CPE (Clinical Pastoral Education) 400 Hour Foundational Unit
Date: Tuesday 18 March, 2025
Venue: Carrington Aged Care
Speaker: Carmen Karauda
Topic: CLINICAL PASTORAL EDUCATION (CPE) 400 HOUR FOUNDATIONAL UNIT
Cost: $2,200
RSVP: 25 January 2024
CLINICAL PASTORAL EDUCATION (CPE) 400 HOUR FOUNDATIONAL UNIT
Are you interested in:
Growing in knowledge, understanding and developing skills that will enable you to offer effective pastoral and spiritual care?
Deepening your awareness of God’s presence in your life and of people’s needs, hopes and concerns during times of illness?
Becoming more aware of your own values, attitudes and assumptions?
CPE Foundational Unit will be offered as an extended, part-time combined face to face and on-line course, conducted two days a month Tuesdays and Wednesday from Tuesday 18th March to Wednesday 12th November, 2025. Assistance with pastoral placement is available.
Please contact Carmen Karauda at [email protected] or phone: 0419 430 676 for more information and/or application form.
Applications are now open. Please apply early. Applications close 24th January 2025.
Carmen is a CPE Supervisor and Educator, previously attached to the Mental Health CPE Centre, and an Associate Teacher with the SCD. Carmen was a Course Facilitator and Assessor for Holy Family Services’ Registered Training Organisation, a privately run RTO in Marayong, which facilitates courses such as 10642NAT Diploma of Ageing and Pastoral or Spiritual Care. Carmen currently holds the position of Treasurer and Executive Secretary on the NSWCCPE Executive and brings her valuable former experience as an Accountant and Accounting Software trainer to the role. Carmen’s interest in exploring ways of helping others discover and develop their talents and skills has led her into the area of pastoral and spiritual care. Carmen’s studies and work to date have mainly been in the area of spirituality, exploring the meaning and purpose of life today and pastoral and spiritual care of the aged, sick and dying. Carmen has a well-developed understanding of spirituality and journeying with others as they explore their own spirituality and relate to others on their journey.
WHAT IS CLINICAL PASTORAL EDUCATION?
Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE) is education and formation for the professional work of pastoral and spiritual care. CPE’s methodology utilises the ‘action-reflection’ model of learning. The ‘action’ component entails practical experience in the work of pastoral and spiritual care within a pastoral care setting such as a hospital, aged care facility or parish.
This care acknowledges and attends to the human condition, particularly life’s spiritual dimensions. The ‘action-reflection’ process is integral to CPE participants’ understanding and the formation of their pastoral identity and competence. CPE uses an educational methodology that combines knowledge of theology/spirituality (what we believe) with knowledge of education (how we learn), with knowledge of the behavioural sciences (who we are as human beings).
CPE provides opportunities for you to:
Grow in knowledge and understanding of the pastoral role
Develop skills that will enable you to offer effective pastoral and spiritual care
Deepen your awareness of peoples needs, hopes and concerns during times of illness
Become more aware of your own values, attitudes and assumptions
Service Agreement
Definitions
Account means the account held at your financial institution from which we are authorised to arrange for funds to be debited.
Agreement means this Direct Debit Request Service Agreement between you and us, including the direct debit request.
Business day means a day other than a Saturday or a Sunday or a listed public holiday.
Debit day means the day that payment is due.
Debit payment means a particular transaction where a debit is made, according to your direct debit request.
Direct debit request means the Direct Debit Request between us and you.
Us and we and our means the Catholic Development Fund.
You means the customer(s) who signed the direct debit request. Your financial institution is the financial institution where you hold the account that you have authorised us to arrange to debit.
Debiting your account
By submitting a direct debit request, you have authorised us to arrange for funds to be debited from your account according to the agreement we have with you.
We will only arrange for funds to be debited from your account:
As authorised in the direct debit request; if the debit day falls on a day that is not a business day, we may direct your financial institution to debit your account on the following or previous business day. If you are unsure about which day your account has or will be debited, please check with your financial
Changes by you
If you wish to stop or defer a debit payment you must write to us at least 5 business days before the next debit day.
This notice should be given to us in the first instance.
Your obligations
It is your responsibility to ensure that there are sufficient clear funds available in your account to allow a debit payment to be made.
If there are insufficient clear funds available in your account to meet a debit payment:
you or your account may be charged a fee and/or interest by your financial institution;
you or your account may be charged a fee to reimburse us for charges we have incurred for the failed transaction;
you must arrange for the payment to be made by another method
Please check your account statement to verify that the amounts debited from your account are correct.
Dispute
If you believe that there has been an error in debiting your account you should call us on 1800 047 703 and confirm the details in writing with us as soon as possible so that we can resolve your query quickly.
Accounts
You should check:
with your financial institution whether direct debiting is available from your accounts offered by financial
your account details which you have provided to us are correct by checking them against a recent account statement; and
with your financial institution before completing the direct debit request if you have any queries about how to complete the direct debit
Warning: if the account number you have quoted is incorrect, you may be charged a fee to reimburse our costs in correcting any deductions from:
an account you do not have authority to operate; or
an account you do not
Confidentiality
We will keep any information (including your account details) in your direct debit request confidential.
We will make reasonable efforts to keep any such information that we have about you secure and to ensure that any of our employees or agents who have access to information about you, do not make any unauthorised use, modification, reproduction or disclosure of that information.
However, we may use your contact details to provide information about the fund. Should you wish this not to be the case, please advise the fund in writing.
Our diocesan logo is theologically rich and very succinct. As a hand, it depicts our mission as a diocese and as individuals within the diocese, of bearing (bringing, carrying) Christ’s love to one another and to the world around us. In this, we are the hand of Jesus Christ, and we are offering ourselves to him so that he might work through us.
We can be the bearers of his love only as a response to his call and in the strength of his grace. We are reminded of this in two ways—through the symbol of the dove (the Holy Spirit) also present in the logo, and by the incorporation of the cross that segments the logo. The presence of the cross is a reminder that bearing the love of Christ will inevitably cost us if we live it authentically. However, in the way that the Cross is the portent of redemption and life—an echo of the tree of life in the book of Genesis—so becoming bearers of the love of Christ will also bring us to life.
The four fingers of the hand also represent the four regions of our diocese. The first is bluerepresenting the beautiful water of the Shoalhaven. The second is a blue and green combination representing the waters and escarpment of the Illawarra. The third is greendepicting the hills and plains of the Macarthur. The fourth is dark green illustrating the forests of the Southern Highlands.