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June 2021

Parenting through Divorce with HOPE [positiveexperience.org/blog]

By Amanda Winn, 6/10/21, positiveexperience.org/blog Hello out there, HOPE family. I joined HOPE at the start of this year to help the team bring HOPE to the West Coast. I’m a Bay Area girl living in Portland. Well, to be more precise, I’m a New Jersey girl who made the Bay Area her home for over a decade before moving to Portland. I’m a social worker with my MSW from Cal, and I’ve always worked at the intersection of parenting and poverty, typically at a more macro-level. Oh, and I’m a...

[Repost] Unlearning Ableism for Educators - free, interactive workshop

Registration for the June Rise to Resilience workshop Unlearning Ableism for Educators is now available! In this workshop, we will dive into what ableism is, how it manifests within classrooms and the education system, and identify ways to challenge ableism in our practices. Register here: www.bit.ly/risejune You can watch past workshop recordings by clicking here and learn more about Rise to Resilience on the website www.risetoresilience.org . Image Description: A light pink background with...

What Can We Learn from the World's Most Peaceful Societies? [greatergood.berkeley.edu]

By Peter T. Coleman and Douglas P. Fry, Greater Good Magazine, June 7, 2021 Given the grinding wars and toxic political divisions that dominate the news, it might come as a surprise to hear that there are also a multitude of sustainably peaceful societies thriving across the globe today. These are communities that have managed to figure out how to live together in peace—internally within their borders, externally with neighbors, or both—for 50, 100, even several hundred years. This simple...

Minnesota Bill Would Remove Financial Burden of College for State's Foster Youth [imprintnews.org]

By Colleen Connolly, The Imprint, June 3, 2021 Abbe Desai wants to be a teacher or maybe a flight attendant someday. At age 19, she’s still trying to figure it out. But while her future career is undecided, her path to get there, starting at Ridgewater College in central Minnesota, is all mapped out, and — as is the case for many of her peers raised in foster care — it’s a long and difficult journey. Desai takes classes in both global studies and liberal arts to keep her options open. She...

Orange County schools join with Children's Hospital to address student mental health needs [edsource.org]

By Carolyn Jones, EdSource, June 8, 2021 Faced with rates of adolescent suicide and self-harm that have been among the fastest-rising in the country, schools in Orange County have teamed up with a local hospital to boost mental health services on campuses. The partnership between Children’s Hospital of Orange County and the Orange County Department of Education will include a streamlined connection between the schools and the hospital system, and “well spaces” on every campus where students...

Oakland public school teacher celebrated for her rare girls-only computer science classes [sfchronicle.com]

By Emma Talley, San Francisco Chronicle, June 8, 2021 Growing up, Chantel Parnell would round up all the kids in her neighborhood to hold “school” on her front lawn. Toting a chalkboard and her clipboard, she’d teach her neighbor-students arithmetic in her free time. In high school, Parnell worked in a local elementary school in her community of south Los Angeles. While a student at the women’s college Bryn Mawr, she helped coordinate a tutoring program for high school students. [ Please...

The Neuroscience of Narcissism and Narcissistic Abuse

This series has focused on narcissism and narcissistic abuse of children and how their past inhibits their present. However, some questions need answering, including the most common, “Why did she/he act that way?” This article is purely scientific and does not, in any way, excuse the behaviors of narcissistic parents and the abuse they perpetrate against their children. All adults are entirely responsible for their actions, no matter the extent of their illness. This article will attempt to...

On Top of Everything Else, the Pandemic Messed With Our Morals [theatlantic.com]

By Jonathan Moens, The Atlantic, June 8, 2021 Throughout the pandemic, people have had to make impossibly tough decisions. Kathleen Turner, a 52-year-old intensive-care nurse in San Francisco, has been haunted by hers. Since COVID-19 patients started overwhelming her hospital last spring, she has had to give patients sedatives knowing they would likely have lasting negative health consequences, and systematically deny relatives a chance to say goodbye to dying loved ones. Last year, Turner...

National Week of Conversation 2021 along with Resources and Events to Bridge Divides! [princeton.edu]

Weekly Series with Alliance for Peacebuilding + U.S. Peace, Justice, and Democracy Working Group Join Alliance for Peacebuilding (AfP) for their weekly series of webinars events, Preventing Violent Extremism in the U.S. , a part of their ongoing webinar series. June 16 for a two-part webinar . Session 1: The Way Out: How to Overcome Toxic Polarization (2:00pm-3:00pm EDT) , hear from social psychologist Peter T. Coleman as he discusses ideas from his new book, The Way Out: How to Overcome...

Get the New Playbook Created by Learning Policy Institute and Turnaround for Children: Design Principles for Schools [tfcusa.org]

New Playbook from Learning Policy Institute and Turnaround for Children: Design Principles for Schools Putting the Science of Learning and Development Into Action In partnership with the Forum for Youth Investment and in association with the Science of Learning and Development (SoLD) Alliance This is such an exciting moment: the release of the new playbook, Design Principles for Schools: Putting the Science of Learning and Development Into Action , created by the Learning Policy Institute...

The Problem with Shoulds: How Should Statements Can Hurt You and What to Do About Them

I shouldn’t feel this way. I should know better. I should have learned my lesson. I should be able to handle this by now. I shouldn’t still be upset about this breakup/death/situation. I would like to hereby eliminate the word “should” in statements like these. I’d like to remove the word “should” from the collective vocabulary of trauma survivors. I’d like to see most everyone else eliminate shoulds for that matter! These statements serve no positive purpose, they only attempt to criticize...

From Concern to Collaboration: Wilmington University’s New Trauma and Resilience Certificate Teaches Awareness and Hope-filled Renewal

Professionals in many fields, including healthcare, human services, education, and criminal justice, have the potential to guide people and communities toward wellness and help prevent re-traumatization. Wilmington University's new Trauma and Resilience Certificate Program offers these and other professionals the evidence-based training necessary to promote preventive health, healing, and growth.

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