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Cloquet school adopts restorative approach [PineJournal.com]

When 15-year-old Marcia (not her real name) got caught selling marijuana and prescription pills, she was given the opportunity to go through the Carlton County Restorative Justice program rather than the juvenile criminal justice system. The RJ program requires offenders to participate in a “sentencing circle” with their own parent or support system, the victims of the crime, trained community members and one or two “circle keepers,” who lead the group. They literally sit in a circle and...

Is Universal Pre-K Worth The Cost? [ChildTrends.org]

Public interest in and funding for public pre-K programs have significantly risen over the past few decades. In general, pre-K programs serve 4-year-olds the year before they enter kindergarten , and most are targeted toward at-risk children. However, some state and local governments have made public pre-K “universal,” meaning these programs are open to all 4-year-olds. Evaluations of universal pre-K programs in Tulsa (Okla.), Boston , Georgia , and Florida [i] have demonstrated that they...

A University Is Threatening to Punish Students Who Discuss Their Suicidal Thoughts With Friends [NYMag.com]

In the winter of 2015, a student at Northern Michigan University named Katerina Klawes sought out help at the university’s counseling office. She had been sexually assaulted in July of 2014 and wanted to talk about her experiences with a professional. On March 25, 2015, she got an alarming email from Mary Brundage, associate dean of students at NMU, which read, in part, as follows: Dear Kat, I received a report that others are worried about your well-being. I’d like to meet with you to...

The mindboggling barriers that colleges create — and that end up hurting their own students [HerchingerReport.org]

A student at a Massachusetts private college learns midway through a semester that his financial aid is less than he expected. Since he can’t afford the difference, the college embargoes his transcript for that term and his grades from the previous two years — even though he’d already paid for those — preventing him from transferring to another institution willing to charge him less. At a public university in Minnesota, students in similar situations lose their meal plans halfway through a...

A Congressional Briefing on RESILIENCE [PreventChildAbuse.org]

Yesterday in Washington D.C., Prevent Child Abuse America held a congressional briefing on the topics of toxic stress, ACEs, and the documentary film RESILIENCE. Our President and CEO Dan Duffy joined with Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) and an expert panel to discuss the science, solutions and national movement to prevent childhood trauma, treat toxic stress, and improve the health of future generations of American leaders, innovators and entrepreneurs. We were fortunate enough to have a...

The Health Threats Mark Zuckerberg’s Gift Doesn’t Address [LinkedIn.com]

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s announcement that he and his wife, pediatrician Priscilla Chan, will devote more than $3 billion to medical research with the ambitious goal of ultimately preventing, curing or managing "all diseases in our children's lifetime" has understandably garnered a lot of attention. Also skepticism. To end or manage disease within the next 100 years may sound too pie-in-the-sky to some, but biomedical science could accomplish amazing things in the next century.

Partnering for Excellence Model: Walking the Trauma-Informed Talk

I wrote about my personal experience at the Partnering for Excellence conference earlier this month. Here, I write as an activist observing attempts at system change utilizing ACEs science and trauma-informed approaches. Please share your ideas, brainstorms and observations about what you see happening (or not happening) in organizations or agencies you rely on, work at or run. I’ll admit, as an activist, I’m often in fight the system mode. I approach even do-gooders with defensiveness. Why?

Healing Your Digestive System Heals Your Mental Issue?

Could this be serious? You might not need psychotropic drugs to heal your brain? Who would propose such an idea? And why would any sane person accept this idea? OK. I am not being serious. I just blogged about whether we can trust our own brain, and the answer is frequently we cannot. Our mind plays tricks on us because of its low computing power in the prefrontal cortex. That lack of computing power is dealt with by the brain in some increasingly predictable ways, like resistance to change.

Trusting Your Own Mind

As the CEO for two organizations, one problem we encounter are the “resisters.” Change comes very hard to some people. In my experience, a hard core resister will go to extraordinary measures to stop change. I let one one of my top line executives go after showing extraordinary insubordination. As I filled the leadership void for a while, I was using his executive computer and discovered searches for dirt on me, including a search for lawsuits, bar association discipline and other attempts...

Helping First-Responders Deal With Depression, PTSD [HartfordCourant.com]

Trish Buchanan's husband, Paul Buchanan, was a decorated East Hartford police officer who took his life in March 2013 after months of struggling with depression. He had feared the repercussions that seeking help for mental illness might have on his career, Trish Buchanan said. When they finally called some mental health professionals, they were asked whether Paul was at immediate risk, otherwise the soonest he would be able to see someone would be six weeks later. When they did find someone...

Young People Need Early Access To Mental Health Care [HuffintonPost.com]

I was 16 when I had my first full panic attack. I sat clutching my French horn (yes, I played the French horn), waiting for a solo in a school band performance, and found I couldn't catch my breath. My stomach and chest felt impossibly tight. This wasn't an average case of nerves: my entire body responded to the fear of playing music publicly with what I now understand to be chronic anxiety. I felt I might die. I managed that day to slow my breathing just enough so I could finish my solo...

This school replaced detention with meditation. The results are stunning. [UpWorthy.com]

Imagine you're working at a school and one of the kids is starting to act up. What do you do? Traditionally, the answer would be to give the unruly kid detention or suspension. But in my memory, detention tended to involve staring at walls, bored out of my mind, trying to either surreptitiously talk to the kids around me without getting caught or trying to read a book. If it was designed to make me think about my actions, it didn't really work. It just made everything feel stupid and unfair.

A Congressional Briefing on Resilience!

Prevent Child Abuse America partnered with KPJR Productions, producers of the ACE themed films Paper Tigers and Resilience to host a Congressional Briefing on September 21. Read more about the standing-room-only event here: http://preventchildabuse.org/latest-activity/resilience-congressional-briefing/

Mending Fences [JoyfulHeartFoundation.org]

I’ve always been intrigued by the different choices people make, while working to restore good boundaries in their life after an experience of abuse. Whether it’s re-establishing the broken boundary with the abusive person, or finding a safe way to relate to others, the memory of betrayed trust can complicate decisions about how to maintain safety. When I think about my own relationship to personal boundaries, I’m often reminded of the iconic phrase, “good fences make good neighbors.” I...

Third annual trauma conference at Edinboro University [Merciad.Mercyhurst.edu]

The number of children in the world today that have suffered a traumatic incident is on the rise. People do not realize how close these issues truly are to the communities across America. It is for this reason that the Crawford and Erie County Human Services along with Edinboro University and Peace4Crawford began working together to educate members of the community. Monday, Sept. 26, will mark the Third Annual Trauma Informed & Resilient Communities Conference. This year’s conference...

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