MEET YOUR COURSE TRAINERS
NDIS & Support Worker Online Course
In a world that feels fast and overwhelming, many of us, especially those navigating disability and caregiving roles, can experience stress, burnout, isolation, and disconnection from the self, others and the natural world. This course offers a different path for NDIS workers and clients. A soft and evidence-based approach that gently brings nature back into the centre of care.
This online course is a practical and accessible application of ecopsychology (ecotherapy), designed specifically for NDIS staff and those supporting clients with diverse needs and abilities. It explores how reconnecting with the living world, whether indoors or outdoors, can support emotional, psychological, and physical well-being.
Across the course, you will discover the core principles of ecotherapy and learn how to integrate simple, adaptable nature-based practices into everyday support. From sensory engagement and nature-based creativity to outdoor experiences and therapeutic exercises, this approach meets people where they are. This course honours mobility, preferences, ancestral wisdom, and choice.
This course opens the door to deeper calm, stronger relationships, a renewed sense of purpose, and more holistic care for both clients and those who support them.
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Led by Dr Geoff Berry of Nature Calling, along with Ecotherapists Sarah Frustie and Leah Muller, this course will guide you in integrating nature into your NDIS or Support Worker role, in a way that is both effective and transformative. You’ll gain the knowledge and confidence to help yourself and your clients to reconnect with the healing power of the natural world, offering a much-needed alternative to the pressures of modern life.
Dr Geoff Berry
Australian Representative
International Ecopsychology Society
Sarah Frustié
Psychotherapist and Ecotherapist, Adelaide and Online
BIO
Dr Geoff Berry
Principle Trainer, Broulee NSW
BIO
I’ve been training therapists for over ten years now, bringing ecopsychology, myth and ritual, symbol and metaphor to the game in a process of mutual evolution. I feel very privileged to help people make meaning and unlearn some of the bad habits we internalise with modern socialisation. This way we can make space for mysterious, wonderful, synchronicities, realisations and access points to the sacred every day.
As a PACFA and ACA Registered Academic, i also teach trauma informed practice, which i trained and worked in for over five years.
Leah Muller
Psychotherapist and Ecotherapist, Cairns FNQ and Online
BIO
What's included?
The Nature Calling NDIS & Support Worker Online Course includes:
- Three videos, with slides and a spoken presentation to guide you through the basics and more
- Practical Exercises
- Additional resources and links
FAQ for the Nature for NDIS and Support Workers Course to Ecotherapy Course
What are the 3 Modules covered in this course?
Module 1: How Nature Supports You to Support Others!
- Ecotherapist and Forest Bathing Guide Sarah Frustie introduces the beautiful, foundational elements of this nurturing practice in this 50 minute video.
Module 2: Techniques to Integrate Nature into our Busy Lives
- Ecotherapist and Art Therapist Leah Muller takes you deeper into ways to work with nature for your benefit and in support of others (83 minutes).
Module 3: Bringing Nature into Everyday Life and Work
- Sarah and Leah combine their super powers to help you to integrate the learning from the course in this video, which will guide you to feel connected to and supported by nature every day! (77 minutes watch time)
What is the time commitment for this course?
The course is self-paced and available in complete once you have paid to access it.
The Modules comprise of slide sets accompanied by pre-recorded videos, presented by the trainers, to ensure that personal touch. Watching the videos takes between 50 and 90 minutes per module, but they also include practical activities, journalling suggestions and further reading/watching.
Hence, generally speaking, you should allow for about an hour or two for each Module, depending on how much of the extra exercises you want to do.
Are there assessments for the course?
There are no assessments, but suggestions are given to help you deepen your understanding of the materials. These come as journaling ideas, or exercises you can do yourself in nature (or even sometimes indoors).
If you would like to go deeper on this journey, take a look at the International Certificate in Applied Ecopsychology course, which is a substantial deep dive into the world of applied ecopsychology. Accredited by the IES (International Ecopsychology Society), this is the premier training in Australia for those who want to integrate ecotherapy into their counselling or psychology practice (*prerequisites apply).
Can PD hours be claimed for the course?
While it is up to individual peak bodies such as PACFA, the ACA, AAPi or the APS to regulate members’ Professional Development attendance and completion, this online course could be used to claim for 3 hours (or equivalent points) in the year it is completed.
Are payment plans available?
This online short course has been released at a very competitive rate, which means that payment plans are not available.
Can i practice as an ecotherapist with this qualification?
This course is designed to give you an overview of ways that ecotherapy can support your work as an NDIS or Support Worker. IT also offers ideas for how you can begin to integrate nature into your own busy life.
In order to call yourself an Ecotherapist in Australia, the International Ecopsychology Society require a minimum of 8 months or over 270 hours of training. It was for this reason that Nature Calling created the International Certificate in Applied Ecopsychology, which fulfills these requirements as an official IES School. Upon completion of the ICAE, you can become a member with the IES as well as adding their badge to your materials. (*NB: prerequisites apply for this course; you must already have adequate counselling and/or coaching skills to join, and you must complete all assessments.)
Geoff Introduces himself and his Ecotherapy journey
Structure is at the heart of confidence
Nature Calling's commitment to Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders
The Nature Calling commitment to Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders has a long and proud history. Respect for First Nations peoples is woven throughout the course and knowledge that Geoff has learned from mob on Country and through his studies is always acknowledged with the story and the people behind it.
Geoff has been a proud ally of First Nations peoples the world over all his life, but it was in the early 2000s, while studying for his Masters in dreams and myth, that Geoff first volunteered at ANTaR, Australians for Native Title and Reconciliation, in Melbourne (Naarm). He raised over 10K through a series of concert events under the title Come Together, which featured Aboriginal artists such as Vika and Linda alongside popular acts like Augie March and Shane Howard, in a celebratory atmosphere that welcomed large crowds of both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal peoples. A live CD was produced out of these gigs, which was sold as another, ongoing fundraiser by ANTaR. All funds raised supported the successful campaign for the Yorta Yorta peoples to gain co-management of the Barmah-Millewa National Park.
Through his research for this project, Geoff came across the work of anthropologist John Bradley, who was living and working with and for the Yanyuwa people of North-East Arnhem Land. John was recording the Songlines, or more accurately the Country Lines, of the Yanyuwa, at their request, first in a hand drawn atlas and then in animated versions. Designed to bring generations of Yanyuwa together and pass on priceless knowledge of their Country, the stories also expressed a living, breathing, animate world in which humans related to the more-than-human with respect and reciprocity. This is what myth can really do – breath life into consciousness, so that we awaken to the spirit of place as part of a bigger picture, a whole cosmos of potential filled with relationships between beings, places and even elements. Geoff asked John if he could share his interpretations of the Yanyuwa Country Lines (not the stories themselves, which can only be told by traditional owners) with a wider audience and John asked the Yanyuwa elders, who agreed that he could talk about their stories with respect and honour.
More recently, having moved to the far south coast of NSW, Geoff found himself living amongst the Walbanja peoples of the Yuin Nation, and helped set up the South Coast NSW Aboriginal Elders, where he was the inaugural CEO before handing over operations to the Elders. Geoff has many stories of learning from ‘mob’ over the years and worked closely with Aboriginal families on the coast as part of his role in training people to care for traumatised children. He has also learnt from a Hopi spiritual leader and was befriended by Jerome Bernstein, famous for his work with Navajo or Dine people in the great Southwest of America. But that’s another set of stories (amongst others).
Nowadays, in his work training ecotherapists with Nature Calling, Geoff always pays respect to the Aboriginal peoples who cared for the Country they are working on over countless generations. The team at Nature Calling recognise the need for decolonisation, as a way of educating ourselves about Aboriginal land and the special relationship First Nations peoples have with it. Geoff is also quick to point out that we cannot let an Acknowledgement of Country become a token display but should engage in it to help us connect with our feelings for Country and its traditional owners in a real and respectful way. At Nature Calling events, we use a variety of Acknowledgments, which pay respect to Elders past, present and emerging, and celebrate Aboriginal connections to Country that are part of a deep history of identification with nature that is unbroken and unceded.
Geoff engages local Elders to offer a Welcome to Country whenever possible, while reminding participants that when this is not possible, we must remember that Elders have more pressing commitments to their own people and cannot always fit in sharing their priceless culture with non-Aboriginal Australians. In fact, he relates that Elders encourage all Australians to reconcile with the earth, to listen deeply to nature as a way of learning to understand a little of how Aboriginal peoples feel about their Country. This requires us to reconnect with the cultures of our own ancestors, as well as to tune into the land and waters and elements in the here and now, as two ways we can reconnect with Country, alongside paying respect to the traditional owners.
Questions
If you would like to know more about my services, please feel free to contact me at geoff@naturecalling.org
Address: Broulee, far south coast, NSW Australia.
Zoom: Geoff Berry
Availability: online anytime, unless I am out listening to nature calling
