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Hello Friends,

I am wondering if any of you can direct me to curriculum for trauma-infomred parenting classes. I have received a number of requests and I cannot find anything online. I know in my home state of Wisconsin that type of training was going on via the Wisconsin Trauma Project, but the fuding for that ended along with the classes.

Thanks in advance for any assistance you can provide.

Scott Webb

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Try your local foster parent groups.  They usually have a lot of training about trauma available.

On Tuesday, September 27, 2022 at 08:24:13 AM CDT, PACEsConnection <communitymanager@acesconnection.com> wrote:

[New Ask the Community] Trauma-Informed Parenting Curriculum
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New Ask the Community
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| Trauma-Informed Parenting CurriculumScott A Webb
Hello Friends,

I am wondering if any of you can direct me to curriculum for trauma-infomred parenting classes. I have received a number of requests and I cannot find anything online. I know in my home state of Wisconsin that type of training was going on via the Wisconsin Trauma Project, but the fuding for that ended along with the classes.

Thanks in advance for any assistance you can provide.

Scott Webb

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The Wisconsin Trauma Informed Parenting training was modeled from the curriculum available from the National Childhood Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN). The most recent evolution of it was renamed to Strengthening Families and Systems (SFS) and that occurred shortly before the funding for the WI Trauma Project ended. I was one of the many workers who was trained to train the curriculum, first TIP and then later SFS. We were given access to all the materials via an Adobe connect site, but I don't believe it's active anymore and most of us continue to use whatever we had saved prior to the end. I know LaCrosse County advertises their SFS trainings here on PACEs, though they may call it something different than I did above. The foster/adoptive parent, Donna, who was contracted with DCF for the project had said that we could continue to reach out to her as needed. If you email me directly JTSmith@childrenswi.org I can share what info I have for her and as well as the training materials I have saved. 

Hello!

Check out this universal intervention mentioned above,TBRIÂŪ, we use at Hope Street in Jacksonville, FL where we work every day to change the outcomes for little ones (and not so little ones) in Northeast FL.

Every child is precious.

Hope Street equips ALL who touch the lives of children with what they need, so they can give children what they need.

Every child should feel precious, loved & safe.

There is a model of care that is a trauma-informed, strength-based training for parents (and teachers and any other child- and family-serving individuals) who themselves have experienced trauma (most of us)--Trust-Based Relational InterventionÂŪ (TBRIÂŪ) Training .

https://hopestreetinc.com/trus...l-intervention-tbri/

Positive Childhood Experiences and interventions like Trust-Based Relational InterventionÂŪ (TBRIÂŪ) equip the adults in a child’s life with understanding, strategies, and skills to strengthen connection and felt safety.

Hope and healing are possible in the lives of children and their families who have experienced trauma that has gone unresolved.

Sign up for a free virtual training here: https://hopestreetinc.com/calendar-2/

WHAT IS TBRIÂŪ?

TBRIÂŪ is an attachment-based, trauma-informed intervention that is designed to meet the needs of ALL children, and especially the complex needs of children who have experienced trauma.

TBRIÂŪ uses Empowering Principles to address physical needs, Connecting Principles for attachment needs, and Correcting Principles to disarm fear-based behaviors. While the intervention is based on years of attachment, sensory processing, and neuroscience research, the heartbeat of TBRIÂŪ is connection.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FWScSJKjn1A&t=2s

What do we do?

TBRIÂŪ is a care model designed to help meet relational and developmental needs of children and youth impacted by unresolved trauma. Developed by Drs. Karyn Purvis and David Cross at the Karyn Purvis Institute of Child Development at TCU, TBRIÂŪ considers the whole child—brain, biology, behavior, body, and beliefs. TBRIÂŪprovides parents, caregivers, teachers and service providers with insight and practical tools to help children in their care reach their highest potential.

At Hope Street we Connect & Nurture in all that we do as weâ€Ķ

  • Meet people where they are
  • Develop relationships of felt safety
  • Share knowledge respectfully
  • Provide a safe space for changing mindsets & behaviors
  • Offer new relational skills & strategies
  • Create opportunities to process & practice new skills

As a parent, caregiver or one who serves children and families, you may have experienced ACEs as a child and you may still still feel those effects. What does this mean? Because our brains and bodies are always changing, you can heal by learning healthy ways to deal with stress. When you are better able to handle difficult situations, everyone around you does better, especially children. Understanding what you should expect from children at different ages can also help you when their behaviors are challenging leading to stronger connections.

Hope Street’s TBRIÂŪ Practitioners have a wide variety of expertise and experience as they meet you where you are to deliver the concepts and strategies to develop the skills to connect with and nurture the children in your life.

Connection builds trust, and trust builds healthy relationships.

https://hopestreetinc.com/trauma-aces-tbri/

Sign up for a free virtual training here: https://hopestreetinc.com/calendar-2/

That sounds interesting. Im an EdD student looking for a school that is implementing a trauma informed teaching approach/ intervention. My research is examining how a trauma informed program impacts on the social and emotional wellbeing of traumatized students from minority groups  learning English in the US.



thanks!

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