CPD Positive Health Webinar Series – Accredited Positive Psychology Event (Recorded)

About the Event
Join qualified Health Researchers and Positive Psychology Practitioners & Researchers, Reece Coker, Diane Dreher, Laura Ellingson, Sarah Monk, Liz Leyland, and Matt Freeman, for a 3-part panel presentation and audience discussion series on Positive Health.
Over the course of 3 recorded webinars, and across multiple contexts in research, theory, and practice, the panel experts share their perspectives on answers to the following questions:
- What is Positive Health?
- What facilitates Positive Health?
- How can we overcome (some) obstacles to promote Positive Health?
Webinar 1: What is Positive Health?
Reece and Diane discuss the evolution of Positive Health. Their talks explore aspects of Positive Health with particular attention to the concept of “dynamic balance” and Eastern philosophies. They question what it might mean to find balance in today’s ever-changing and rapidly evolving world.
Webinar 2: What facilitates Positive Health?
Laura and Sarah present perspectives from research and practice on how to facilitate Positive Health. Their talks address pertinent questions on how to research and facilitate more positive states of health amongst individuals experiencing chronic illness and cancer diagnoses.
Webinar 3: How can we overcome obstacles to promote Positive Health?
Liz and Matt present perspectives from practice on how to overcome (some) obstacles to create Positive Health. Their talks address the intersection of Positive Psychology, alcohol freedom, and ageing, raising critical questions on how practice can inform future research as well as a better quality of life.
Event Fee & Access
The event recordings are available for a fee of £75 plus VAT (20%) if you live in the UK.
To apply for access, please fill out the application form here.
Following enrolment, you will receive:
- Online access to 3 recorded webinars (for 365 days)
- A reflective practice PDF guide to support your learning experience
- Electronic Certificate of Attendance with 6 CPD points
Payment options include PayPal and bank transfer. On booking, we will provide you with a PayPal link or bank transfer details.
To learn more about our Positive Psychology events and qualifications, please click here or contact: training@ppnetwork.org
Event Audience
This event welcomes qualified health professionals and Positive Psychology Practitioners and students who have an interest in Positive Health.
Whether you are new to Positive Psychology or a seasoned practitioner or researcher, you will take away valuable insights for further contemplation in relation to your own practice.
Event Accreditation
This series of events is accredited by the Positive Psychology Guild (PPG), a Not for Profit Organisation and a government registered learning provider with a UK Provider Reference Number: 10067939. We are also a CPD certified Provider dedicated to raising the standards of training and continuing professional development.
To receive a CPD Certificate of Attendance, you will need to confirm you have completed all prior requirements. Guidance is provided in the event learning materials on how to do this.

Speaker Biographies
Reece Coker (UK)

Reece Coker is the founder of PPG. A fellow at the Institute of Leadership and Management, and Royal Society of Public Health, he is an experienced trainer, psychologist, and sector expert within the subjects of Positive Psychology, Motivation, Organisational Development & Culture, Neurodiversity & Inclusion, and Business Management. A senior manager within the corporate commercial and not-for-profit sectors, Reece is passionate about learning and development at all levels. He completed his Masters in Applied Positive Psychology (MAPP) at Bucks New University in 2016, where his research focused on hope and fear, and is currently completing a PhD in Education and Psychology at Sheffield Hallam University with a focus on courage, anxiety, and autism. He leads and lectures on the Positive Psychology and Autism Awareness in Practice Programmes. He is an autistic individual who is a passionate advocate for autism and strengths-based approaches. Reece leads PPG’s Autism Centre and is keen to work with stakeholders within the areas of employment, mental health and wellbeing, and neurodiversity and inclusion. He is also an Honorary Senior Lecturer at the University of Manchester, where he is a subject matter expert in the fields of qualitative research, autism, and neurodiversity (theory and practice).
Diane Dreher (USA)

Diane Dreher, PhD, PCC, is a Positive Psychology Coach, teacher, researcher, and author who has worked in higher education for over 30 years. After completing her PhD in Renaissance English literature at UCLA, Diane began teaching at Santa Clara University, where received the Distinguished Teaching Award in 2019. Her publications include the bestselling Tao of Inner Peace, Tao of Personal Leadership, Tao of Womanhood, Inner Gardening, and Your Personal Renaissance as well as scholarly books and articles on literature, Positive Psychology, and hope. Seeking new frontiers in learning, she went on to complete a Master’s degree in Counseling and became a Professional Certified Coach (PCC), with the International Coaching Federation and a HeartMath Clinical Practitioner. Her research interests explore the convergence of Positive Psychology with Eastern philosophy, leadership, mindfulness, and hope. In addition to lecturing in the Positive Psychology Academy, she is Associate Director of the Applied Spirituality Institute at Santa Clara University, maintains an international coaching practice, is an advisor for the Hopeful Mindsets Project, and is writing a book on hope.
Sarah Monk (UK)

Sarah Monk is a Chartered Psychologist, Positive Psychology Practitioner, Coach and meditation and mindfulness teacher. She is also a part time associate lecturer on the Masters in Applied Positive Psychology and Positive Psychology in Coaching programmes at Bucks New University and a regular blog team member at The Positive Psychology People. Sarah has a degree in Psychology from Southampton University and an MSc in Clinical Psychology from the University of Surrey and started her career as a Clinical Psychologist in the NHS working in both adult mental health and physical disabilities specialties. Her career in Clinical Psychology was interrupted 25 years ago when she burnt out and developed ME/CFS. She has learned to live well with an ongoing illness, Positive Psychology has been an important part of that journey and the well-being of people who work in healthcare is a keen interest. Sarah refocused as a Positive Psychology Coach, completing the MAPP in 2019. She has special interests in mindfulness, meditation, compassion, people with chronic health conditions and applying PP in groups with disabilities. Sarah’s role in the Guild involves helping develop the professional services to members including the communities of practice, peer exchange and practitioner member annual review process.
Laura Ellingson (USA)

Laura L. Ellingson, Ph.D., is the Patrick A. Donohoe, S.J. Professor of Communication at Santa Clara University and a National Communication Association Distinguished Scholar. Her passion for methodological and epistemological innovation infuses her research and writing. Narrative, feminist, pragmatic perspectives guide her research on communication in healthcare delivery and in extended/chosen families. In addition to over 50 journal articles and chapters in edited collections, she is the author of six books, including an ethnographic study of communication in a geriatric oncology program (Communicating in the Clinic, 2005) and two co-authored books (with Dr. Patty Sotirin) on aunts, nieces, and nephews in extended and chosen families (Aunting, 2010) and of aunts’ representation in popular culture (Where the Aunts Are, 2013). Laura enlarges possibilities for methodological innovation through the development of a crystallization framework for qualitative research (Engaging Crystallization in Qualitative Research, 2009), articulation of embodied research strategies (Embodiment in Qualitative Research, 2017), and reimagining of data collection practices as lively data engagement (with Dr. Patty Sotirin; Making Data in Qualitative Research: Engagements, Ethics, and Entanglements, 2020). She teaches courses on qualitative methods, health and sexuality, and gender and communication.
Liz Leyland (France)

Liz Leyland is officially retired but coming to the end of her studies with the PPA to become a Positive Psychology Coach. She has had a varied career, leaving school at 18 and joining a retail bank, where she progressed through the ranks to become a manager. Disillusioned with the politics and the reducing focus on the customer, Liz took redundancy and trained as a Diet and Fitness Instructor in the late 90s. Liz and her husband are avid skiers and fulfilled their dream of living and working in the French Alps by building a ski chalet and running associated businesses from 2002 to 2016 when they retired in their mid 50s. The following years highlighted to Liz a lack of meaning and true purpose in her life and she used alcohol to an increasing extent to cope with these feelings and those of trying to fit in with an expat community with whom she had little in common”. In an effort to bring this under control she joined an online community aimed at “changing your relationship with alcohol” and discovered that she needed to change her relationship with herself. She was introduced to Positive Psychology and through her interactions in the online community, remembered that her most fulfilling job had been as a diet and fitness instructor when she learned that being overweight was often more complex than simply eating too much. In 2020 Liz decided that Positive Psychology Coaching could provide her with a path to meaning and purpose and her subsequent studies revealed the value of PP in overcoming her struggles with alcohol. She now describes herself as Alcohol Free and has a particular interest in helping others on their alcohol free journey. She will be developing her current coaching repertoire further to offer a path beyond the booze.
Matt Freeman (UK)

Following 20-plus years in Corporate Brand Strategy and Marketing Communications across Europe, Asia and Africa, Matt Freeman returned to the UK from Johannesburg in 2016 to support his father who was battling Parkinson’s disease. Observing his father’s needs, he began to develop an interest in the ageing population and those who are affected by it – those who care for the ageing and ailing, their spouses and partners, their offspring and siblings. But he also became curious about how we could all prepare, in advance, for a better older age. He initially trained and qualified in the anatomy and physiology of ageing and illness and the potential for counteraction through physical movement. He then became an Exercise & Fitness Instructor for the over 60s and now run Community and Carehome classes in his local area. Further vocational studies into Dementia, Bereavement & Grief, and Diet & Nutrition in Older Age reinforced his knowledge and understanding of some of the challenges of getting older. Matt’s mission is to enable older or ailing adults, those who care for them, and the organisations which support them, to optimally function and ultimately flourish. He is a passionate Positive Ageing Advocate and wants to alter the impression organisations and nations have of ageing, to give it a more acceptable, positive image. He believes that everyone can influence their ageing process, and that all ‘apprentice’ older adults should be encouraged by the potential of an optimally functioning, flourishing, older population in society.