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Teaching Teenagers to Cope With Social Stress [NYTimes.com]

Almost four million American teenagers have just started their freshman year of high school. Can they learn better ways to deal with all that stress and insecurity? New research suggests they can. Though academic and social pressures continue to pile on in high school, teenagers can be taught effective coping skills to skirt the pitfalls of anxiety and depression. David S. Yeager, an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Texas at Austin and a leading voice in the growing...

The Problem With Most Media Coverage of Domestic Violence [PSMag.com]

Controversy erupted in 2014 when video of National Football League player Ray Rice violently punched his fiancé (now wife) and dragged her unconscious body from an elevator. Most recently, Deadspin released graphic images of the injuries NFL player Greg Hardy inflicted on his ex-girlfriend. In both instances, NFL officials insisted that, if they had seen the visual evidence of the crime, they would have implemented harsher consequences from the onset. Why are violent images so much more...

How Childhood Trauma Can Cause Premature Aging [Time.com]

There are a lot of things to envy about youth: clear skin, perfect hair, boundless energy. But nothing says young like a good set of telomeres. We’ve all got them, but if you’re past a certain age, you don’t want to think about them too much. Telomeres are the protein caps at the end of chromosomes that act as a sort of mortal fuse: the older you get the shorter they grow, a process that contributes to all manner of age-related diseases and breakdowns. Telomere length can be affected by...

Why Parents Are Being Forced to Find Childcare Underground [TheAtlantic.com]

The front door of Nora Nivia Nevarez’s adobe-like house in suburban Albuquerque, New Mexico, opens to blocks and children’s books scattered around the brightly colored carpet, shaped like a puzzle piece. Throughout the afternoon, she keeps a careful eye on her four small charges, ages 4 months to 10 years, by turns reading books and helping them with puzzles. One little boy named Javier cries as his guardian, Guadalupe, picks him up. He’s tired and ready to go home. “I love caring for...

Why the Museum of African American History Is About More Than the Past [BillMoyers.com]

“The great force of history,” James Baldwin once wrote, “comes from the fact that we carry it within us, are unconsciously controlled by it in many ways, and history is literally present in all that we do. It could scarcely be otherwise, since it is to history that we owe our frames of reference, our identities, and our aspirations.” Though written long ago, Baldwin’s words about the power and complexity of history certainly inform an understanding of the new National Museum of African...

Standing Firm at Standing Rock: Why the Struggle is Bigger Than One Pipeline [BillMoyers.com]

The first sign that not everything is normal as you drive down Highway 1806 toward the Standing Rock reservation in North Dakota is a checkpoint manned by camouflage-clad National Guard troops. The inspection on Sept. 13 was perfunctory; they simply asked if we knew “what was going on down the road” and then waved us through, even though the car we rode in had “#NoDAPL” chalked on its rear windshield. “What is going on down the road” is a massive camp-in led by the Standing Rock nation,...

Social Emotional Learning (SEL) and Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) [TraumaInformedOregon.org]

As a Certified Prevention Specialist for Wasco County, I am often asked at what age should a parent start talking to their child about the risks of alcohol, tobacco and other drugs. My answer to that question has dramatically changed over the last several years and it has to do with a combination of 6 letters . . . SEL and ACEs. SEL stands for Social Emotional Learning and ACEs stands for Adverse Childhood Experiences. These two acronyms are receiving attention individually but YouthThink...

We Become Good At Hiding Behaviors

The revelation that The Boss, Bruce Springsteen, suffered from major depression for a good part of his life should not come as a revelation to those of us who have had bouts with depression. [ STORY LINK ] The ACE Study revealed that about 23% of the population will experience depression at some point in our lives. [ LINK HERE ] Women suffer at a rate about 10 percentage points higher than men do, but when you think of the U.S. population, there are a lot of us. A second story, where the...

A Social-Justice Agenda for Community College [TheAtlantic.com]

Eloy Oakley isn’t shy about his plans to be much more “proactive” than previous chancellors when he takes over California’s mammoth community-college system in December. “We’re going to take on a much more aggressive agenda with a clear lens on social justice and equity,” Oakley, who is in his final weeks as head of the Long Beach Community College District, told me during an interview at his office on the Long Beach City College campus. Oakley, who is himself a product of the system and a...

What the Criminal Justice System Looks Like Across the Globe [CityLab.com]

In 2010, Jan Banning made a trip to Uganda to photograph prisons. A Dutch photographer , Banning had spent much of the previous decade traveling between eight different countries to document the lives of civil servants . Backgrounding that project was a more difficult subject that Banning found increasingly impossible to ignore: the criminal justice system. Banning’s arrival in Uganda marked the beginning of his latest work, Law & Order : The World of Criminal Justice , which he...

Massachusetts Is The Best Place To Live If You’re A Woman [HuffingtonPost.com]

The Northeast ― especially Massachusetts ― is the healthiest place in the country for women and children to live, according to the “America’s Health Rankings” report published this month by United Health Foundation. The report compared all 50 states based on 60 health measures in four categories: health behavior of residents, policy, socio-structural factors and health care. The researchers looked specifically at women’s health. They analyzed factors including the rate of sexually...

ACEs articles by category Oct 3 2016 -- Wisconsin Dept of Health Services

Scott Web, an ACEsConnection member who works at the Wisconsin Department of Health Services, sends out this list of links every couple of weeks. Most of the links are from posts on ACEsConnection, and, as you can see, they're organized by category. Some of you have asked if the summaries and links we post can be put into categories. Thanks so much, Scott, for sharing this with the ACEsConnection community! ACEs, Adversity's Impact Why we should do everything possible to avoid foster care...

Should Prison Really Be the American Way? [BillMoyers.com]

This post originally appeared at TomDispatch . You’ve heard of distracted driving? It causes quite a few auto accidents and it’s illegal in a majority of states. Well, this year, a brave New Jersey state senator, a Democrat, took on the pernicious problem of distracted walking. Faced with the fact that some people can’t tear themselves away from their smartphones long enough to get across a street in safety, Pamela Lampitt of Camden, New Jersey, proposed a law making it a crime to cross a...

Engaging Parents, Developing Leaders [AECF.org]

This publication introduces an assessment and planning tool to help nonprofits evaluate their parent engagement efforts and chart a path toward deeper partnerships with parents and caregivers. The tool spans just eight pages, with accompanying text outlining how to use it, how to assess its results and what real-world strategies and programs are already in play — and working — to boost parent engagement. [For more go to http://www.aecf.org/resources/engaging-parents-developing-leaders/]

Revisiting Eugene Richards’s Sweeping Portrait Of Life Below The Poverty Line [NewYorker.com]

Thirty years ago, when Consumers Union, the publisher of Consumer Reports magazine, commissioned the photojournalist Eugene Richards to travel through fourteen American cities and towns to document poverty, he approached the project with the meticulousness of a policy analyst. “We read news articles and sociology texts, studied maps and statistics charts, searching for ways to address the issues of hunger, homelessness, and unemployment,” Richards, who had previously worked as a civil-rights...

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