In January, our inter-disciplinary project with Michael Gregory and Susan Cole of the Education Law Clinic at Harvard Law School and the Trauma & Learning Policy Initiative was selected for an exploratory seminar at the Radcliffe Institute of Advanced Study. The convening of experts across a range of disciplines and backgrounds–including students, teachers, practitioners, and academics–will be hosted in June 2022.
Read our proposal abstract:
Racism, Trauma & School Pushout: Transforming School Cultures for Equity & Student Success
Students succeed when school cultures foster their agency, safety, and belonging; support their developmental needs; and honor their multidimensional lives and identities. Adults can create school cultures that are havens for learning when systems support them to feel safe and valued, promote collaboration, empower them to engage in shared decision making, and establish a clear vision grounded in inclusive and equitable norms.
Research across several fields links traumatic experiences to learning, relational, and behavioral difficulties at school—difficulties that can interfere with development and lead to negative, counterproductive responses for the most vulnerable students. A growing literature also illuminates how experiences of racism can function as trauma for students of color, compounding the structural disadvantages they face. The overlapping barriers of racism and trauma place many students at increased risk of being left behind, disparately disciplined, and/or pushed out of school.
A burgeoning trauma-sensitive schools movement seeks to reshape education by supporting schools to transform their cultures based on a shared understanding of trauma’s impacts on learning and students’ universal need to feel safe and supported. A parallel movement seeks to overcome profound intergenerational harms of racism by prioritizing equity, diversity, and inclusion in schools and infusing antiracist mindsets and practices throughout education. Our proposal aims to convene an interdisciplinary group of scholars and practitioners connected to these two movements to explore how trauma-sensitivity and antiracism can together improve our understanding of how to educate the whole learner and transform school cultures into sustained, supportive, equitable communities where all students thrive.