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A Teen’s Life in Anchorage

Reading feel-good stories is a part of life that helps us appreciate life. I had to smile while reading about Iris. [ LINK HERE ] She is apparently a successful teen despite a rocky beginning in school. The stories always include the people that helped them along the way, and Iris had a teacher who engaged her. I had mine, certainly very influential role models at a time when I needed them. They guided me in certain ways. But they were not a part of any close relationships. They were adults...

Educators Rethink Discipline, Learn New Moves to Dismantle School-to-Prison Pipeline [JJIE.org]

When communities want to snip the school-to-prison pipeline, how do they do it? They revise their code of conduct, redefine the role of school police, address bias, build a positive school climate and address problematic behavior in a positive way, among other things. School officials in the Southeast learned some of these new strategies at the Rethink Discipline Regional Convening in Atlanta last week. The conference was sponsored by the Safe and Supportive Schools Initiative of the U.S.

Federal Education Law Delivers Vital Protections for Foster Youth [YouthToday.org]

Children involved in the juvenile justice and child welfare systems face countless barriers to educational success. Our historic failure to address these challenges has resulted in a dramatic achievement gap between these youth and their peers. The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), signed into law in December, provides an opportunity and a responsibility for states to begin narrowing this gap. Removed from their families due to abuse or neglect, many foster youth are forced to move from...

How to help employees carrying past trauma [PostCrescent.com]

The term "trauma-informed approach" doesn't exactly roll off the tongue. But the idea of looking at the traumatized past of people as a reason for their behavior today and meeting them where they're at makes sense. I wrote in-depth about this on Sunday, and now we're giving local businesses the opportunity to learn directly from experts on how to implement this in the workplace. Employees walk into work every day with varied backgrounds, and usually you don't know what's going on behind the...

Boston’s architect of community well-being: Pediatrician Renée Boynton-Jarrett

She talks with parents about the relationship between childhood adversities they have experienced and how that may have an impact on parenting. “I frame things a bit more broadly than ACEs,” she said, “because I think it’s very important to reflect on a broader number of exposures than were covered in the original study, such as poverty or structural violence and racism.”

Pause in the Action: Trauma-Informed DC leaders take a Saturday to plan for the future

The first year of Trauma-Informed DC (TIDC) has been action filledthere have been several large public events ( screenings of Paper Tigers and Wounded Places, a School to Prison Pipeline forum and more) as well as small gatherings that have helped gauge where community interests lie and that have built a network, now comprising nearly 600 people. The founder of TIDC, Leah Harris, felt the time seemed right to pause and take stock of what had been accomplished and plan for the future. Harris...

Philadelphia: Deep Roots, New Ripples of ACEs Activism

Members of the Philadelphia ACE Task Force (PATF) decided it was time to move from talk to action. After meeting regularly since 2012, the PATFan increasingly diverse group of practitioners in pediatrics, primary care, juvenile justice, early childhood intervention and anti-violence workinvited each member to write down his or her vision for ACEs work in the city. From that batch of cards, three priorities emerged: To educate the wider community about ACEs and their impact. To develop a...

A TV Network for Native Americans [TheAtlantic.com]

If theres one thing most television lovers and critics have come to agree on in the last few years, its that the medium has become more racially diverse. If challenged by a skeptic on this subject, Id cheerfully rattle off the names of great and popular shows currently on air starring and created by people of color . See? Progress! And yet, maybe not so much. I can count the number of Native American charactersnot even showsthat Ive personally seen on TV in the last year on one hand. Theres...

Study: Military falls short in treating new cases of war-related stress [USAToday.com]

The U.S. military is struggling to provide adequate therapy sessions for thousands of active-duty troops suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and depression, a massive study released Thursday concludes. The RAND Corp. study of 40,000 cases, the largest ever, found that only a third of troops with PTSD and less than a quarter who are clinically depressed receive the minimum number of therapy sessions after being diagnosed. A RAND review of U.S. military and Department of Veterans...

When Low-Income Parents Go Back to School [TheAtlantic.com]

Leon Sykes has eight children at home, works two jobs, and drives for Uber and Lyft on the side. Yet the 34-year-old father has found time to take classes Monday through Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m. to earn his high-school credentials at Academy of Hope, an adult public charter school in Washington, D.C. Sykes is about two years into the program. His wife usually picks up their children, ages 5 to 15, from after-school activities, but he still cant always make it to class. Some days, you just...

The "Orphan" Generation in Cambodia [HuffingtonPost.com]

A quiet, but alarming, trend is happening in Cambodian "orphanages." Instead of predominantly serving the needs of children whose parents have died, these institutions are increasingly being filled with children from poor families whose living parents are seeking better opportunities for their children's future. It's a phenomenon that my colleagues and I at Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health , together with a number of committed partners, are working to correct. There's a long...

Program offers support to youth probationers [MRT.com]

Midlander David Gutierrez certainly has a story to tell. He grew up in a gang-infested neighborhood in the greater Los Angeles area, his mother was an alcoholic, his dad wasnt around. His brother was in and out of prison and his sister was a drug addict. He started drinking and doing drugs at age 12, was addicted to meth and marijuana by 14 and arrested by age 15. Now 36, he is three years sober and a substance abuse counselor for troubled teens at Palmer Drug Abuse Program (PDAP). About...

Dr. Drew on Amy Winehouse Doc: 'Help Destigmatize This Disease' (Guest Column) [BillBoard.com]

"Although Amy Winehouses voice was indisputably unique, there was really nothing unusual about her addiction," writes the popular TV personality. The Oscar-nominated documentary Amy takes an honest look at an incredible singing talent who was also suffering from a common chronic disease. Although Amy Winehouses voice was indisputably unique, there was really nothing unusual about her addiction. Like so many other addicts living in the glare of celebrity, Amy needed to be treated like...

Looking through the lens of trauma [PostCrescent.com]

After being physically and sexually abused from infancy into her teenage years, Mary doesn't want a doctor to touch her unless it's absolutely necessary. So going to appointments, where male nurses or physical exams are often emotional triggers, can be difficult. "It's very rare to come across a health care provider that is informed in trauma at all, or that is aware in how to deal with patients that have gone through trauma," said Mary, a 36-year-old Neenah woman who is using a false name...

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