top of page

Search
Through the Lens of ARC: From IHT Chaos to Clinical Clarity
In Home Therapy is often treated as crisis management, but it is fundamentally developmental work. This article explores how the Attachment, Regulation, and Competency (ARC) framework organizes clinical attention within IHT, helping providers understand family functioning, prioritize intervention, and support lasting change. ARC does not add new tasks—it clarifies the developmental logic of the work already being done.
7 min read
ARC-Informed Supervision Skills
ARC is designed as both an individual-level clinical intervention for work with youth and families and as an organizational framework that supports trauma-informed service systems. When applied to supervision, ARC offers a developmentally aligned approach that recognizes how safety, regulation, and skill-building are shaped at every level of a system. Supporting clinicians through ARC-informed supervision not only strengthens capacity and sustainability, but also promotes dee
4 min read


Reimagining Supervision through the ARC Lens
In my clinical work, the Attachment, Self-Regulation, and Competency (ARC) model has long shaped how I think about healing and resilience, particularly in the context of trauma and complex developmental histories. But what’s been just as impactful is how seamlessly ARC translates into the supervisory space. Supervision is, at its core, a relational process. It’s not just about checking boxes for licensure or troubleshooting clinical stuck points (though yes, we do that too).
2 min read
bottom of page
