Are we doing enough for traumatized students?
A school in Idaho introduced trauma-informed practices five years ago and is seeing positive results including a 17% decrease in discipline issues. “This is fantastic,” said Leigh Peebles, the principal at Lewis and Clark Elementary. “Kids can’t just set traumatic incidents aside. We need to create a safe emotional environment before we can even talk about academics.” Peebles also sees an upward trend in academic achievement in the students.
A panel in the Philadelphia area says that teachers aren’t adequately prepared to deal with students who are experiencing trauma. Students can suffer trauma in many aspects, from neighborhood violence to an abusive home, and teachers need to take more steps to recognize the signs and know how to intervene.
In Los Angeles, one school’s mental health director says it is important to stick to routine in the wake of a traumatic event, such as a school shooting, even if it happens on the other side of the country. But teachers need to look for signs of trouble in students and talk to them”if there’s something at school that’s troubling you, if there’s another student that may have said something that’s concerning,” Pia Escudero said. “The children that don’t have someone to go to, the children that are feeling alienated … we look for those opportunities to teach them, to link them to resources.”
Dr. Pamela Cantor co-authored a study on the traumatic effects that the 9/11 attacks had on kids in New York. She found that big event trauma like those attacks had an impact on kids, but that daily stresses and trauma have more of an effect on kids feeling safe and secure in the learning environment of the classroom.
“There is a lot that parents, that one parent, can do or just one teacher can do to make a child feel protected and safe in the school classroom to foster a healthy learning environment,” Dr. Cantor says. Just being present and providing a sense of security, continuity, and acceptance in the child’s life can make all the difference in the world.”
Author
Reach education decision-makers without ads—and more importantly, without being ignored. Because here’s the reality: Most…
Assessment in the AI era is rapidly becoming one of the most disruptive shifts in…
Student attention in schools is quickly becoming one of the defining challenges of modern education…
What 15 episodes taught us about school safety is this: safety isn’t defined by policies,…
Education thought leadership often begins with a quiet frustration that exists across classrooms, district offices,…
COPPA in schools is reshaping how educators use technology, protect student data, and build trust…