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Teachers: It’s Time To Talk About Our Secondary Trauma

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Teachers: It’s Time To Talk About Our Secondary Trauma

Educators need mental health supports. Here’s how Chicago schools could make a difference.

CHALKBEAT

Being in a silent school hallway is not unlike finding yourself within a horror movie.

The hallway should be full of boisterous conversation, laughter, and the bustle of our school community. But when I returned to my Chicago high school in late spring to clean up my classroom, the absence of students, and the knowledge that those hallways had sat empty for months, was unnerving. When I shared that sentiment with colleagues, one fellow teacher broke down in tears.

Brian Meeker
Courtesy photo

The struggles of remote learning — notably, the inequitable distribution of technology, and low student participation for a multitude of reasons — only added to our uncertainty. We’ve been left to wonder about our students: Are they healthy? Are they safe? In normal times, a conversation in the hallway or a quick classroom check-in would bring me up to speed. During remote learning, the lack of in-person interaction often turned the social and emotional aspects of education into guesswork.

I also know that, for some students, the only advocates in their lives besides their parents are their teachers. As the pandemic disproportionately ravages America’s poorest communities, and the systemic racism in our society is laid painfully bare, I’ve seen my students struggling to grapple with the stress. In these moments, I am not only their teacher but their counselor and confidant.

It’s a lot. And as much as I am honored by my students’ trust, responding to student trauma on top of our own daily stressors can produce a kind of secondary trauma in teachers. For this upcoming school year to be successful, schools are going to need to acknowledge that and help teachers work through it in ways they never have before.

I have known educators in the past who have suffered quietly as they faced their own mental health challenges, costing their students a vibrant and caring atmosphere. We cannot allow this kind of silent suffering to continue. If we are unable to fully take care of our own mental health, how can we possibly be the advocates our students need?

I see a few ways Chicago Public Schools could make a real difference here. One way is to use the $18 million saved from shrinking its contract with the Chicago Police Department to increase the number of social workers, boost support for social-emotional learning, and add mental health services for students and teachers.

Another option would be to expand the school district’s Office of Social and Emotional Learning to include, explicitly, the responsibility for teachers’ social and emotional health. While it currently helps educators create effective curriculum materials, teacher mental health remains separate. In addition, the Employee Assistance Program, which offers in-person and virtual counseling, loans, and financial planning for the district’s workforce, could grow to include resources geared explicitly toward anti-racism, conflict de-escalation, and restorative justice.

When we all do finally return to our classrooms, educators — with the support of their school leaders — must move from trauma-informed to healing-centered education. Trauma-informed education implies a deficit and runs the risk of reducing a person to their traumatic experiences. Healing-centered education focuses on the assets we all bring to the classroom and any post-traumatic growth that has taken place. For example, if a struggling student has an outburst, healing-centered education means acknowledging past trauma as a cause, but also the work that student has since done and the unique perspective they offer.

Over time, I hope our school communities will heal, not go back to the way they were but grow into new and better forms. Trauma forces change. It is up to all of us, students, teachers, and administrators, to plant the seeds for a more caring, equitable, and supportive education system, one that takes seriously the mental health of students and educators alike.

FOOTNOTE: Bryan Meeker is an instructor at Acero’s Major Hector P. Garcia High School, where he teaches biology. He is a member of the Chicago Teachers Union, Mikva Challenge, Educators for Excellence, and the Acero Anti-Racism Committee.

ADOPT A PET

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Bella is a female Beagle mix. She’s approximately 10 years old. She plays nicely with other dogs! She was abandoned by her previous family. Her adoption fee is $130 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Get details on adoption at www.vhslifesaver.org/adopt!

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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Receptionist/Medical Office
Evansville Multi Specialty Clinic 3.5/5 rating 4 reviews – Evansville, IN
$12.50 an hour
Answer multi-line phones and either direct the caller to the appropriate party or handle the caller’s needs yourself. Answering and routing phone calls.
Easily apply
Sep 11
Weekend Receptionist
CarDon & Associates 3/5 rating 153 reviews – Evansville, IN
It’s an environment that’s exciting, respectful and rewarding. We offer positions with amazing benefits, like weekly pay, cell phone discounts and premium…
Easily apply
Sep 11
MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST (PEDIATRICS)
ECHO COMMUNITY HEALTHCARE 3.3/5 rating 4 reviews – Evansville, IN
This position includes serving as first point of contact for patients entering the. Clinic, and provides front desk coverage and patient greeting.
Sep 8
Receptionist
The Salvation Army USA Central Territory 3.9/5 rating 13,791 reviews – Evansville, IN
This position will be the primary contact for all people coming to The Salvation Army. This position requires the ability to multi-task as the person will be…
Sep 8
Secretary – Food and Nutrition Bookkeeper
Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation 3.8/5 rating 62 reviews – Evansville, IN
$17.35 an hour
This position works 47 Weeks per year, 5 days per week at 8 hours per day. Our people are the single most important asset we have in the EVSC.
Sep 9
Retail Receptionist
Visionworks 3.4/5 rating 1,116 reviews – Evansville, IN
Schedule appointments, verify insurance coverage, maintain accurate patient records, and assist with preliminary testing under the Optometrist’s supervision.
Sep 10
Office Assistant – Integrity Family
St. Vincent, IN 3.7/5 rating 5,301 reviews – Evansville, IN
Integrity Family’s doctors and care teams specialize in family medicine, a type of primary care that provides ongoing healthcare for patients of all ages.
Sep 8
Office Assistant – Pediatrics
St. Vincent, IN 3.7/5 rating 5,301 reviews – Evansville, IN
Ascension Medical Group – Washington Avenue Pediatrics. Ascension’s pediatric teams provide complete, expert care for infants, children and adolescents, from…
Sep 8
Office Assistant Part Time
Wayne’s Appliance & Mattress – Evansville, IN
$10 an hour
A job for which military experienced candidates are encouraged to apply. Front Office staff needed for light clerical work answering phones, and basic computer…
Sep 9
Administrative Assistant
RoofClaim, LLC – Evansville, IN
$16-$18 per hour (Commensurate with experience). Company, is seeking a full-time dynamic, friendly, and organized employee to perform office support activities…
Easily apply
Sep 11
Accounts Payable/Administrative
Hinderliter Construction, Inc. – Evansville, IN
$14 – $17 an hour
Our busy organization is seeking a highly organized, hardworking and self-motivated Accounts Payable and Administrative Clerk to process all incoming invoices…
Easily apply
Sep 3
Switchboard Operator/Receptionist – Busy Medical Practice
WOMEN’S HEALTH CARE P.C. – Newburgh, IN
Receives and transfers telephone calls of patients to various departments. Operates telephone / switchboard service for medical practice.
Easily apply
Sep 11
Senior Administrative Assistant
Adecco 3.8/5 rating 17,404 reviews – Evansville, IN
$15 an hour
Review documents and copies to send on to various vendors that track our insurance, legal descriptions, address change request, etc.
Easily apply
Sep 11

USI Contact Tracing Update

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Through contact tracing protocols by the University of Southern Indiana Dean of Students Office (DOSO), several positive COVID-19 cases came to light late Friday in one student organization. For both the safety of the other members and that of the broader University community, all members of the organization have been required to immediately quarantine, obtain a COVID-19 test and report the results to DOSO.

Due to confidentiality considerations, neither individual names nor the name of student group will be publicly identified. Faculty members will be notified of the students’ absences from class.

The safety of the entire USI community relies upon everyone abiding by the safety practices of physical distancing of six feet or more, wearing face coverings and frequent hand washing. Self-monitoring and reporting will continue to be vital in reducing the spread of COVID-19 in our comm

ADOPT A PET

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Ruby is the VHS’ 5th-longest resident cat! She arrived at the end of May. She loves people of all shapes & sizes, but gets overwhelmed in a communal room of lots of kitties. She may do fine with 1-2 other cats in a home environment. Her adoption fee is reduced to $20 through 9/19 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane atwww.vhslifesaver.org/adopt for details!

HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS

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Lost Wages Assistance (LWA) Unemployment Benefits To Be Paid Beginning Week Of Sept. 21

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Lost Wages Assistance (LWA) Unemployment Benefits To Be Paid Beginning Week Of Sept. 21

INDIANAPOLIS (Sept. 11, 2020)  – The Indiana Department of Workforce Development (DWD) will begin making Lost Wages Assistance (LWA) payments to eligible claimants beginning the week of Monday, Sept. 21.

LWA is funded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to provide $300 per week to supplement unemployment benefits for those who have an unemployment benefit amount of at least $100 and are out of work due to COVID-19.

LWA funding will only cover the six-week period from the week ending Aug. 1 to the week ending Sept. 5. No LWA funding will be available to states beyond that time period.

Indiana will make payments the week of Sept. 21, covering the period of Aug. 1 to Sept. 5, for those eligible. For those claimants with issues holding payment, DWD will make payments, pending funding availability, once eligibility is established.

Since March 8, DWD has paid a total of $4.9 billion to nearly 670,000 Hoosiers.