This class provides IAPST credits which are eligible for credits toward Certification as a Sex Therapist. See iapst.org/certification
See complete list of certificates available in the Accreditation tab
Sexual and Gender Diversity Training for Sex Therapy is a three-hour professional learning experience designed for clinicians, counselors, and educators seeking to strengthen their competence and confidence in working with clients who are sexually and gender diverse. This course explores the intersections of identity, sexuality, culture, and spirituality within clinical and educational settings, emphasizing the ethical and therapeutic importance of understanding your clients needs, wants and values. Participants will engage in interactive discussions, case applications, and guided reflections to deepen their understanding of gender identity, sexual orientation, and the systemic factors that shape clients' lived experiences.
Grounded in principles of cultural humility, intersectionality, and trauma-informed care, this training empowers sex therapy professionals to recognize and challenge bias, and create safe environments. By the end of the course, participants will gain actionable strategies to integrate affirming frameworks into assessment, treatment planning, and clinical dialogue, thereby enhancing therapeutic outcomes and holistic client well-being.
To register or access the part 2 asynchronous/self study click -> HERE <-
https://frumtherapist.com/workshops/Sexual/viewSexual & Gender Diversity in Sex Therapy
Previously Recorded
Presenter: Tonya L O'Neal
Course Length: 3 Hours
This workshop Offers 3 Continuing Education Credits
This webinar is recorded and will not grant live credits.
This class provides IAPST credits which are eligible for credits toward Certification as a Sex Therapist. See iapst.org/certification
See complete list of certificates available in the Accreditation tab
Sexual and Gender Diversity Training for Sex Therapy is a three-hour professional learning experience designed for clinicians, counselors, and educators seeking to strengthen their competence and confidence in working with clients who are sexually and gender diverse. This course explores the intersections of identity, sexuality, culture, and spirituality within clinical and educational settings, emphasizing the ethical and therapeutic importance of understanding your clients needs, wants and values. Participants will engage in interactive discussions, case applications, and guided reflections to deepen their understanding of gender identity, sexual orientation, and the systemic factors that shape clients' lived experiences.
Grounded in principles of cultural humility, intersectionality, and trauma-informed care, this training empowers sex therapy professionals to recognize and challenge bias, and create safe environments. By the end of the course, participants will gain actionable strategies to integrate affirming frameworks into assessment, treatment planning, and clinical dialogue, thereby enhancing therapeutic outcomes and holistic client well-being.
To register or access the part 2 asynchronous/self study click -> HERE <-
Facilitator: Tonya L. O’Neal, M.Ed.
Total Duration: 3 Hours (180 Minutes)
Format: Online / Virtual Interactive Training
Delivery: Lecture, Guided Discussion, Breakout Activities, Reflection
Focus: Establish psychological safety and course agreements.
Activities: Quick introductions (name, pronouns, inclusion word).
Review agreements: Confidentiality, Compassion, Collective Care.
Learning Objective: Build trust and a respectful foundation.
Focus: Introduce course structure and learning outcomes.
Talking Points:
Flow of the session
Three core themes: Awareness, Humility, Integration
Learning Objective: Orient participants to course objectives.
Focus: Self-reflect on early beliefs about sexuality and gender.
Activity: Quick breakout (2–3 mins) → whole-group share-out.
Learning Objective: Identify implicit messages and internalized bias.
Focus: Challenge common myths about sexuality and gender (Meyer, 2010).
Activity: Guided myth-busting + brief journaling reflection.
Learning Objective: Recognize how misinformation perpetuates stigma.
Focus: Clarify the spectrum of sex, gender, and sexuality.
Discussion: Introduce diversity as natural variation (Hammack & Manago, 2025).
Learning Objective: Apply inclusive language and conceptual clarity.
Focus: 10-minute rest and reflection break.
Focus: Introduce humility as ethical framework for therapy (Fischer et al., 2025).
Activity: Discussion + brief reflection: “What does humility look like in my work?”
Learning Objective: Integrate self-reflection and accountability into practice.
Focus: Explore empathy and moral reframing (McDermott & White, 2025).
Activity: Pair discussion: “How do I hold faith and identity together?”
Learning Objective: Apply empathy and moral reframing to faith-based contexts.
Focus: 5-minute mental rest and reset.
Focus: Bridge reflection into actionable inclusion.
Discussion: “What does daily inclusion look like for you?”
Learning Objective: Transform awareness into consistent, affirming behavior.
Focus: Explore faith, identity, and resilience in practice.
Activity: Small breakout groups analyze Jordan’s case → short debrief.
Learning Objective: Apply intersectional, affirming approaches to client care.
Focus: Quiet journaling and integration.
Prompt: “What did Jordan’s story teach you about presence and compassion?”
Focus: Move from reflection to professional accountability.
Discussion: Inclusion as transformation, not checklist (Staley & Leonardi, 2019).
Activity: Journal: “What inclusive commitment am I ready to make?”
Learning Objective: Identify professional commitments to embody inclusion.
Focus: Group accountability and shared reflection.
Activity: Breakout to create one SMART inclusive commitment.
Learning Objective: Develop collaborative accountability plans.
Focus: End with gratitude and affirmation.
Quote: “Integration is not perfection—it’s presence.”
Learning Objective: Commit to embodied, values-based inclusion.