The trauma and learning policy initiative (TLPI)'s inquiry‐based process: Mapping systems change toward resilience

Author:

Atallah Devin G.12,Koslouski Jessica B.3,Perkins Kesha N.4,Marscio Christine5,Robinson Rhyann L.12,Del Rio Michelle G.12,Porche Michelle V.6

Affiliation:

1. Psychology Department University of Massachusetts Boston Boston Massachusetts USA

2. Department of Psychology Decolonial Antiracism Research & Action (DARA) Collective for Healing & Liberación, University of Massachusetts Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Educational Psychology Department The University of Connecticut Storrs Connecticut USA

4. Disparities Research Unit Mongan Institute at Mass General Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

5. Department of Counseling Psychology & Applied Human Development, Wheelock College of Education and Human Development Boston University Boston Massachusetts USA

6. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences University of California San Francisco California USA

Abstract

AbstractTrauma is much more than our individual experiences. Fundamentally, trauma is rooted in our social conditions, interrelated with the oppression and violence in our communities and in societies at large. Trauma is knotted within cycles of harm in our relationships and in our communities and institutions. Not only are our communities and institutions sites of trauma, however, but they can also be sites of great healing, restoration, and resilience. Educational institutions hold the potential for contributing to resilient change toward the creation of transformative communities for children to feel safe and to thrive, even in the face of accumulating adversities that are endemic in the United States and beyond. This study investigated the impact of an initiative that strives to support K‐12 schools in transforming towards greater trauma‐sensitivity: trauma and learning policy initiative (TLPI). We share findings from our qualitative, situational analysis of the impact of TLPI's support to three schools in Massachusetts, USA. Although TLPI's framework on trauma does not explicitly include an antiracism lens, when engaging in data analysis, with the aim to shed light on possible schoolwide approaches to promote equity, our team of researchers specifically attended to ways intersecting systems of oppression may have impacted student education. A visual diagram, “Map of Educational Systems Change Towards Resilience,” emerged from our data analysis, with four themes that represent how educators understood the shifts in their schools. These were: (1) facilitating empowerment and collaboration; (2) integrating whole‐child approaches; (3) affirming cultural identity and promoting a sense of belonging; and (4) re‐envisioning discipline toward relational accountability. We discuss pathways that educational communities and institutions can take to create trauma‐sensitive learning environments for the promotion of greater resilience.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Social Psychology

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