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Title: Creating%20Trauma%20Sensitive%20Schools


1
Creating Trauma Sensitive Schools

2
Acknowledgements
  • These materials have been gathered created by a
    work group organized by the Wisconsin Department
    of Public Instruction. This group came together
    around a shared passion for helping to heal
    children who have been victims of trauma. These
    people shared their time expertise to
  • support schools in their journey to become more
    aware of the impact that trauma has on learning,
    behavior development and
  • foster school environments where all students can
    grow learn.
  • Pamela Black, Kenosha Unified School District
  • Paula Buege, Wisconsin Family Ties
  • Sara Daniel, School Based Services - St.
    Aemilian-Lakeside, Inc.
  • Nic Dibble, Wisconsin Department of Pubic
    Instruction
  • Christine Dunning, University of
    Wisconsin-Milwaukee
  • Elizabeth Hudson, Wisconsin Department of Health
    Services
  • Supported in part by a grant from
  • the Wisconsin Department of Health Services.

3
Sources of Information
  • Helping Traumatized Children Learn
  • Massachusetts Advocates for Children 2005
    http//www.massadvocates.org/helping_traumatized_c
    hildren_learn
  • The Heart of Learning Teaching Compassion,
    Resiliency Academic Success
  • Wolpow, Ray Johnson, Mona M. Hertel, Ron
    Kincaid, Susan O. 2009 http//k12.wa.us/Compassio
    nateSchools/HeartofLearning.aspx
  • Creating Sanctuary in Schools 1995
  • Bloom, Sandra http//www.sanctuaryweb.com/Documen
    ts/Sanctuary20in20the20School.pdf
  • Child Trauma Toolkit for Educators
  • National Child Traumatic Stress Network
    http//www.nctsnet.org/nctsn_assets/pdfs/Child_Tra
    uma_Toolkit_Final.pdf

4
Overview
  • Trauma defined
  • Prevalence of trauma
  • Impact of trauma
  • Steps to creating trauma-sensitive schools
  • Self care
  • Next steps

5
Trauma-Specific Therapy vs. Trauma-Sensitive
School
  • Therapy
  • School
  • Licensed clinical mental health professionals
  • Intervention occurs in therapists office in 11
    or group sessions
  • Focus is on addressing trauma reactions
    reducing symptoms
  • Licensed educators student services
    professionals with varied mental health training
  • Sensitivity accommodations occur throughout the
    school
  • Focus is on students educational success through
    emotional physical safety, empowerment, trust,
    choice, collaboration

6
Trauma Defined
  • Trauma exposure vs. trauma reaction
  • Acute trauma - PTSD
  • Complex/developmental trauma

7
What about our school/district?
  • Do we have students who .
  • witness domestic violence?
  • are physically, emotionally or sexually abused?
  • are neglected?
  • are homeless?
  • have family members who are fighting overseas in
    Iraq or Afghanistan?
  • have experienced a natural disaster (e.g.,
    tornado, house fire)?

8
What about our school/district?
  • Do we have students who .
  • have been in a serious accident (e.g., car
    accident)?
  • have been a victim of physical or sexual assault?
  • have lost a loved one?
  • live in homes with family members who abuse
    alcohol or other drugs?
  • live in homes with family members with untreated
    mental illness?

9
Prevalence Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE)
StudyCenters for Disease Control Prevention
  • Household dysfunction
  • Substance abuse 27
  • Parental separation/divorce 23
  • Mental illness 19
  • Battered mother 13
  • Incarcerated household member 5
  • Abuse
  • Psychological 11
  • Physical 28
  • Sexual 21
  • Neglect
  • Emotional 15
  • Physical 10

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
10
Health risks associated with ACEs
  • Outcomes
  • Autoimmune disorders
  • Obesity eating disorders
  • Substance use disorders
  • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
  • Depression
  • Fetal death
  • Health-related quality of life
  • Ischemic heart disease (IHD)
  • Liver disease
  • Risk for intimate partner violence
  • Sexually transmitted infections (STIs)
  • Unintended pregnancies
  • Behaviors
  • School Absenteeism tardies truancy
  • Dysregulated eating (under overeating)
  • Smoking
  • Suicide attempts
  • Illicit drug use substance abuse
  • Multiple sexual partners
  • Self-injurious behaviors (e.g., cutting)

11
Impact of Trauma over the Life Span
  • Effects of
  • childhood
  • adverse experiences
  • neurological
  • biological
  • psychological
  • social

12
  • Adverse Childhood Experiences
  • (ACE) Study
  • Summary of Findings
  • Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) are very
    common
  • ACEs are strong predictors of health risks
    disease from adolescence to adulthood
  • This combination of findings makes ACEs one of
    the leading, if not the leading determinant of
    the health social well-being of our nation

CDC
13
ACE School Performance
  • Traumatized children are
  • 2.5x more likely to fail a grade in school
  • score lower on standardized achievement tests
  • have more struggles in receptive expressive
    language
  • are suspended expelled more often
  • more frequently placed in special education

14
Impact of Trauma on the Child
  • Cognitive/academic
  • Physical
  • Emotional
  • Spiritual
  • Developmental

15
Impact on Relationships
  • Relationships are developed through the emotional
    bond between the child primary caregiver. It is
    through this relationship we learn to
  • Regulate emotions/self soothe
  • Develop trust in others
  • Freely explore our environment
  • Understand ourselves others
  • Understand that we can impact the world around us

16
Impact on WorldviewTypical Development vs.
Developmental Trauma
  • Basic mistrust of adults/inability to depend on
    others
  • Belief that the world is an unsafe place/bad
    things will happen they are usually my fault
  • Assumption that others will not like me
  • Fear pessimism about future
  • Feelings of hopelessness lack of control
  • Nurturing stable attachments with adults
  • Belief in a predictable benevolent world/
    generally good things will happen to me
  • Feeling of positive self-worth /others will see
    my strengths
  • Optimism about the future
  • Feeling that I can have a positive impact on the
    world

17
Impact on Learning
  • Organizing narrative material
  • Cause effect
  • Taking another's perspective
  • Attentiveness
  • Regulating emotions
  • Executive functioning
  • Engaging in curriculum

18
Impact on Classroom Behavior
  • Reactivity impulsivity
  • Aggression
  • Defiance
  • Withdrawal
  • Perfectionism

19
Impact on the Brain
  • If there is danger, the thinking brain shuts
    down, allowing the doing brain to act
  • Traumatized children experience changes in brain
    structures, neuro-chemistry genetic expression

20
Trauma-Sensitive Schools
  • Trauma-sensitive schools acknowledge the
    prevalence of traumatic occurrence in students
    lives create a flexible framework that provides
    universal supports, is sensitive to unique needs
    of students, is mindful of avoiding
  • re-traumatization.

21
Steps to Create a Trauma- Sensitive School
  1. Engage leadership
  2. Perform assessment
  3. Review literature
  4. Provide training
  5. Implement classroom strategies

22
Step 1 Engage Leadership
  • Administrative direction commitment
  • Priority for school improvement
  • Necessary resources allocated
  • Tie into existing related initiatives (e.g.,
    RtI/PBIS)

23
Using Trauma-Sensitive Strategies to Improve
Learning A Response to Intervention (RtI) Model
  • Tier 3/Targeted Strategies 1-5
  • Intensive FBA BIP
  • Wrap-around services
  • Intensive case management
  • IEPs/504 plans
  • Parent caregiver training support
  • 1-5 Tier 3/Targeted Descriptors
  • Individual students
  • Assessment-based
  • Intense, durable procedures
  • Tier 2/Selective Strategies 5-15
  • BCT process
  • Screening
  • Monitoring, e.g., Check Connect
  • Community referrals
  • Parent caregiver education
  • Classroom supports
  • 504 plans/IEPs
  • Brief FBA BIP
  • Small group interventions
  • Some individualizing
  • 5-15 Tier 2/Selective Descriptors
  • Some students (higher-risk)
  • High efficiency
  • Early detection
  • Rapid response
  • 80-90 Tier 1/Universal Descriptors
  • All settings, all students, all staff
  • Preventive, proactive
  • Trauma-sensitive
  • Tier 1/Universal Strategies 80-90
  • School policies, culture climate
  • Behavior management
  • Instructional practices approaches
  • Modeling
  • Classroom consultation
  • Comprehensive School Counseling Model

24
Step 2 Assessment
  • School culture
  • School climate
  • Strengths/needs
  • Current programs strategies
  • Gaps in services
  • Policy procedures
  • Resources

25
Step 3 Review Literature Explore Model
Implementation
  • Massachusetts Advocates of Children
    http//www.massadvocates.org/helping_traumatized_c
    hildren_learn
  • Washington State The Heart of Learning and
    Teaching http//k12.wa.us/CompassionateSchools/Hea
    rtofLearning.aspx
  • Creating Sanctuary in Schools by Sandra Bloom
    http//www.sanctuaryweb.com/Documents/Sanctuary20
    in20the20School.pdf
  • Child Trauma Toolkit for Educators
  • http//www.nctsnet.org/nctsn_assets/pdfs/Child_Tr
    auma_Toolkit_Final.pdf
  • Visit or consult with schools that are
    trauma-sensitive

26
Step 4 Provide Staff Training
  • Todays In-service
  • Additional training to encourage
  • Relationships that enhance learning
  • Attention
  • Affection
  • Attunement
  • Classroom strategies to establish
  • Safety
  • Empowerment
  • Collaboration
  • Choice
  • Trust
  • Understanding the dynamics of interpersonal,
    community historical violence

27
Step 5 Classroom Strategies to establish SAFETY
  • Clear consistent rules
  • for managing behavior
  • setting limits
  • Accommodations to meet
  • individual strengths needs
  • Predictable structure, relationships,
    environment
  • Reduce bullying harassment
  • Use seclusion/restraint only as a last resort

28
Step 5 Classroom Strategies to establish
EMPOWERMENT
  • Embed mental health instruction into curriculum
    by teaching
  • Coping skills
  • Self-regulation skills
  • Provide guided opportunities for meaningful
    participation
  • Maintaining high behavioral academic
    expectations
  • Build on strengths
  • Build competency

29
Step 5 Classroom Strategies to establish
COLLABORATION
  • School Staff
  • Building Consultation Team (BCT)
  • Identify triggers (FBA)
  • Classroom consultation
  • Students
  • Family
  • Family education
  • Family training support
  • Community
  • Community referrals
  • Wrap around services
  • Community partnerships

30
Step 5 Classroom Strategies to establish CHOICE
  • Adult works with student to create self-care plan
    to address triggers
  • Identify triggers
  • Eliminate trigger or create coping strategies to
    deal with triggers
  • Collaborative Problem Solving (Lost at School -
    Greene, R.)
  • Giving choices alternatives
  • Comfort rooms
  • Learn about lower brain interventions
  • Sensory diets
  • Safe acceptable expression of feelings

31
Step 5 Classroom Strategies to establish TRUST
  • Relationship with the educator based on
  • Unconditional positive regard for all students
  • Checking assumptions, observing questioning
  • Being a relationship coach

32
Self Care as an Ethical Obligation
  • We cant teach what we dont know.
  • We cant lead where we wont go.
  • Malcolm X
  • You cannot give away that
  • which you do not have.
  • Juli Alvarado
  • Coaching For Life

33
Progression of Burnout
  • Compassion
  • ?
  • Empathy
  • ?
  • Vicarious/Secondary Trauma
  • ?
  • Compassion Fatigue
  • ?
  • Burnout

34
Cycle of Compassion
35
Next Steps
  • What would we like to start doing?

36
For more information on Creating Trauma-Sensitive
Schools
  • Toolkit http//www.dpi.wi.gov/sspw/mhtrauma.html
  • Contact
  • Nic Dibble, Education Consultant, School Social
    Work Services
  • Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction
    nic.dibble_at_dpi.wi.gov
  • Sara Daniel, School Based Services Coordinator at
    St. Aemilian-Lakeside, Inc. sdaniel_at_st-al.org
  • Sara provides training consultation on
    trauma-sensitive schools direct service to
    children families to support success at school
  • Christine Dunning University of
    Wisconsin-Milwaukee cdunning_at_uwm.edu
  • Chris provides training, education
    consultation on trauma trauma-sensitive schools

37
Credits
  • Child Trauma Academy (Dr. Bruce Perry),
    http//childtrauma.org
  • National Child Traumatic Stress Network,
    http//www.nctsnet.org
  • National Center for Trauma Informed Care,
    http//mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/nctic/
  • The Emotional Brain, J LeDoux
  • Affective Neuroscience The Foundation of Human
    and Animal Emotions, J.P. Panksepp
  • Bessel van der Kolk, http//www.traumacenter.org
  • Juli Alvarado, http//www.coaching-forlife.com/
  • Dr. Robert Anda, CDC (ACE Study)
  • Helping Traumatized Children Learn, Massachusetts
    Advocates for Children 2005
  • Understanding Traumatic Stress in Children Bassuk
    M.D., Ellen L. Konnath LICSW, Kristina, Volk
    MA., Katherine T.
  • The Heart of Learning and Teaching Compassion,
    Resiliency Academic Success Wolpow, Ray
    Johnson, Mona M. Hertel, Ron Kincaid, Susan O.
    2009
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