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The Small Appalachian City That’s Thriving [citylab.com]

At the end of October, a blue Amtrak train pulled into downtown Roanoke, Virginia, to the sound of applause. This was a big moment. For the first time in nearly 40 years, a passenger train was rolling into this city founded on railroads. The last time Amtrak carried passengers here, in 1979, Roanoke was a different city. Then, the so-called Star City at the eastern gateway to central Appalachia was a blue-collar New South city built around the Norfolk & Western railroad. The city core...

Local services join forces to train the community on Adverse Childhood Experiences [theworldlink.com]

COOS COUNTY — Childhood trauma effects brain development. Western Oregon Advanced Health is coordinating with an organization dedicated to studying childhood traumas and the resulting effects. Not only is WOAH involved at a local level, but it is helping spread awareness. “Our community is a community that needs to heal itself,” said Kate Frame, the South Coast Regional Early Learning Hub’s home visiting systems coordinator and Adverse Childhood Experience interface master trainer. “We’re...

Resilient Sacramento's DeAngelo Mack: Unsung Hero [Dr. Richard Pan's Unsung Hero]

Congratulations to Resilient Sacramento's DeAngelo Mack for receiving recognition from Senator Dr. Richard Pan as an Unsung Hero! We appreciate all that DeAngelo does for our community through his work with the Sacramento Violence Intervention Program , his creative pursuits and his dedication to the Resilient Sacramento team. To read the full article, go to http://sd06.senate.ca.gov/sites/sd06.senate.ca.gov/files/e_alert/20171207_SD06_information_338.htm

Trauma-Informed Organizational Assessments

Hi all** - Attached is a document with a list of trauma-informed organizational assessments that the Greater Richmond TICN has been working on for a while. When we began looking for information about helping organizations to become trauma-informed, we started with searching for assessment measures. We have always started from the place that many organizations and professionals are already doing many things that are trauma-informed and wanted to make sure to assess what areas were presenting...

I NEED to Self-Regulate: Rolling out "The Regulated Classroom"

I am freaking out! My heart is racing, my chest is thumping, my belly is buzzing. Last night I check my list of attendees for my upcoming workshop. It jumped from sixteen to eighteen registrants. I freaked! I was literally scrambling around my kitchen screeching, “18,” “AHH!…18.” “I can’t fit eighteen.” My 10-month old puppy and 10-year old daughter are chasing behind me in frenzied excitement. My daughter is yelling, “mom this is good, your business is growing.” And my husband is sitting in...

How Place Shapes Our Politics [citylab.com]

We urbanists are obsessed with place. So it may be hard for us to believe that the connection between physical space and urbanization has been neglected by much of social science, outside of urban economics, urban planning, and urban geography. Indeed, place and geography have been notoriously absent from the greater field of political science. That’s why the research of political scientist Ryan Enos is so interesting. An associate professor at Harvard’s Department of Government, Enos...

Does Preschool Pay Off? Tulsa Says Yes [npr.org]

In 2001, not long after Oklahoma had adopted one of the nation's first universal pre-K programs, researchers from Georgetown University began tracking kids who came out of the program in Tulsa, documenting their academic progress over time. In a new report published in the Journal of Policy Analysis and Management today, researchers were able to show that Tulsa's pre-K program has significant, positive effects on students' outcomes and well-being through middle school. The program, which...

To Drop Its Suspension Rate, One School Instead Tries Push-Ups, Timeouts, and Wall Sits as Punishment [kqed.org]

Last month, California’s top education official announced suspensions have been cut in half since five years ago, and expulsions are down more than 40 percent. The state has encouraged these reductions as mounting evidence has shown out-of-school suspensions and expulsions do more harm than good. But the story behind the numbers is complicated. As schools stop relying on suspensions and expulsions to discipline students, some struggle to find other ways to keep bad behavior in check. At one...

Asylum-seeking fathers separated from children by ICE [sandiegouniontribune.com]

Four fathers fleeing death threats from gangs in Central America traveled thousands of miles to reach the safety they saw in the U.S. border. Then immigration officials forced them to hand over their children. The men were together when officials came to take their children about two weeks ago. They haven't been able to talk to their children even by phone since then, they said. “They took him without clothes, without my authorization,” said Eric Matute Castro, 33, one of the fathers, about...

If You’re Too Busy For These 5 Things: Your Life Is More Off-Course Than You Think [medium.com]

Despite turbulence and other conditions keeping airplanes off-course 90 percent of flight time, most flights arrive in the correct destination at the intended time. The reason for this phenomenon is quite simple — through air traffic control and the inertial guidance system, pilots are constantly course correcting. When immediately addressed, these course corrections are not hard to manage. When these course corrections don’t regularly happen, catastrophe can result. For example, in 1979 , a...

Forum: Examining Discrimination Against Native Americans [npr.org]

How do Native Americans experience discrimination in daily life? A poll by NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health is examining the extent of discrimination against five major ethnic and racial groups in America today . It finds that Native Americans experience very high rates of discrimination in everyday life. More than a third of Native Americans and their family members have experienced slurs and violence, and close to a third have faced...

Suspect Evidence Informed a Momentous Supreme Court Decision on Criminal Sentencing [propublica.org]

More than 30 years ago, Congress identified what it said was a grave threat to the American promise of equal justice for all: Federal judges were giving wildly different punishments to defendants who had committed the same crimes. The worries were many. Some lawmakers feared lenient judges were giving criminals too little time in prison. Others suspected African-American defendants were being unfairly sentenced to steeper prison terms than white defendants. In 1984, Congress created the U.S.

Peer mentor uses her own ACEs story to teach med residents how to help traumatized patients

When O’Nesha Cochran teaches medical residents about adverse childhood experiences in patients, she doesn’t use a textbook. Instead, the Oregon Health & Science University peer mentor walks in the room, dressed in what she describes as the “nerdiest-looking outfit” she can find. And then she tells them her story. “My mom sold me to her tricks and her pimps from the age of three to the age of six,” she begins. “I could remember these grown men molesting me and my sisters. I have three...

2018-2019 National Council Trauma-Informed, Resilience-Oriented Approaches Learning Community Informational Webinar December 14, 2017, 3:00-4:00pm ET

In the face of the many obstacles that threaten the delivery of quality services and positive outcomes, resilience is more important than ever--for our organizations, staff, and those we serve. How do organizations foster a culture of resilience? Since 2011, the National Council has worked with over 450 behavioral health, social service, and community organizations to develop trauma-informed, resilience-oriented change. With the launch of our 8 th National Learning Community, the 2018-2019...

The Working Class That Wasn't [CityLab.com]

A grizzled face, smudged grey with the factory soot. Hands that are calloused from making things—things that Make America Great. This person is, of course, white. In the popular imagination, this is the portrait of a “working class” American—a figure that political leaders say will benefit from their policies ; the same one that props up the myth of bootstrapping —the hardworking, real American who is deserving of help; and the one whose “economic anxieties” are commonly cited to justify the...

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