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Alleviating the Educational Impact of Adverse Childhood Experiences: School-University-Community Collaboration [Hardback]

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Crises like family separations and natural disasters highlight children's trauma, but many face daily adversity. The National Survey of Children’s Exposure to Violence shows widespread victimization, with ACEs harming health and behavior. This book presents research on alleviating the educational impact of these phenomena.



Recent crises—whether policy-induced (e.g., family separation at the Mexico/U.S. border) or natural disaster-related (e.g., hurricanes in Florida and North Carolina and wildfires in California)—have galvanized the attention of the U.S. and international public on the plight of children who endure these traumatic events. The sheer enormity of such wrenching events tend to overshadow the trauma endured by many children whose everyday life circumstances fall short of affording them a safe, stable, and nurturing environment.

At the national level, three rounds of data collection spanning January 2008 through April 2014 constituted the National Survey of Children’s Exposure to Violence (NatSCEV) that—according to Finkelhor, Turner, Shattuck, and Hambly (2013) in reporting on the 2011 round—assessed “a wide range of childhood victimizations” (pp. 614-615). Among many other findings, Finkelor et al. concluded that “overall, 57.7% of the children and youth had experienced or witnessed at least 1 to 5 aggregate exposures (assaults and bullying, sexual victimization, maltreatment by a caregiver, property victimization, or witnessing victimization) in the year before this survey” (p. 619). According to the recent re-visiting of NatSCEV II by Turner et al. (2017), “almost 1 in 4 children and adolescents ages 5-15 in the United States lived in family environments with only modest levels of safety, stability, and nurturance, while about 1 in 15 had consistently low levels across multiple domains” (p. 8).

Adverse childhood events (ACEs) have both immediate and long-term impacts on children’s health and well-being (Banyard, Hambly, & Grych, 2017; Bowen, Jarrett, Stahl, Forrester, & Valmaggia, 2018; Walker & Walsh, 2015). Children do not shed their entanglement with ACEs at the schoolroom door. To highlight just one study, Jimenez, Wade, Lin, Morrow, & Reichman (2016) conducted a secondary analysis of a national urban birth cohort and found that experiencing ACEs in early childhood was “associated with below-average, teacher-reported academic and literacy skills and [ more] behavior problems in kindergarten” (p. 1).

Introduction vii
1 North Carolina Resilience and Learning Project
1(38)
Katie Rosanbalm
Elizabeth DeKonty
Sheronda Fleming
2 Trauma-Informed Partnering
39(20)
Jack Leonard
3 Our School Behavioral Health "Y'Alliance": The Development of a Rural School-Community-University Collaboration Focused on Supporting Children Who Have Experienced Trauma
59(24)
Travis Lewis
Karen D. Jones
Karen Koch
Kia Glosson
Karen Harrington
4 Pedagogy and Adverse Childhood Experiences: A Teacher's Action-Learning Journey in Mitigating the Impact of Trauma Through Changing Teaching Practice
83(24)
Michelle Montgomery
Roberto H. Parada
Brenda Dobia
5 Systemic School Reform Partnership to Address Adverse Childhood Experiences in Flint, Michigan
107(28)
Bryan Beverly
Nicole Ellefson
Brian J. Boggs
6 River of Emotions: Reflecting on a University-School-Community Partnership to Support Children's Emotional Processing in a Post-Disaster Context
135(22)
Carol Mutch
Jason Miles
Sarah Yates
7 Increasing Trauma-Informed Practices in a High Poverty Elementary School: A School, University, and Community Partnership
157(26)
Betty V. DeBoer
Alyssa M. Boardman
8 Schoolwide Trauma-Informed Professional Development: We Can! Building Relationships and Resilience
183(24)
Armeda Stevenson Wojciak
Jan Powers
Laura Medberry
9 An Integrated Approach to Mitigating Adverse Childhood Experiences Through Trauma-Informed Yoga
207(26)
Lauren Dotson Davis
Rebecca Buchanan
10 Bridging Education and Neuroscience to Support Transformation in Teaching and Learning: A Design-Based Approach
233(26)
Alison Wishard Guerra
Shana R. Cohen
Amanda Datnow
Timothy Brown
Terry Jernigan
Matt Doyle
Alan Daly
11 Coalescing Streams: Interrupting the Progression of Adversity Through Cross-Sector Mobilization and Systems Alignment
259(26)
John T. King
Aprille Phillips
Todd Bloomquist
Peter Buckley
12 A Research-Practice Partnership Serving Students Experiencing Trauma: Best Practices Revealed by an Investigation of a Dropout Prevention Alternative School
285(24)
Nicole Ralston
Rebecca Smith
Cara Megan Wright
Jacqueline Waggoner
13 Creating Holistic Trauma-Informed Schools: School-Based Health Centers
309(22)
Sherry Shamblin
Dawn Graham
Erin Lucas
About the Contributors 331
R. Martin Reardon, East Carolina University.

Jack Leonard,University of Massachusetts-Boston.