1 / 21

Trauma Informed Care at Crossroads Rhode Island

Trauma Informed Care at Crossroads Rhode Island. Embracing A Trauma Informed Care Approach with Adult Learners Presented by: Jennifer Bryant, John MacDonald, Sharon McMahon and Don Laliberte April 17, 2013 Rhode Island Adult Education Conference. Crossroads, Rhode Island. Who we are

lyre
Télécharger la présentation

Trauma Informed Care at Crossroads Rhode Island

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Trauma Informed Care at Crossroads Rhode Island Embracing A Trauma Informed Care Approach with Adult Learners Presented by: Jennifer Bryant, John MacDonald, Sharon McMahon and Don Laliberte April 17, 2013 Rhode Island Adult Education Conference

  2. Crossroads, Rhode Island • Who we are • What we do (who we serve) • How we do it (services provided) • Values based

  3. Education and Employment Services • Weekly Program Information Sessions • Education, Training Programs, Job Developer • Served 385 in 2012 • Learning Center • One multi-level classroom • Students work at their own pace • Transition options • Individual driven

  4. Trauma in the classroom:educational student trauma (past) • Students shared traumatic educational experiences -almost all negative • Learned negative behaviors • Lack of family support then and now • Not having successful educational experiences to pull from

  5. Trauma in the classroom:educational student trauma -(present) • Believing EFL is higher that it truly is • Known and/or unknown Learning Disabilities • Learned negative behaviors carried over from the past • Scheduling/planning/organizing • Concentration • Anxiety • Prescription drugs • Glasses

  6. What do we mean by Trauma? • Intense and overwhelming experiences that involve serious loss, threat or harm • May occur at any time in a person’s life • May be a single event or repeated over many years

  7. Examples of Trauma • Physical, emotional abuse or neglect • Sexual abuse • Rape • War • Natural disasters • Witnessing or involvement in violent crimes/events

  8. How does Trauma affect behavior? • Overwhelms the person’s coping resources • Leads to ways of coping that may work in the short run but may cause harm in the long run. • Common trauma reactions: • Depression • Flashbacks • Emotional numbing • Feeling unsafe, helpless • Nightmares or insomnia • Irritability – angry outbursts substance abuse • Learned helplessness • Boundary issues • Difficulty trusting • Emotional swings • Difficulty concentrating • Hyper-alert • Feeling detached from others • Psychosomatic symptoms

  9. Why Crossroads needs to know about TIC • Based on Crossroads values • Clients interact with all agency staff • It informs our understanding of clients and how staff behave with them

  10. Your response is key….. Greater chance for a …. Negative Outcome Non – Trauma Informed Response Trigger Greater chance for a …. Positive Outcome Trauma Informed Response Trigger

  11. Trauma Informed Approach • Relies on basic values/principles to guide specific behaviors • Safety – Staff and clients feel physically and emotionally safe. • Collaboration – staff and clients recognize issues of power and partner on decision making- Respect • Empowerment and Choice – Recognizing and validating each individual’s strengths and role in the healing process • Learning is on-going – TIC is a continuous process where we strive to constantly improve- Effectiveness

  12. Trauma Informed Care • Demonstrates an understanding of the biological, psychological and social effects of trauma • Promotes trust, dependability and predictability • Respectfully gathers client information through empathetic listening and observation • Understands the prevalence of trauma in persons experiencing homelessness Know each client, respect fears and DO NO HARM!

  13. So, what is Trauma Informed? Not a Mystery! • A trauma-informed system is one in which all components of a given service system have been reconsidered and evaluated in light of a basic understanding of the role that trauma plays in lives of people seeking services. • Safety, Respect, and Effectiveness - listen, observe and ask

  14. Though no one can go back and make a brand new start, anyone can start from now and make a brand new ending. Carl Bard

  15. What do we see, what do we hear? • Observation of the whole person • Conversations: direct and shared with others • Behaviors • Attitudes • Doodles/notes on worksheets

  16. How we do what do we do • Provide a safe, (physical and emotional), respectful environment (trust, responsibility/accountability) • Anticipate and watch for anxiety, stressors, clues… • Emphasize minimal barriers • Offer transition time to build confidence/belief that this can be done • Classroom modeling (instructional and role interactions) • Social interactions (open/individual/group discussions become teachable moments)

  17. Specific strategies/examples • Scrap paper (spacing for focus) • Colored transparent overlays • Headphones • Fidgets (stress balls, smooth stones, etc.) • Magnifier • Model different approaches to a learning challenge and allow student to choose what works best for them • Review textbook table of contents

  18. Strategies/examples, cont. • Have student picture themselves in the story • Break down the challenge into manageable chunks • Model “bad day” strategies • Teach ‘sense of time’ with weekly work log • Test preparation (before and during)

  19. What are the results? • New positive educational experiences to pull from (solid foundation) • Students stay with us longer, (but not too long!) • Self-empowerment/self care • Students transform their beliefs from negative to positive • Learn how to learn/learn how to study

  20. Next Steps • Confidence and belief in ones self increases • Knowledge built about how educational systems work and what resources are available (self advocacy) • Options are opened • Transitions are made • Anything becomes possible

  21. Crossroads, Rhode Island • Thank you for attending our panel discussion presentation! • Any questions, please do not hesitate to contact any one of us! • Crossroads Main Number: 401-521-2255 • Please don’t forget to fill out the evaluations provided! • Enjoy the rest of the conference! 

More Related