If you've seen the documentary Paper Tigers, you may remember the stress target -- or color wheel -- in Lincoln High School Principal Jim Sporleder's office.
Now you can have one, too!
The steering group members of the Yolo Resilience Network in Yolo County, CA, (you can find them on the Yolo County ACEs Connection group) realized the needed to have some tools that they could give to local educators for whom they did presentations about ACEs and trauma-informed practices.
"We'd see people get excited about the potential," says Yolo County CASA CEO Tracy Fauver, a member of the Yolo Resilience Network steering committee, and then have nothing to give them when they asked, "Now what?"
The color wheel was mentioned in Paper Tigers as a tool that all staff used to help initiate a conversation with students about stress levels. It's a good tool to have as a school begins the (at least three-year) journey of integrating trauma-informed and resilience-building practices based on ACEs research (writ large).
"We realized that printing up our own version was a fairly simple way that we could provide a ready-to-use tool to bring thought and conversation about toxic stress into schools," says Fauver. Yolo Resilience Network had 500 of them printed, for about $1 a wheel.
We've attached a PDF suitable for printing, and anyone is welcome to use it. The front shows the stress target. The back provides information about types of stress, and how to use the color wheel.
Comments (0)