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Helping Students and Families Deal with Distress and Trauma . Objective. Increase educators’ understandings of the range of possible effects of traumatic displacement on students and their families. Recognizing the Symptoms. Listen to the story
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Helping Students and Families Deal with Distress and Trauma
Objective Increase educators’ understandings of the range of possible effects of traumatic displacement on students and their families.
Recognizing the Symptoms • Listen to the story • On a piece of paper, note key words or ideas about the symptoms and reactions of children in the story who have experienced a traumatic event
Symptoms of Distress and Trauma What were some of the feelings and reactions you noted? How did Sherman get help?
Symptoms of Distress and Trauma Review the Handout: What is Trauma? What are some of the symptoms of distress and trauma? What might you add to our list?
Four Phases of Reaction to Disasters • Anticipation and preparation • Disaster impact • Immediate post-disaster impact • Long-term post-disaster impact
Tips for Helping Students • Parents - Give children choices about food, clothes, what games to play, or any appropriate choices helps them feel some control when their environment has felt out of control. • Teachers - Provide flexibility such as extra time to do work, extra support for challenging subjects and different ways of showing competence. • Counselors - try to keep red tape to a minimum whenever possible, realizing that school will be the place many families gain access to social services.
Making it Real • Select a partner and choose two or three of the tips from the guidebook Tips for Helping Students Recovering from Traumatic Events that fit your role. • In the context of your role, such as the grade level and content area you teach if you are a teacher, develop some concrete examples of ways you can implement the tips from the guidebook.