Upload
debra
View
33
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
The T exas H omeless E ducation O ffice. Creating Trauma Informed Schools: A Helpful Approach to Working with Highly Mobile Students. Who are Highly Mobile Students? Homeless In Foster Care/Wards of the State Unaccompanied Youth Military Migrant Undocumented Runaway. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Citation preview
Creating Trauma Informed Schools: A Helpful Approach to Working with Highly Mobile Students
The Texas Homeless Education Office
Who are Highly Mobile Students?
Homeless
In Foster Care/Wards of the State
Unaccompanied Youth
Military
Migrant
Undocumented
Runaway
Impact of High Mobility
Higher rates of acute and chronic illness, depression and anxiety; experiences of trauma and loss
For unaccompanied youth, lack of support from any caring adult
Unaccompanied youth are frequently victimized. As many as half have been assaulted or robbed; one in ten runaways reports being raped – likely a low report
According to the National Runaway Switchboard, 5,000 unaccompanied youth die each year from assault, illness, or suicide
Perform lower on academic assessments 75% of unaccompanied homeless youth do not graduate Runaway youth often know what they are running from
but have no realistic idea of what they are running to
Many students are homeless due to traumatic events
Over half of callers to Runaway Hotline report being physically abused at home; over one-third report sexual abuse; over two-thirds report that at least one of their parents abuses drugs or alcohol – single most common predictor of runaway behavior
Other youth are thrown out of their homes because they are pregnant, gay or lesbian, or because their parents believe they are old enough to take care of themselves
Some children and youth are abandoned by their parents, or are on their own due to death of parents
Domestic Violence plays a role in homelessness
Some children and youth are in unstable living situations due to parental incarceration, illness, or hospitalization
Many students are homeless due to traumatic events
Over half of youth living in shelters report that their parents either told them to leave, or knew they were leaving and did not care
Some youth become homeless with their families, but, due to lack of space in doubled-up or motel situations, end up homeless on their own
Natural disasters cause youth to be separated from family during their homelessness
Aging out of foster care into homelessness; running away from foster care placements due to abuse in the foster home, or to reconnect with siblings and family
Being in a highly mobile situation hurts children:
Grief due to Loss of family, home, possessions, school, community, friends, sense of belonging, self-esteem and
identity Live in strange, chaotic, overcrowded situations
Live in dangerous street situations vulnerable to sex, drug trafficking and other victimization
Live in fear, worry and confusion, take on adult concerns
Repeated trauma impacts brain development and behavior; and normal childhood development
Highly mobile children are 2 to 4 times more likely to have serious physical and/or mental health issues
Runaway and kicked-out youth often experience abuse, neglect, conflict, vulnerability, loss, and
trauma
This often results in a student that has difficulty focusing, attending, sitting still, keeping up,
participating, having resources, and/or controlling feelings and behaviors.
Unfortunately schools often treat these behaviors as discipline issues with punitive interventions
Runaway Youth who are Unaccompanied often Experience Trauma
What is Trauma?
Trauma is any experience that threatens injury, pain and/or death
Trauma experiences overwhelm the natural coping mechanisms of a person
Trauma experiences may be experienced first hand or witnessed happening to others
Trauma experiences leave one in fear, disbelief, without hope, and feeling powerlessness and out of control
What is Trauma?
Not all highly mobile students have experienced Big “T” Trauma
Even small “t” trauma can cause issues for students
Everyone experiences trauma differently, and reacts differently
Everyone has defense mechanisms
Everyone develops coping skills
Common traumatic experiences
Big T Experiences: violence, physical and/or sexual abuse, severe neglect, disasters, bullying, divorce, death, accidents, loss, extreme instability
Little t Experiences: mobility, loss of: home, community, neighborhood, school, housing; moving in with strangers, losing track of loved ones, losing friends, losing mentors, feeling lost in new school and unfamiliar school surroundings and behind in school work
Experiences that are big T to one child may be little t to another and vice versa; sometimes little t traumas tend to be minimized or negated
What is Complex Trauma and how does it affect a child?
Exposure to: Multiple events and/or prolonged exposure Invasive and interpersonal Simultaneous and sequential occurrences
Can have wide-ranging and lasting effects on developmental functioning
Affects a child’s physical, social, emotional and spiritual well-being
Affects a child’s ability to think, learn and concentrate Affects impulse control, self-regulation Affects self-image and ability to build relationships with others Affects trust building and attachment
Trauma gets carried into the school
Trauma undermines a child’s ability: To Learn To form relationships To self-regulate and behave appropriately
Schools should be aware so as not to compound the trauma
Schools can have a positive impact that helps build resiliency through appropriate response
Common traumatic experiences affect individual children differently
Why is the same event traumatic and overwhelming for one child and not for another?
1. Child’s own resilience and protective factors
2. How trauma is responded to is often the key factor in healing
Resiliency
Is the ability to bounce back from difficult and/or traumatic experiences
Is the ability to develop positive coping mechanisms
Is the ability to thrive not just survive
Protective factors include:Child’s own strengths/predispositionFamily and environmental strengthsFamily and societal response to traumaLearned coping skills
Resiliency: Intrinsic and Extrinsic Protective Factors
The intrinsic factors are seen as three building blocks that are necessary for resilience: A secure base – the child feels a sense of belonging
and security Good self-esteem – an internal sense of worth and
competence A sense of self-efficacy – a sense of mastery and
control, along with an accurate understanding of personal strengths and limitations.
Resiliency
The extrinsic factors are described as:
at least one secure attachment relationship
access to wider supports such as extended family and friends
positive childhood, school and or community experiences
This framework provides a useful basis for informing assessment
Factors promoting resilience in all phases of the lifecycle: • Strong social support networks. • The presence of at least one unconditionally supportive
parent or parent substitute. • A committed mentor or other person from outside the family. • Positive school experiences. • A sense of mastery and a belief that one’s own efforts can
make a difference. • Participation in a range of extra-curricular activities. • The capacity to re-frame adversities so that the beneficial as
well as the damaging effects are recognized. • The ability – or –opportunity – to ‘make a difference’ by
helping others • Not to be excessively sheltered from challenging situations
that provide opportunities to develop coping skills
Assessment
The behavior – all behavior has meaning Traumatic incident or experiences Mobility Stability Psychosocial history Resiliency factors The intrinsic factors: child’s healthy development, strengths,
coping skills, world view The extrinsic factors, family, environment, friends, school,
community, - at least one secure attached relationship Coping mechanisms New skill development
Coping Mechanisms
The means a child has for dealing with and making sense of their experiences
Coping Mechanisms may work in some settings but be viewed as inappropriate/ a cause for discipline in others
Tearing down defenses and removing coping mechanisms too soon can be harmful
Removing a coping mechanism without assisting the student to develop others can be harmful
Schools may not be able to provide the student with their home, room,
neighborhood, family members, lost friends, possessions, or remove the traumatic
incident, but school can provide: school stability, sense of community, security,
safety, lack of triggers, predictable routines, opportunities for self-esteem building, sense
of belonging, and opportunities for empowerment – ability to make choices,
experiencing mastery
Schools can provide stability
Schools can assist the traumatized student
Schools are the significant community for children Teachers are primary role models and a source of
safe relationships Trauma Sensitive school environment benefits:
1. Children with known trauma2. Children with unidentified trauma –
probably the greater number than those with known trauma, as much goes unreported
3. Peers impacted by traumatized class mates
What is a trauma informed approach?
Trauma-informed care is an approach to engaging students with histories of trauma that recognizes the presence of trauma symptoms and acknowledges the role that trauma has played in their lives.
TIC seeks to change the paradigm from one that asks, "What's wrong with you?" to one that asks, "What has happened to you?"
Schools can provide stability
23
What does a Trauma Informed School Look Like
Taking on, Identifying and addressing barriers:
1. Tendency to see trauma as a child and home problem, not the school’s problem
2. Blaming the student or parent3. Staff feelings of helplessness and being
overwhelmed – parallels traumatized child’s feelings – can seem contagious
4. Balancing the individual student’s need and the rest of the class as a whole
5. Lack of skills and resources for handling trauma6. Lack of support and consultation for staff7. Role confusion of the teacher and mental health
professionals8. Fear
24
What does a Trauma Informed School Look Like?
Creating: Flexible framework and policy review Full staff training and participation Consistent interactions Understanding of triggers – de-trigger the environment Staff sensitivity training Understand the connection between experience, emotion and
behavior – Children don’t understand why they do things, if teachers don’t understand either they will continue to be punitive
Understand the traumatized child must learn skills to control their response to triggers
All healing comes from positive relationships Use interventions other than punishment Appropriate evaluation Referral resources and partnerships, i.e., therapists Classroom structure with predictable and clear limits and rules
Susan
Susan, age 16, has a fight with her mother and leaves home. She shows up at school the next day with a black eye. She is wearing the same clothes she had on the day before. She does not have her assignments completed. She gets angry with her teacher when her teacher chastises her for not doing her homework. She tells the teacher she has more important things to worry about than her silly homework assignments and bursts into tears.
How do you think the teacher is likely to handle this situation?How do you think the teacher should handle this situation?How would you advise the teacher?What would you do to help Susan?Is this a big T or little t trauma for Susan?How might the teacher’s response help or hurt the situation?
Bob
Bob is 16 years old and is trying to break free of gang involvement. In order to protect his family, he moves from friend to friend’s house, and has changed schools twice to avoid gang members. Bob has been in numerous fights because of his gang involvement, and has done a number of things that he is very regretful about. Bob is behind in his classes. His teachers report that he is often tardy or misses school, doesn’t seem to pay attention in class, often is daydreaming, and jumps at noises like dropped books, raised voices or even when the bell rings. The teacher tells you that she thinks Bob is lazy and just not interested in succeeding in school.
What do you think might be going on with Bob?How would you advise this teacher?Can you identify any intrinsic or extrinsic resiliency factors for Bob?
Jesse
Jesse Montoya, 15 was living with his parents near Juarez. Jesse has seen several people shot and killed. His best friend was knifed as he and Jesse walked home from school. His parents sent him to stay with his aunt and uncle in Austin in order to escape the violence. His aunt and uncle report that Jesse is angry and hostile with them. Yet at school his teachers report that he is very quiet, shy, and docile. He doesn’t do well in class because he never asks questions about things he doesn’t understand, and mostly doesn’t seem interested in the subjects. Because he doesn’t cause any problems in class, most of his teachers just ignore him believing him incapable of the work.
What would you do first to assess Jesse’s situation?What intrinsic and extrinsic resiliency factors can you identify?How would you advise his teachers?How would you advise his aunt and uncle?
Jimmy, age 17 ran away from foster care for the third time. He is staying between the houses of two aunts. CPS has custody and knows where he is, but is not going to return him to a foster home. Jimmy has a long history of abuse both in his birth family and in two of his 16 foster placements since he first came into care at age 8. Jimmy enrolls himself in school and attends every day. However, he does not seem to make friends, and does not join in any of the activities at school. His teachers say he is distant and unreachable. His school work is below average, but he offers no excuses or explanations when his teachers’ question him about the poor quality of his work.
How would you assess this situation?What intrinsic and extrinsic resiliency factors can you identify?How would you advise his teachers?How would you advise Jimmy?
Jimmy
Mary Lou
Mary Lou Jones, 17 is living in a van. She ran away from home because of her stepfather’s abuse. Mary Lou wants to enroll in your district. She believes she was immunized in Arkansas where she lived with her mother and stepfather. She cannot afford to get her records from Arkansas since she owes a book fine of $47. She is afraid to contact the school in case it notifies her mother and stepfather. The school registrar tells Mary Lou that she cannot enroll without a parent or guardian, and she needs to park her van elsewhere, out of your district. The registrar tells Mary Lou that if she registers for school, the district has to report her to CPS and they will send her back to her mother and stepfather.
How would you advise the school registrar?How would you advise Mary Lou?What kinds of things would you address in an assessment?What are the intrinsic and extrinsic resiliency factors?
30
Trauma Informed teaching approaches
Welcoming environment = sense of belongingSafe environment= calm, orderly, clear limits and rulesConsistently and fairly apply rulesIdentify strengths/competence = positive relationshipsPredictability = safetyTransitions without trauma = preparation & practicePositive behavioral supports = not punitiveWhat happened to you not what’s wrong with you approach that looks behind the behavior to feelingsLanguage - put words to feelings = understanding, self-awareness and clarityCreative play = to be a child, to safely express emotionProvide choices = empowermentOpportunities for empowerment = safety and control
ResourcesThe Texas Homeless Education Office (THEO) www.utdanacenter.org/theoThe National Association for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth: www.naehcy.org
Report: “Helping Traumatized Children Learn” Supportive school environments for children traumatized by family violence, http://www.massadvocates.org/download-book.php
Jeanne Stamp, LCSW, LMFT, LCDC, ACSW Senior Program Coordinator 512-475-6898 1-800-446-3142 (hotline) [email protected]
Resources
ResourcesThe Texas Homeless Education Office (THEO) www.utdanacenter.org/theoThe National Association for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth: www.naehcy.org
Report: “Helping Traumatized Children Learn” Supportive school environments for children traumatized by family violence, http://www.massadvocates.org/download-book.php
Jeanne Stamp, LCSW, LMFT, LCDC, ACSW Senior Program Coordinator 512-475-6898 1-800-446-3142 (hotline) [email protected]/theo