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January 2016

The Hardest Job [TheAtlantic.com]

On a typical morning, the first to wake is 6-month-old Nathaniel. He doesn’t always sleep through the night, so by the time his mother, Cierra Thomas, sits up in the twin bed she shares with her husband, Tony Gardner, she’s already dreading the day. “I’m mad that I woke up here,” she says. “Here” is the Gardner family’s room in a 135-bed shelter for homeless families. Their space, bright and painted beige, is the size of a modest kitchen.

Feds Funding Effort To Tie Medical Services To Social Needs [KHN.org]

The federal government has announced a $157 million project to help hospitals and doctors link Medicare and Medicaid patients to needed social services that sometimes have a bigger impact on their health than medical interventions. Public health experts have known for decades that even with medical care easily available, patients are often limited in their ability to get better or maintain good health if they lack stable housing, access to healthy food, or the ability to get to and from...

How Teachers Can Be Better: A Call for Cultural Knowledge in the Classroom [PSMag.com]

It was 5 a.m.—right before I was due to rise, dress, get my two children ready to go to church—and tears began to stream down my face. I was struck by the irony of my emotion: Seven years before, I’d been crying because I thought I had a serious illness and could not have children. This morning, I was crying because of my children: in particular, my boy child, about whom I was desperately worried, unsure how to help him navigate the everyday world of school as an...

The Cracks in Britain's Big Plan to Build 30,000 Affordable Starter Homes [CityLab.com]

The U.K. government is so tired of waiting on private developers to build new homes that it’s going to build its own. Faced with a nationwide housing crisis, Britain just earmarked £1.2 billion to directly commission 30,000 affordable new homes on brownfield sites by 2020, part of a target of 200,000 new homes in total. To speed things up, the first five new projects will be built on government land—ex-military sites, a goods yard, and a former hospital—in Southeast...

Subsidized housing used to stem teacher shortages [OCRegister.com]

As the days get shorter, first grade teacher Esmeralda Jimnez watches the dimming afternoon sky outside her classroom window the way her pupils watch the clock at dismissal time. The studio apartment Jimnez rents for $1,783 a month, or 43 percent of her salary, is located in one of San Francisco’s sketchiest neighborhoods. Getting home involves running a gauntlet of feces-strewn sidewalks, popping crack pipes, discarded needles and menacing comments — daily irritants that become...

In Mass. schools, a focus on well-being [BostonGlobe.com]

The only sound that could be heard in Maria Simon’s first-grade classroom one December morning was the soothing hum from a vibrating Tibetan singing bowl. Her students had gathered on a brightly colored rug at the back of the classroom, sitting with their eyes shut, their legs crossed, and their arms extended outward palms up. Each time a classmate struck the small bowl with a mallet — releasing a low sounding gong — the students breathed in. Then as the sound faded away,...

Will Restorative Justice Work in South Bronx Schools? [YouthToday.com]

In New York, kids are fighting to stay alive; in Seattle kids are contemplating suicide. This is one way to describe the vast differences in the student populations I have spent my career working with. As a high school teacher for the past eight years, and facilitator of restorative justice (RJ) for the past three, it has been my honor to help guide and coach students through the extremely tough years of high school and adolescence. [For more of this story, written by David Levine, go...

Veterans Say Trained Dogs Help With PTSD, But The VA Won't Pay [NPR.org]

At a warehouse near Dallas, a black Lab named Papi tugs on a rope to open a fridge and passes his trainer a plastic water bottle with his mouth. Service dogs are often trained to help veterans with physical disabilities. Now, a growing number are being trained to meet the demand from vets with post-traumatic stress disorder and other mental health issues. Those dogs learn extra tricks — how to sweep a house for intruders, for example, so a veteran feels safe. [For more of this story,...

Our Prisons in Black and White [JJIE.org]

After swelling for decades, the number of Americans in prison is finally, gradually beginning to shrink. For the first time since 1978, populations in both state and federal prisons are getting smaller, the result of an overall decline in crime, an easing of the War on Drugs and reform efforts on the part of many states. But what about the racial disparity in incarceration? Is it easing, too? [For more of this story, written by Eli Hager, go...

Have You Been Affected By Substance Abuse or Foster Care?

Youth Today and the Juvenile Justice Information Exchange , both nonprofit publications,  are seeking opinion columns on two issues that affect young people: substance abuse, including prevention, addiction and recovery, and foster care. Have you or a family member been affected by or involved in either one? If so, we would love to hear from you. Here are examples of columns we have already run on substance abuse and foster care. If you are interested, email Senior Editor...

Not in My City, Not in My State Campaign

The issue of human   trafficking is one of the most unifying issues of our time. The Not in My City, Not in My State Campaign  is a multi-city movement being developed to engage local communities who want to use their time, talent and treasure to fight the issue of human trafficking. Human Trafficking negatively affects many communities and Sacramento is no exception. Community leaders and activists have come together and now Sacramento is leading the fight to combat...

Students with influence over peers reduce school bullying by 30 percent [ScienceDaily.com]

Curbing school bullying has been a focal point for educators, administrators, policymakers and parents, but the answer may not lie within rules set by adults, according to new research led by Princeton University. Instead, the solution might actually be to have the students themselves, particularly those most connected to their peers, promote conflict resolution in school. A team of researchers from Princeton, Rutgers University and Yale University engaged groups of influential students in...

More Evidence That America's New School Lunches Work [PSMag.com]

If you build it, they will eat it. That's the lesson from a new  study  on the effects of a controversial federal law requiring American public schools to serve healthier lunches. In contention is the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act (HHFKA), which passed in 2010 and was implemented in 2012. HHFKA has come under fire in recent years, with  food companies  saying the rules are too strict, students complaining  that the food is too gross, and school districts...

The Oregon Standoff: Race, Land Use, and Environmental Protection [CityLab.com]

The militia that has taken over the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge headquarters in Harney County, Oregon, has been hashtagged derisively as the #yallqaeda or #VanillaISIS movement. The conceit behind these labels is that these men have resorted to terrorist measures to make a political statement. Some of the militia men are reportedly armed, have vowed to go out in a blaze of glory for their cause, and have military veterans among them to help see that through. While their tactics are...

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