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Great Example of Trauma-Informed Practices in Southern Oregon

McLoughlin Middle School eighth-grader Brynn Allen sees it simply: If students feel welcomed at her school, they’ll want to come to it.

“Sometimes people have rough lives and school is their escape,” she says, recalling a phase in seventh grade where she was struggling personally. “It kind of felt like everyone was there. It was like a welcoming center.”

School culture may be harder to quantify than academic achievements, but McLoughlin leaders say thought, heart and data spurred their multifaceted efforts to create a supportive environment. Last week, they presented to district officials what they say are the academic fruits of those efforts to boost kindness, inclusivity and, perhaps most importantly, hope, within its old building.

--For the full article from the Medford Mail-Tribune:

http://www.mailtribune.com/new...to-boost-achievement 

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Thanks, Leslie! The staff at the school has received training in the NEAR curriculum (neurobiology, epigenetics, ACEs and resilience) produced by ACE Interface and presented by our Southern Oregon ACEs Training Team, but the ways they have put it all into practice is all theirs. Their principal was chosen as the Oregon middle school principal of the year last year--she is a fantastic leader.

Agreed!  The article does not mention trauma-informed care but has all the hall  marks of a compassionate, strength-based,and trauma-informed environment and the approach is getting results!  It also underlines a theme that we have seen in schools and other organizations across the nation through Mobilizing Action for Resilient Communities.  Positive change needs to start by attending to the wellness, resiliency and trust among staff.  Thanks for sharing this

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