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Sing, Act, Dance, Heal [Chronogram.com]

In January 2011, a 9mm bullet, fired point-blank from the gun of a mentally ill assailant, passed through the left rear of Gabrielle Giffords's head and exited just over her left eye. The Arizona congresswoman, who had been meeting with constituents in front of a supermarket near Tucson, would survive—despite massive trauma to the left side of her brain, the regions that control vision, movement, and speech. After surgery and intensive therapy, some 10 months later Giffords could respond to...

Uncovering Decades of Sexual Abuse in a Pennsylvania Diocese [TheAtlantic.com]

On Tuesday, two days after a film about a massive Catholic sex-abuse scandal in Boston won the Academy Award for Best Picture, Pennsylvania’s attorney general released a grand jury report chronicling “staggering and sobering” accounts of sexual abuse in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown. The report alleges that, dating back to the 1970s, “hundreds of children have fallen victim to child predators” in abuse cases that involved over 50 priests and religious leaders in the area: As wolves...

The Concentration of Poverty in American Schools [TheAtlantic.com]

In almost all major American cities, most African American and Hispanic students attend public schools where a majority of their classmates qualify as poor or low-income, a new analysis of federal data shows. This systemic economic and racial isolation looms as a huge obstacle for efforts to make a quality education available to all American students. Researchers have found that the single-most powerful predictor of racial gaps in educational achievement is the extent to which students...

Remaking High School for Immigrant Kids [CityLab.com]

Alison Hanks-Sloan wanted to know how to keep her students from dropping out. A former ESOL teacher, she was working in the international students’ office at Prince George’s County Public Schools, a large suburban system in Maryland, right next to Washington, D.C. Just two-thirds of the county’s English language learners were graduating high school at all, let alone on time. Immigrants make up one-third of the system’s 128,000 students. New students are arriving all the time, including,...

Calculating the True Cost of Affordable Housing [TheAtlantic.com]

In 2006, the Brookings Institution worked with the Center for Transit Oriented Development and the Center for Neighborhood Technology to study the transportation patterns of the U.S.’s low-income population. Until then, many researchers and policymakers had assumed that larger and wealthier households owned more vehicles—and more expensive ones—and drove more miles overall. But the 2006 study found that transportation methods had less to do with household income and more to do the...

Study Evaluates ‘Resilience’ in Transition-age Foster Youth, Claims Non-whites More Resilient [ChronicleOfSocialChange.org]

A new report claims that “non-white race” adolescents showed higher resilience in the foster care system as they approached the age of emancipation. Many foster youth face challenges transitioning into independent adults. These challenges are related to difficult experiences in childhood and lack of adequate resources, resulting in dysfunctional behaviors and outcomes. The study attempts to explore the success stories among these high-risk youth–those who circumvent the challenges and...

Watch: Mark Cuban, Emmitt Smith promote mental health awareness [TheScoopBlog.DallasNews.com]

Mark Cuban and Emmitt Smith are speaking up about mental illness so others won’t remain silent. Dallas’ Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute launched a new effort Monday to encourage Texans to seek any psychological treatment they need. At okaytosay.org , people can share their stories and offer support to spread the word that effective treatment is available statewide. “Nine out of ten Texans think that it is more difficult to discuss mental health rather than a physical issue,” the...

Feed Your Dog, Feed Your Soul [Opinionator.Blogs.NYTimes.com]

Of all the patients I have seen in my 40 years as a psychoanalyst, Daniel was the strangest. He was the most inaccessible, inwardly tormented and infuriating man I have ever known, and yet he stayed in therapy with me for over a decade, calling faithfully every week — he insisted that his work schedule precluded coming in person — even though he spent many of those sessions in silence or addressed me as if I were inanimate. He drove me crazy, he haunted me and he moved me, sometimes all in...

Boston's Heroin Users Will Soon Get A Safer Place To Be High [NPR.org]

A Boston nonprofit plans to soon test a new way of addressing the city's heroin epidemic. The idea is simple. Along a stretch of road that has come to be called Boston's "Methadone Mile," the program will open a room in March with a nurse, some soft chairs and basic life-saving equipment — a place where heroin users can ride out their high, under medical supervision. Dr. Jessie Gaeta , chief medical officer at the Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program , which initiated the project,...

Turnaround for Children releases new paper and announces hiring for key positions

Michael Lamb, Executive Director, Washington D.C., Turnaround for Children sent the following message about a new paper, Building Blocks for Learning, just released by Turnaround and three new positions it is seeking to fill. Take a look: "Hi friends and colleagues, it’s an exciting time for Turnaround in Washington, D.C. as we work towards our vision that one day all children in the US attend schools that prepare them for the lives they choose. In addition to our exciting work in schools,...

Important communal garden in Los Angeles faces a rocky future [Grist.org]

Try to find a patch of green in the Eastside Los Angeles neighborhood of Boyle Heights and you might get lost amid the gray pavement. With the 5, the 10, the 60, and the 101 freeways weaving through the area, it’s easy to find a paved road, much harder to find a green space. Keep looking and you might stumble upon an oasis, Proyecto Jardín, a communal garden and local treasure in Boyle Heights. It’s where I recently found Antonio Garcia carefully tending his crops. Young gardeners turn to...

In Philippines, ‘Comfort Women’ Have a Special Demand [WomensENews.org]

Inside the Malacanang Palace that morning, President Benigno Aquino welcomed visiting Japanese Emperor Akihito. Outside, Narcisa Claveria, 85, dressed in a fuchsia pink traditional Filipina dress, stood on the frontline of a small group of protesters. She had walked about a quarter mile under the scorching Manila heat in the late morning to get there. It was tiring for an 85-year-old woman like her, but she was determined. "My message to the emperor is for Japan to recognize us. They already...

‘Range’ of opportunity: Home on the Range looks to deepen its care for troubled youth [TheDickinsonPress.com]

When clinical psychologist Dr. Mel Rose first came to Home on the Range therapeutic ranch for an interview for its open executive director position, she said she was impressed by the longevity of the program’s staff. Rose said this spoke of the dedication to the ranch, as well as showed a “continuity of care” toward children that’s different from other programs with high rates of staff turnover. Plus, Rose said, everyone has been very welcoming since she began at the job in August. “I...

Judge Rob Philyaw Opens Up About Juvenile Court, Court Appointed Special Advocates, Adverse Childhood Experiences [Chattanoogan.com]

Judge Rob Philyaw says most of what he does happens behind closed doors. The Hamilton County Juvenile Court judge addressed members of the Rotary Club Thursday at the Convention Center to give an overview of Juvenile Court and how it serves the community. He began by educating about the group called CASA (court appointed special advocates). Started in 1977 in Seattle, CASA made its way to Chattanooga about 30 years ago. The group works to obtain better information on the children Juvenile...

The Original Six: The Story of Hollywood's Forgotten Feminist Crusaders [PSMag.com]

Nell Cox lives on the Upper West Side in one of those kooky apartments you see only in Nora Ephron movies—quaint with a certain country flair (her living room furniture includes a daybed topped with a vintage quilt), filled with precarious stacks of books and papers and knicknacks and the odd glass trophy commemorating a long creative life, the kind of perfectly charming mess that indicates an artist is in residence. When I arrive, on a freezing afternoon in early February, her radiator is...

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