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Delve into the effects of homelessness on children's development, exploring attachment, emotion regulation, behavior, and physical responses. Learn how to support these vulnerable children effectively.
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The Impact of Homelessness on Children's Development Nedra Robinson and Joy Johnson Senior Early Childhood Specialists Simpson Housing Services
"The child must know that he is a miracle, that since the beginning of the world there hasn't been, and until the end of the world there will not be, another child like him" -Pablo Casals
Homelessness in Minnesota • Major causes of homelessness for children in Minnesota include: • High poverty rate • Lack of affordable housing • Continuing impacts of the Great Recession • Racial Disparities • Challenges of single parenting • The ways in which traumatic experiences, especially domestic violence, precede and prolong homelessness for families (The National Center on Family Homelessness, 2013)
Parenting While Homeless • The cycle of poverty and homelessness may affect parenting practices. Many parents experiencing homelessness as adults, have experienced homelessness as a child. A parent who has been adversely affected by trauma may have a dysfunctional relationship with their child who is experiencing trauma resulting in problems with the parent-child relationship.
Impact of Homelessness on Development • https://www.zerotothree.org/resources/539-starting-life-without-a-home
Impact of Homelessness on Development • Attachment and Relationships • Emotion Regulation • Behavior • Physical Responses (Cognition, Body, Architecture of Brain)
Attachment and Relationships • “I've learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel." - Maya Angelou • "Young children experience their world as an environment of relationships, and these relationships affect virtually all aspects of their development" such as intellectual, emotional, moral, social, and behavioral. - National Scientific Council on the Developing Child "Young Children Develop in an Environment of Relationships", 2004
Attachment and Relationships: Impact of Homelessness • Children experiencing homelessness may: • Be separated from parents • Not have reassurance of secure base and safe haven • Have detachment that looks like adjustment
Emotion Regulation • Core of secure attachment is regulation, yet core of trauma is dysregulation. • Learn affect regulation from caregivers. • Young children's emotional health is interconnected to the emotional and social characteristics of their environments (e.g. family, home, school).
Emotion Regulation: Impact of Homelessness • Trauma inhibits reflective functioning • Homeless children tend to demonstrate higher rates of externalizing behaviors (e.g. hostility, conduct disorder, temper tantrums) and internalizing behaviors (e.g. depression, anxiety) than their housed peers. • Dysregulated parent ---> dysregulated child ---> dysregulated parent/child relationship • "In terms of basic brain functioning, emotions support executive functions when they are regulated but interfere with attention and decision-making when they are poorly controlled" - National Scientific Council on the Developing Child "Children's Emotional Development is Built into the Architecture of Their Brains", 2004
Physical Body and Brain • Trauma is not the event itself; rather, trauma resides in the nervous system. • Trauma is defined by its effects on a particular individual’s nervous system, not the intensity of the circumstances itself. • Early traumatic experiences can have profound effects on the brain architecture of young children that lead to altered brain size and structure leading to impaired cognitive skills, memory, emotional self-regulation, behavioral problems, coping, and social relationships. Traumatized children frequently suffer body dysregulation, meaning they over- respond or under-respond to sensory stimuli. • http://developingchild.harvard.edu/resources/toxic-stress-derails-healthy-development/
Behavior • A child with a trauma history may be easily triggered or “set off” and is more likely to react very intensely. The child may struggle with self-regulation (i.e., knowing how to calm down) and may lack impulse control or the ability to think through consequences before acting. • As a result, traumatized children may behave in ways that appear unpredictable, oppositional, volatile, and extreme.
How to Support Children Experiencing Homelessness • Strengths-based approach • Patience vs. Understanding • Routines • Provide Choices • "Serve and return" interaction – affirming a child's experiences, and nurturing their new abilities. - National Scientific Council on the Developing Child "Young Children Develop in an Environment of Relationships", 2004 • Unconditional relationship with your students • For many children, relationships with caregivers may be conditional (e.g. "If you sit and watch T.V we'll do_____) • Involve children in "reciprocal learning interactions" • Balance attention on literacy and cognition skills with a strong focus on social and emotional development
Thank You! Joy Johnson – jjohnson@simpsonhousing.org Nedra Robinson – nrobinson@simpsonhousin.org
References • Bassuk, E.L., DeCandia, C. J., Corey, A, & Berman, F. (November, 2014). America’s youngest outcasts: A report card on child homelessness. The National Center on Family Homelessness. • Family Housing Fund "Homelessness and its Effects on Children" http://www.fhfund.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/Homlessness_Effects_Children.pdf • National Scientific Council on the Developing Child "Children's Emotional Development is Built into the Architecture of Their Brains", 2004 http://developingchild.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2004/04/Childrens-Emotional-Development-Is-Built-into-the-Architecture-of-Their-Brains.pdf • National Scientific Council on the Developing Child "Young Children Develop in an Environment of Relationships", 2004 http://developingchild.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2004/04/Young-Children-Develop-in-an-Environment-of-Relationships.pdf • Starting Life Without a Home: https://www.zerotothree.org/resources/539-starting-life-without-a-home • Toxic Stress Derails Healthy Development: http://developingchild.harvard.edu/resources/toxic-stress-derails-healthy-development/ • Minnesota Early Childhood Risk and Reach Report https://www.cehd.umn.edu/ceed/MN_Early_Childhood_Risk_and_Reach_Report_2015.pdf