Share Cultivating Resilience
Share to email
Share to Facebook
Share to X
By Dr. Christine Mason, Jesse Kohler and Jeff Ikler
4.5
1616 ratings
The podcast currently has 48 episodes available.
Teachers have the opportunity to impact students in ways that can change the trajectory of their life. To do this, teachers have to be prepared to embrace students emotionally by knowing how to regulate their own emotional stability. Showing respect and a having willingness to care for them has profound impacts on students.
As you listenWhat is trans-generational trauma?
How can teachers implement effective communication strategies?
What occurs in the brain when someone is dysregulated due to trauma?
What should administrators focus on to transform their school?
Why is it necessary for teachers to learn how to regulate themselves?
Website
“SEL has five major components: self-awareness, self management, social management – the skills we use to manage relationships — and responsible decision making. There used to be this notion that you had your cognition — your rational side, your frontal brain — and you had your emotional side — you're limbic system — and they just fought for each other for dominance over decisions. But we now know that's not the case. Your emotions are deeply entwined with what you're paying attention to, how you're encoding information and memories. And your cognition is deeply entwined with how you're processing your emotions. And so this idea of the integration of social and emotional, and academic development is not just a catchphrase, it's really reflective of how we grow as human beings, incorporating and taking in cognition, emotion, as well as trying to solve problems.” — David Adams
Our guest David Adams is the CEO of The Urban Assembly. He started with the UA in 2014 as the Director of Social-Emotional Learning. In 2021, David received the Champion of Equity Award from the American Consortium for Equity in Education. David sits on the board of CASEL and is an author of The Educator’s Practical Guide to Emotional Intelligence, and a co-author of the textbook, Challenges to Integrating Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Programs in Organizations. He is a Civil Affairs Officer in the Army Reserve and holds an M.Ed in Educational Psychology from Fordham University. As you listenGiven COVID and the trauma that many students carry, how can we best help to heal them?
What is social-emotional learning (SEL) and how is it used to support students?
What makes human interactions so critical, and why are students having difficulty establishing relationships after COVID-19?
How are academics and emotion intertwined to benefit students?
How do SEL skills help the school community?
CASEL - Collaborative for Academic and Social Emotional Learning
Zone of Proximal Development
Bronfenbrenner's Ecological Systems Theory
Connect with DavidThe Michigan Elementary Middle School Principals Association (MEMSPA) facilitates conversations among school communities to bring together the vision and voices of many districts. Such communication establishes a plan for a better future while working in the present. Constant discussion helps leaders learn new methods, update their vision, and address the current implications of trauma-informed learning.
Our guests Paul Liabenow joined the MEMSPA staff as Executive Director in 2012. He has dedicated his 38 years in education to Michigan’s youth. With degrees from Michigan State University and Central Michigan University, Paul joined Cadillac Area Public Schools where he worked his way through the ranks of teacher, building leader, principal and district superintendent. Today, Paul is working to build a community of educators dedicated to advocating, leading, and learning. He is also currently serving as Treasurer of Michigan Association of After School Partnerships, President of The Center for Education Improvement, President of Core Communications, President of The MEMSPA Foundation, and Board Member of the Michigan Assessment Consortium. Paul is co-author of Visioning Onward providing guidance for school leaders on the visioning process. Michael Domagalski is the current president of the Michigan Elementary and Middle School Principals association. He is known for founding #MEMSPAchat, which is MEMSPA's weekly twitter chat, occurring each Thursday at 8pm. Mike has served on the MEMSPA Board of Directors since 2015. He is the current principal of St. Clair Middle School within the East China School District in St Clair, Michigan. He serves as the leader of the 5th-8th grade building of 700 students. Along with his administrative responsibilities, Mike serves as president of the East China Education Foundation.Referenced
The Positivity Project
TIPPS (Trauma-informed Programs and Practices for Schools from the University of Michigan)
Trails (supporting student wellness in Michigan) Connect with Paul
memspa.org
coreleaders.net
Connect with Mike
What is visioning, and how does a vision help with creating a trauma-informed, safe school?
What is the main core value needed to focus on a compassionate school model?
What was the vision for Rainbow Community School and how was it implemented in the community?
Why is a constant discussion with school leaders and students necessary for following the visioning plan?
What are some examples of trauma held by students? How do group spaces help address these situations?
How does taking risks while feeling safe help with resilience?
Build and maintain a consistent strategic plan that eliminates adding flavor-of-the-month responsibilities to the faculty’s already considerable workload. this focus provides stability and avoids faculty burnout.
Understand that student behavior is a way of communicating. To counter ineffective behaviors, the district promotes training around social and emotional learning, making it as important as traditional academics in supporting student wellbeing.
Healing happens in the context of healthy relationships over time. Support staff across the district - nurture the nurturers - to help them best serve their students. Promote healthy school cultures by supporting everyone in the district.
Adopt a flywheel mentality. Build momentum by focusing on achieving a few things that get the achievement ball moving. We can't do everything at once, but we can build toward better.
Interview with Susan Engel
Books by Susan Engel
The Intellectual Lives of Children
The Hungry Mind
Book by Todd Whitaker
What Great Principals Do Differently
Howard is the president and founder of the REACH Center for Multicultural Education in Seattle, Washington. He is the author of We Can’t Teach What We Don’t Know 3rd Edition and We Can’t Lead Where We Won’t Go: An Educators’ Guide to Equity.
SummaryIn this conversation, Gary Howard invites listeners to engage in reflective thinking about our racializing experiences. He begins by sharing his story of growing up as a White male in cultural isolation to becoming more culturally responsive during his collegiate years in New Haven, Connecticut. Howard emphasizes the importance of a multiethnic, multireligious, multigender teaching corps to understand that the work of personal transformation goes beyond just being culturally aware, beyond multicultural content, and conversations about differences. It is about the deeper work of acknowledging how our racializing experiences may impact our practice and how we relate to ‘others’ in ways we are not consciously aware of.
Our discussion touched upon trauma and mental health issues in the Benton Harbor Area Schools, emphasizing the need for mental health initiatives for both teachers and students. The importance of leadership philosophy and growing leaders within the district was highlighted, focusing on equity and addressing barriers through strategic planning and partnerships. The conversation also delved into education, neuroscience, and self-improvement through self-reflection and student feedback, ultimately emphasizing the significance of psychological safety, community engagement, and building alliances in education.
Key Topics
School leadership, trauma, and community support in Benton Harbor. (2:27)
Leadership, transparency, and building relationships in a school district. (9:26)
Mental health and wellness support for students and teachers in Benton Harbor. (14:25)
Addressing barriers to education and mental health support. (20:54)
Education, neuroscience, and teacher training. (27:39)
Self-reflection and improving teaching methods. (31:17)
Education, vulnerability, and agency in the classroom. (38:07)
Building alliances and addressing trauma in schools. (44:07)
Transformational leadership in education. (49:53)
Education reform with a focus on student involvement. (52:02)
Connect with Dr. ButtsSchool website: https://www.bhas.org/
As a passionate and dedicated principal, Anitra is committed to addressing trauma and creating a culturally responsive and trauma-informed environment in her school. She believes that all students can learn and succeed, and she is always looking for ways to improve their education. She is a strong advocate for her students, and she is committed to addressing trauma and promoting wellness in her school community. She is also a strong advocate for her faculty, and she believes they should be remembered for making a difference in education rather than just teaching content.
Listen for how Anitra puts her three “I’s” to work• Integrity
• Instruction
• Inspiration
Connect with AnitraEmail: [email protected]
School website: https://www.hsd2.org/pms
A lifelong educator, Michelle Trujillo M.Ed is a Co-Founder of the Center for Learning and Well-Being and is known to make a tangible, sustainable, and positive difference through her books, speaking engagements, and interactive workshops. Named Nevada’s 2016 Innovative Educator of the Year, Michelle has appeared on television (including Oprah), podcasts, and radio nationwide. Michelle partners with school districts, professional educational associations, educational service agencies, and conference organizers to provide relevant answers to future-facing challenges. Michelle’s books include Social Emotional Well-Being for Educators (Corwin, 2022), Thriving through Adversity: Powerful Strategies for Educators to Ignite Hope, Inspire Students and Transform Schools (Center for Learning and Well-Being, 2022), and Start with the Heart: Igniting Hope in Schools Through Social and Emotional Learning (Corwin, 2019).
SummaryIn a conversation about the challenges and well-being of educators, Michelle, a former teacher and principal, emphasized the importance of educational leaders understanding and supporting the well-being of their teachers to meet the academic and emotional needs of students effectively. She also introduced a framework for well-being that focused on six components: being reflective, intentional, empathetic, connected, accountable, and equitable.
Key pointsMental Health and Wellness for educators. (5:06)
The importance of social-emotional well-being for educators. (9:38)
Michelle’s six-part framework for social-emotional well-being. (13:42)
The importance of being accountable to ourselves. (16:19)
Creating a community of care and collective responsibility. (20:28)
Strategies to nourish your well-being. (25:25)
How to promote well-being. (33:05)
What we learned from the interview. (34:47)
Leveraging strengths and opportunities for growth. (40:12)
Connect with Michelle
[email protected]
www.centerforlearningandwellbeing.org
amazon.com/author/michelletrujillo
Video ClipsKeynote Clip: Collective Efficacy
Corwin Clip: Start with the Heart
Resources referenced in the interviewFramework for Educator Well-Being (PDF)
Social-Emotional Well-Being Check-in (PDF)
• the purpose and results of the listening sessions
• the imperative for educational sovereignty
• the importance of allies to support policy-making at the local and state levels
• the value of pathways to post-high school vocational training and higher education
• the need for greater historical awareness of the population at large
Connect with MelanieMelanie Johnson, M.Ed. Sac and Fox Nation of Oklahoma Director, Whole Child Initiative National Indian Education Association 1514 P Street, NW, Suite B Washington, DC 20005
https://www.niea.org/
The podcast currently has 48 episodes available.