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Far From Being a Burden, Research Suggests Refugees Come With Benefits [UnDark.org]

WHEN WAR HIT close to home, Veronica Mesiko Simon grabbed a few dishes and a bundle of clothes. With a load on her head, six kids and a mother in tow, she ran for the Ugandan border, six miles away from her home in South Sudan. And just like that, everything changed. Simon and her family became refugees. [For more of this story, written by Karen J. Coates, go to https://undark.org/article/refugees-benefit-their-hosts/]

'Resilience' makes London premiere; most theaters sold out for 3-month tour across UK

(l to r) Sara Dodds, Office of Chief Social Policy Advisor, Scottish Government; James Redford, "Resilience" director; Dr. Michael Smith, Associate Medical Director for Mental Health, NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde, during Scotland tour of 'Resilience'. _____________________________________ From KPJR Films: On Thursday April 27th, hundreds of people from across England gathered in London for the United Kingdom premiere of RESILIENCE , directed by James Redford and produced by KPJR Films .

Depression's Gender Gap Shows Up in Pre-Teen Years [Consumer.HealthDay.com]

Gender differences in depression diagnosis and symptoms start to appear around the age of 12, a new study reports. "We found that twice as many women as men were affected. Although this has been known for a couple of decades, it was based on evidence far less compelling than what we used in this meta-analysis," said study co-author Janet Hyde. She is a professor of psychology and gender and women's studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. "We want to stress that although twice as many...

Mom's Money Worries May Mean Smaller Baby [Consumer.HealthDay.com]

Financial stress during pregnancy could increase the risk of having a smaller baby, a new study suggests. Researchers call this "pregnancy-specific distress." And it "includes concerns about labor and delivery, about relationships changing, about working after the baby arrives, paying for medical care, and whether the baby will be unhealthy," said study senior author Lisa Christian in an Ohio State University news release. [For more of this story go to ...

Talking Tough Topics with Kids: Chat Event In Parenting with ACEs Group on May 9th

Hi Everyone! Our first monthly chat is scheduled for May 9th. I'm so excited. The topic is great and so is our guest. I hope you can attend. Cissy Location: Online / Parenting with ACEs Group It’s hard to know if, when and how to talk to children about abuse, addiction and ACEs. How do we find the right words or time? Please join Beth O’Malley , our special guest for the first in our Parenting with ACEs chat series . Beth has dedicated her life to supporting kids, adoptees, parents and...

Know your own strength and your child’s; Children, Inc. researchers note impact of character strengths [NKYTribune.com]

What if focusing on the negative side of every situation could have a toxic impact on those around you, particularly children, much in the same way that secondhand smoke is harmful to those in the same breathing space? Would you change your perspective? Tom Lottman, senior director of research-to-practice at Children, Inc. points out that the comparison is not a stretch. Back in 1998, as part of a $206 billion dollar settlement, major tobacco companies agreed to pay for advertising campaigns...

To attract teachers, pricey school districts are becoming their landlords [CalMatters.org]

Rizi Manzon is a teacher, so naturally, he has a lot to worry about: a stack of homework assignments to grade, a week’s worth of culinary arts classes to prepare for, kitchen supplies to purchase on his own time and dime. And the assorted crises, dramas, and anxieties of the 36 teenagers in his care at Wilcox High School in Santa Clara. But unlike most public school educators in California’s Silicon Valley, one thing Manzon doesn’t need to worry about is how he’s going to pay rent this...

Congressional budget deal wards off Trump’s wish list of higher-education cuts [WashingtonPost.com]

A bipartisan bill to fund the government through the end of September protects higher-education programs that are under threat from the 2018 White House budget proposal, setting the stage for a fight over appropriations before the end of the year. [ Congress reaches deal to keep government open through September ] The congressional budget agreement reached Sunday pares back total federal spending on education by $60 million, but upholds or increases funding for a series of higher-education...

How One School is Teaching Empathy After the Election [GreaterGood.Berkeley.edu]

I teach at the Millennium School, a new independent middle school located in the heart of San Francisco. Mindfulness and compassion are essential parts of our curriculum. Yet on November 9th—the day after the presidential election—the sixth-grade classroom I walked into was anything but calm or kind. What I noticed that morning was more troubling than understandable shock, anger, or confusion. In chorus with half the nation, our students voiced sentiments that had been reverberating across...

What should really scare parents about Netflix’s “13 Reasons Why” isn’t the teenage suicide [Quartz.co]

Hannah Baker has killed herself. So begins Netflix’s 13 Reasons Why, a searing, melancholic 13-episode television series based off Jay Asher’s young adult novel of the same name, and produced in part by singer and actress Selena Gomez. The premise: Before committing suicide, a teenage girl records a number of cassette tapes calling out the role that other students at her high school had in driving her to the brink. After her death, her classmates are forced, one by one, to listen to them.

Should Communities Have a Say in How Residents Are Punished for Crime? [TheAtlantic.com]

In most courts in the Cook County district, a person accused of a crime will have their case decided in a courtroom, by a judge. There’s little attempt to tackle any issues underlying the crime, and few alternatives to incarceration if they’re found guilty. A new court opening this summer in Chicago’s North Lawndale neighborhood is looking to change that equation for some offenders. The Restorative Justice Community Court will offer select young people charged with non-violent felonies or...

Is America Holding Out on Protecting Children's Rights? [TheAtlantic.com]

Recently, I asked my 4-, 5-, and 6-year-old students what they thought all children need in order to grow up healthy and strong. They responded readily: Lots and lot of water. Fruits and vegetables. Love. Schools. Homes. Parents. A life. Stuff to play with. A 5-year-old went a step further: “Legos.” A 6-year-old snapped back. “Legos? You don’t need them, but you would want them.” The list my students generated around our meeting rug is remarkably similar to the list of rights named in the...

Walla Walla - Where Resilience Trumps ACEs

Like the sweet onions for which Walla Walla is famous, the story of this community's 10+ years of investment in becoming a Trauma-Informed Community has many layers. Teri Barila is the person widely recognized as the initial champion and catalyst for Walla Walla's trauma informed approach, after she attended a conference in 2007 where Rob Anda, one of the original authors of the ACEs study, challenged attendees to take the information he had presented about ACEs and "get something started in...

Advocates Pass Along Lessons Learned at Conference on Closing Youth Prisons [JJIE.org]

They arrived sharing the same goal of closing youth prisons, the same desire to address the racial and social disparities they see daily and the same belief that rehabilitating youth is always smarter and more moral than locking them away. Today’s Youth First conference could have been preaching to the choir of like-minded activists. Instead, speakers and organizers hoped to send attendees out with something they didn’t have: a blueprint to follow as they returned home to work with...

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