ministry for Children and Families; 14 hours,
1999.
Pacific Institute on Addiction
Studies. Alcohol-Drug Education Service,
The Transtheoretical Model of Change,
Motivational Interviewing; 10 hours, 2000.
Early Psychosis Initiative.
B.C. Ministry for Children and Families, Early
identification of psychosis; 3.5 hours, 2000.
Problem Gambling Training, Level I. B.C.
Ministry for Children and Families;
21 hours, 2000.
Going for Gold: International Career
Development Conference, 21 hours, 2001.
Solution Oriented Therapy,
Bill O'Hanlon; 14 hours, 2001.
Youth Mental Health and Youth
Addictions Joint Training. B.C. Ministry
of Health Services, 14 hours, 2002.
Nonviolent Communication
(Compassionate Communication.)
Marshall B. Rosenberg, Ph.D.; 14 hours, 2004.
Marsha M. Linehan's Dialectical Behavior Therapy,
Fraser Health Authority, 30 hours (readings and 10-week ad hoc
study group), 2005.
Nonviolent Crisis Intervention, Crisis Prevention
Institute, Inc., 8 hours, 2006.
Conference
Presentations
Presenter: Internet-Based Counselling:
Ethical and Practical Considerations.
Canadian Guidance and Counselling Association
National Conference, 1998.
Co-presenter, Paper presentation: When
writing helps to heal: e-mail as therapy. Canadian
Guidance and Counselling Association National
Conference, 1998.
Co-presenter, Paper presentation: Confronting
the challenges of therapy online: A pilot
project. Seventh National and Fifth
International Conference on Information
Technology and Community Health, 1998.
Co-presenter, Crackerbarrel session: TherapEmail.
Going for Gold: International Career Development
Conference, 2001.
Co-presenter: E-mail Counselling:
Skills for Maximum Impact. Going for
Gold: International Career Development
Conference, 2001.
Co-presenter: Reading Culture in Text: Diversity
Counselling Online. ACA/CCA Annual Convention, 2006
Workshops Presented
Co-facilitator, Workshops entitled Parents
As Preventers. Conducted in numerous
schools throughout Surrey, B.C. 1994 through
1996.
Facilitator, Numerous workshops on issues
related to alcohol and drug misuse
targeting adults in the Surrey B.C. community.
1989 through 1996.
Facilitator, Workshop entitled Internet-Based
Counselling. For graduate students in
the Department of Counselling Psychology,
University of British Columbia, 1998.
Facilitator, Workshop entitled Internet-Based
Counselling: Ethical and Practical
Considerations. Meeting of the Employee
Assistance Professionals Association, Western
Canada Chapter, 1998.
Co-Presenter: Colloquium entitled Spanning
the Distance: The use of telecommunications to
deliver mental health services. Presented
on behalf of the Faculty of Education, Telehealth
Research Incubator project, University of British
Columbia, 2002.
Professional Membership
Canadian Counselling Association
Member in good standing since 1989
Canadian Certified Counsellor
Publications
Mitchell, D. L. & Murphy, L. J. (2004)
E-mail rules! Organizations and individuals
creating ethical excellence in telemental-health.
In J. Bloom & G. Walz (Eds.) Cybercounseling
and Cyberlearning: An ENCORE. CAPS Press and
American Counseling Association.
Mitchell, D. L. & Murphy, L. J. (2002).
Ethics, e-mail, and the counselling profession.
Cognica: the Canadian Counselling Association's
Newsletter, 34 (2), 10-14.
Collie, K., Mitchell, D. L., and Murphy, L. J.
(2000). E-mail Counseling: Skills for Maximum
Impact. ERIC Digest.
Collie, K., Mitchell, D. L., and Murphy, L. J.
(2000). Skills for Online Counseling: Maximum
Impact at Minimum Bandwidth, in Walz, G. R. &
Bloom, J. (Eds.), Cybercounseling and
Cyberlearning: Strategies and Resources for the
Millennium.
Mitchell, D. L. & Murphy, L. J. (1998).
Confronting the challenges of therapy online: A
pilot project. Proceedings of the Seventh
National and Fifth International Conference on
Information Technology and Community Health;
Victoria, Canada.
Mitchell, D. L. and Murphy, L. J. (1998). The
practice of therapy online. Cognica: the
Newsletter of the Canadian Guidance and
Counselling Association.
Murphy, L. J. and Mitchell, D. L. (1998). When
writing helps to heal: e-mail as therapy. British
Journal of Guidance and Counselling, 26 (1),
21-32.
Mitchell, D. L. (1993). When the values of
clients and counsellors clash: Some conceptual
and ethical propositions. Canadian Journal of
Counselling,27 (3), 203-211.
Mitchell, D. L. (1989, November). Young
adults' perceptions of parental attempts to
influence their careers. Matrix: The Counselling
Psychology Newsletter, p. 7.
Mitchell, D. L. (1989). Family environment and
young adults' evaluations of parental influences
in career development: An exploratory study.
Master's thesis, University of British Columbia,
Vancouver.
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