34
1 Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health An Introduction for Future Teachers

Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

  • Upload
    temple

  • View
    41

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health. An Introduction for Future Teachers. Prepared by the Minnesota Association for Children’s Mental Health. for the Minnesota Department of Education. Childhood Mental Illness. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

1

Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

An Introduction for Future Teachers

Page 2: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

2

Prepared by the MinnesotaAssociation for

Children’s Mental Health

for the Minnesota Department of Education

Page 3: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

3

Childhood Mental Illness

• All children go through rough times at school, with friends, or in their families

• Most common problems, such as sadness after a family move, clear up with time and maturity

• Consider three things if you suspect a student may be experiencing an emotional problem:– Frequency: how often does the student exhibit the

symptoms?– Duration: how long do they last?– Intensity: how severe are the symptoms?

Page 4: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

4

Childhood Mental Illness

Behaviors or moods that:– Are no longer age-appropriate– Are much more dramatic than in peers– Continue for longer than usual

should alert adults to investigate the possibility of a mental health (emotional or behavioral) disorder

Page 5: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

5

On Any Given Day…• Three million American children meet the clinical

criteria for mood disorders• 21% of children and adolescents have a

behavioral, emotional, or mental health problem• One out of every 20 Minnesota children is

identified with Severe Emotional Disturbance• Suicide is the second leading cause of death for

ages 15-34 in Minnesota. The overall suicide rate is double the homicide rate in the state

Page 6: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

6

Mental Illness Can Be Treated

• Children spend over half their waking hours in school - this makes teachers front line assistants in recognizing and assisting treatment

• Best practice includes therapy, possibly medication, and consistent behavioral support across settings (home, school, community)

• Every child with emotional or behavioral challenges has a possibility to succeed in life

Page 7: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

7

Mental Health Disorders May Be Difficult to Recognize

• Mental health disorders emerge during ongoing development and at times may look like misbehavior but are NOT the same

• Disorders in infancy, childhood, and adolescence may not have the same symptoms as in adulthood

Page 8: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

8

Early Intervention Can…

• Minimize effects on child and family• Lessen duration & severity of symptoms• Lessen disruption of normal development• Increase academic success• Increase social success• Reduce risk of legal system involvement• Reduce risk of family disruption and abuse• YOU are a key factor in early intervention

Page 9: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

9

Lecture 1

The Normal Brain and the Disordered Brain

Page 10: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

10

Focus:

• The structure and function of the normal brain

• Mental health disorders as brain disorders

• The brain and learning

Page 11: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

11

“I think educators ought to be interested in the brain because they teach brains! If you’re a classroom teacher, you’ve got about 30 of them in your room and I can’t imagine somebody who would teach a room full of brains who wouldn’t be interested in brains…If you’re involved in the development and maintenance of a brain, you need a kind of knowledge that is more than folklore knowledge.”

Robert Sylwester

Page 12: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

12

Major Brain Structures

• The brain is divided into several portions or “lobes,” each with a specific function

Page 13: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

13

Major Brain Structures

Frontal Lobe• Judgment• Planning• Creativity• Organization

Many Mental Health disorders involve problems in the frontal lobe

Page 14: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

14

Major Brain Structures

Parietal Lobe• Reception of sensory

information• Sends messages to the

limbs

Page 15: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

15

Major Brain Structures

Temporal Lobe• Hearing• Memory• Meaning• Language

Page 16: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

16

Major Brain Structures

Occipital Lobe• Vision

Page 17: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

17

Major Brain Structures

Cerebellum• Balance• Long-term memory• Motor movement

Page 18: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

18

Cross Section of the Brain

Outer Cortex• Sensory input• Motor movement

Page 19: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

19

Cross Section of the Brain

Brain Stem• Unconscious functions

– Breathing– Digestion– Heartbeat

Page 20: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

20

Cross Section of the Brain

Corpus Callosum• Bridges right and

left brain

Page 21: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

21

Cross Section of the Brain

Hippocampus• Memory

Page 22: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

22

Cross Section of the Brain

Cingulate Gyrus• Arousal

Page 23: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

23

Cross Section of the Brain

Basal Ganglia• Involuntary movement

Page 24: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

24

Cross Section of the Brain

Amygdala• Fear and arousal

regulator

Page 25: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

25

Basic Brain Structures:Nerve Cells

• Nerve cells - your brain has more connections than stars in the universe: 100 billion

• Require a steady supply of glucose & oxygen -- depressed or actually destroyed by alcohol, drugs, nicotine, caffeine, some medications, sleep deprivation, stress, lack of use, lack of intimacy

Page 26: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

26

Synapses & Neurotransmitters

• Electrical charges travel from cell body to tip of axon

• Tip releases chemical neurotransmitters which bridge the synapse to the receptor sites on the dendrite of another neuron

• This is the process of all learning!

Page 27: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

27

Prefrontal Cortex:Attention, Judgment, Emotions

• Functions– Attention span– Perseverance– Planning– Judgment– Impulse control– Organization– Self-monitoring– Problem solving– Critical thinking

– Forward thinking– Learning from

experience & mistakes– Ability to feel and

express emotions– Influences limbic

system– Empathy– Internal supervision

Page 28: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

28

• Problems– Distractibility– Lack of perseverance– Lack of impulse

control– Hyperactivity– Chronic lateness– Poor organization– Procrastination

– Unavailability of emotions

– Poor judgment– Trouble learning from

experience– Short term memory

problems– Social & test anxiety– Lying, confabulation– Misperceptions

Prefrontal Cortex:Attention, Judgment, Emotions

Page 29: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

29

Basal Ganglia: Movement, Emotions, Motivation• Functions

– Integrates feelings and movements

– Refines fine motor movements

– Suppresses unwanted movements

– Sets anxiety level– Enhances motivation– Pleasure

• Problems– Anxiety, panic– Negative thinking– Conflict avoidance– Muscle tension – Tremors, tics– Fine motor problems– Headaches– Low or excessive

motivation

Page 30: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

30

Recent Brain Based Research

• New developments in brain research allow for clear visualization of normal and disordered brains, at rest and at work– CAT scan– MRI scan– PET scan– SPECT scan

Page 31: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

31

Neurobiological Disorders

• Because of this new understanding, many new terms have been developed and promoted as more accurate than mental illness:– Neurobiological disorders– Brain or Bio-brain disorders– Neurobehavioral disorders– Neuropsychiatric disorders

Page 32: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

32

What are We Talking About?• The latest research shows that mental illnesses often

derive from brain malformations or malfunctioning

• Disruption of brain development, causing emotional or behavioral symptoms can be caused by:– Prenatal or early exposure to toxins– Situational crises– Chronic stress and anxiety – Malnutrition– Disease– A combination of these factors

Page 33: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

33

Risk Factors

• Many brain disorders cluster in families, showing a genetic component or predisposition

• Some symptoms relate to damage due to injury, infection, poor nutrition, or exposure to toxins

• Stressful life events, malnutrition, childhood maltreatment, and aggression may lead to short or long-term symptoms and increase the likelihood of adverse outcomes

Research shows both biological and psychosocialfactors influence the development of the brain, and brain disorders

Page 34: Unlocking the Mysteries of Children’s Mental Health

34

The Brain at Work = Learning

• What Helps – Safe environment– Meaningful tasks– Timely feedback– Varied input

• What Hinders– Anxiety – Distraction, aversion– Brain disorders