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State Leaders Attend Symposium on Childhood Trauma, Mental Health

Approximately 100 school, mental health, and community leaders from across the state gathered at the University of Connecticut campus in Storrs on Wednesday, May 24, to discuss childhood trauma and the impact it can have on a child’s education, as well as possible strategies for responding to children who have experienced trauma or have behavioral health issues.
The event, titled “Symposium on Trauma-Informed School Mental Health,” was the result of collaboration between the Capitol Region Education Council (CREC), the Connecticut State Department of Education, the University of Connecticut Collaboratory on School and Child Health and Neag School of Education, the Ana Grace Project, Clifford Beers Clinic, and the Child Health Development Institute. The symposium’s main goals were to increase awareness among participants of important issues in childhood trauma; discuss creation of a common framework for addressing trauma, violence and mental health needs among children; and to stimulate the development of a trauma-informed school mental health plan.
“We are excited to have this collaborative effort on behalf of students and families in Connecticut. This is our first united approach to determine how to best meet the needs of students with mental health needs and those impacted by trauma. We know that our school districts are anxious to become part of this initiative and to be at the table. Hopefully this is the first step in this process,” says Deborah Richards, CREC director of student services.
The symposium’s main goals were to increase awareness among participants of important issues in childhood trauma; discuss creation of a common framework for addressing trauma, violence and mental health needs among children; and to stimulate the development of a trauma-informed school mental health plan.

According to Judith Meyers, president and CEO of the Child Health and Development Institute, “Ensuring children’s health and wellness is a true team effort requiring participation from all child-serving sectors so that children can access needed services and supports where they live, learn, and play. Schools are a critically important setting for supporting and addressing children’s social and emotional well-being, so they can thrive.”
When asked about the value of hosting this type of event, Sandra Chafouleas, Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor in the Neag School and co-director of the UConn Collaboratory on School and Child Health, indicated that “we are excited to facilitate important conversations about the what and how of a trauma-informed lens in our school systems. Collaborative efforts such as this symposium form an essential piece of moving toward why it might be important to how do we collectively work together to make it happen.”
Following opening remarks by Connecticut State Department of Education Commissioner Dianna Wentzell and a kickoff discussion hosted by the Child Health and Development Institute’s Jeff Vanderploeg and Alice Forrester of the Clifford Beers Clinic, participants broke into groups, with each breakout session using a similar set of questions to focus on issues pertaining to a different topic in school mental health: workforce development; financing school mental health and accountability systems; promotion, prevention, and early identification; and interventions that bridge schools, families and communities. Participants later reconvened to summarize the big ideas, with plans to integrate the discussions into a document to drive next steps in facilitating a statewide framework for trauma-informed school mental health.
View photos of the event on the Neag School Facebook page.
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What Being a High School Dropout Taught Me About Teaching
Editor’s Note: The following piece — written by Neag School doctoral student Kristi Kaeppel — originally appeared on the UConn Graduate Certificate in College Instruction blog.

I recently began working on a project that looks at how teachers form their beliefs and conceptions of teaching. Like so much of learning, it seems teachers’ beliefs develop incidentally through experience and observation. Perhaps we model our beloved high school science teacher or we imagine ourselves rousing students from boredom a la Robin Williams in “Dead Poets Society.”
When I got reflecting on my own conceptions of teaching, it struck me that so much of how I conduct myself as a teacher comes from having been a failing, disengaged student in high school. When I stepped into my first teaching role in Adult Basic Education, my main objective was to avoid creating the kind of educational environment I so loathed as a teenager.
“I spent a long time hiding the fact that I dropped out of high school. … I think I have finally overcome the stigma and can instead turn my early experiences failing in school into a strength.”
— Kristi Kaeppel, Doctoral Student
Two anecdotes illustrate my loss of faith in schooling that led, along with a slew of other factors, to my eventual dropping out of high school. Looking back on them now, they also make good case studies of what NOT to do as an instructor (especially the first):
- It was sophomore year, and I was just starting to check out of school, but finally, we were reading a book that captivated me: Great Expectations by Charles Dickens. I hadn’t done many of the assignments all year, but I applied myself to an essay assigned on the book with rare enthusiasm and concentration. I was proud of my work and eager for feedback. When I got my paper back, I had failed with a note saying that it was “very, very, well-written” and that I must’ve plagiarized. And like that, I checked back out beyond return.
- It was senior year. By this time I was merely a seat warmer in school on the rare occasion that I showed up. Again, there was a glimmer of hope in my high school English class as the teacher held up two books — Go Ask Alice, a (in my opinion) poorly written piece of anti-drug propaganda and The Bell Jar, by Sylvia Plath, a masterpiece and (sadly for me since it features a depressed teenager) one of the books I most identified with. The teacher asked the class which one we should read. I think I was the only one who voted for The Bell Jar. This confirmed that I did indeed have nothing in common with my classmates and that I would be better off staying home and reading.

Adolescent angst and arrogance aside, these two stories illustrate some teaching approaches I was determined not to replicate:
First, I would trust my students and give them the benefit of the doubt. I would not make accusations; I would listen and approach them with compassion. Even if someone does cheat, why are they cheating? What is going on with them that cheating is a viable option and how can I make authentic learning more attractive to them?
While the teacher in the second story did at least try to have a democratic classroom and allow student choice, I think one could go a step further by allowing even more autonomy and choice in assignments. If some people were drawn to one book and others to another, why not have book groups?
The larger point I took away from both of these stories was to always look for those signs of student interest and curiosity and try to kindle, not extinguish, them.
This is easier said than done. It was much easier to be the failing student with my head down in class who muttered insults about the class under my breath than to become a teacher and have one of the most important responsibilities in society.
“My goal as a teacher is to try and create those conditions where … natural-born, inherent curiosity can thrive.”
I spent a long time hiding the fact that I dropped out of high school. Now that I am in a Ph.D. program, I think I have finally overcome the stigma and can instead turn my early experiences failing in school into a strength.
Perhaps one difficulty for many instructors is that they were model students, and so it’s hard to conceive of the mindset of those students who appear lazy, disengaged, and unmotivated.
I was that person. But I had curiosity and a love of learning. I just didn’t find a home for it in school. My goal as a teacher is to try and create those conditions where that natural-born, inherent curiosity can thrive. If hadn’t been for my own experiences failing out of school, I may not have appreciated just how much potential and dormant academic interest can be concealed under the guise of an apathetic student.
Kristi Kaeppel is a doctoral student in the Neag School’s Learning, Leadership, and Educational Policy program with a concentration in Adult Learning. She works as a graduate assistant for the UConn Graduate Certificate in College Instruction (GCCI) program. GCCI is a nine-credit program for individuals interested in expanding their preparation in and understanding of college teaching.
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Neag School Announces Partnership With Mashantucket Pequot Museum

Stemming from the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center’s human rights education initiative, a new partnership has been established between University of Connecticut’s Neag School of Education, the Upstander Project, and the Mashantucket Pequot Museum. The partnership is called the Upstander Academy, which formally came together last year as a way to practice outreach and human rights education with the community.
The Academy, slated to run from July 31 to Aug. 4, 2017, will explore such content as the Rwandan genocide and the experiences of the indigenous peoples of New England; feature a speaker from the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe, as well as a speaker from Rwanda; and offer various workshops on creating ways to talk about genocide and reconciliation in the classroom. Teacher’s guides, documentary films, and other materials on human rights and genocide education will be distributed.
“We are so excited for the opportunity to collaborate with Upstander Project again, this time along with the University of Connecticut’s Neag School of Education,” says Jason Mancini, director of the Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center. “Several of our museum educators are alumni, and we are thrilled to deepen our involvement with such impactful educators. We have a great opportunity to pool our resources together with other amazing, like-minded institutions to help equip and compel more people to respond to injustice.”
“We have a great opportunity to pool our resources together with other amazing, like-minded institutions to help equip and compel more people to respond to injustice.”
— Jason Mancini, director of Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center
The Academy is a professional development opportunity for preservice educators in the Neag School as well as in-service K-12 educators, who can take workshops in genocide and human rights education in order to foster understanding of complex historical and current issues. Its goal is to provide educators with new instructional methods and approaches to teaching genocides and the importance of “upstanders,” defined as “a person who stands up, speaks out, and/or takes action in defense of those who are targeted for harm or injustice” by the Upstander Project’s website.
Glenn Mitoma, director of the Dodd Center as well as assistant professor of human rights and curriculum and instruction in the Neag School, has been conducting outreach with the Upstander Project and the Pequot Museum over the past year in order to come up with ways to collaborate.
“Much of their mission overlaps with our mission,” Mitoma says. “It was an important relationship to cultivate.”
The Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center, the Academy’s principal partner, is a nonprofit educational institution that focuses on the history and cultures of Native American tribes in the Northeast. The museum has been working with the Upstander Project by screening its films and helping to continue the human rights discussion. With the inclusion of the Neag School in the partnership, Mitoma says he is “looking at this as an opportunity to build upon the successes of last year.”
Within the Dodd Center’s human rights initiative, Mitoma is in charge of workshops for educators geared toward policy and advocacy, which fits squarely with the partnership, he says. The curriculum is taught using the 2011 United Nations Universal Declaration on Human Rights and focuses on helping educators translate these events into topics that are happening within the classroom today, Mitoma says. The Academy begins and ends at UConn’s Storrs campus, with workshops held at the Mashantucket Pequot Museum in the middle of the week.
Learn more about the Upstander Academy at thedoddcenter.uconn.edu/upstanderacademy.
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