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Advocates aim to save Baltimore children from impact of violence

AbaltimoreThe Baltimore Sun writes about how everyday household and neighborhood violence impacts the littlest ones who are too frequently witnesses. Acknowledgement of trauma by perceptive preschool teachers and social workers starts to solve rather perpetuate the problem.

The first time she witnessed a student's major tantrum — a 2-year-old hurling a toy stove filled with plastic pots and pans — Shanikia Johnson had just started as a teacher at Little Flowers Child Development Center in West Baltimore.

She knew toddlers acted out. But the rage-filled reaction, triggered when Johnson wouldn't allow the boy to play with a toy, stunned the 22-year-old teacher. Then, time and time again, she saw other children throwing classroom furniture. Bookcases, chairs, tables — all were flung around the room.

Some students bit classmates, leaving teeth marks on hands and cheeks; a few threatened to hurt staff members. Other children, dubbed “runners,” darted out of the building and down barren city blocks, with frantic teachers on their heels. The encounters exhausted Johnson and other teachers, who began to see the children as troublemakers.


To read more about this story by Andrea McDaniels, go to: 
http://www.baltimoresun.com/he...14-story.html#page=1

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About 15 years ago, at "Grand Rounds" Continuing Education at Dartmouth, an Epidemiologist presented about the 50% of Detroit Metropolitan Area Schoolchildren with PTSD and/or Toxic Stress......Might this article be indicative of an "Epidemic" beyond just the Detroit Metro area ? ? ?

Vermont State Police used to carry "Trooper Teddies" (made by the Vermont Teddy Bear Factory) in the back of their patrol cars, for many situations like incidents that are discussed in this article, which they would give to such children, at the time of the incident-to keep afterward, as their own. Perhaps they still do. I would imagine it might provide some comfort to a child, perhaps even help build repoire, and possibly contribute to resilience, after experiencing or witnessing a tragedy. Some of those "Trooper Teddies" found their way outside Vermont, to other departments, where they were similarly used.  

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