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Presidential campaign rhetoric affecting school children [MichiganRadio.org]

Richard T. Cole, who most people know as Rick, is a remarkable man who’s had several careers, sometimes simultaneously. I was first aware of him when he was press secretary and chief of staff to Governor Jim Blanchard in the 1980s. Later, he was a senior executive at Blue Cross Blue Shield, and worked with Mike Duggan back when the man who became Detroit’s mayor was overhauling the Detroit Medical Center. But Rick Cole is also an academic with a doctorate who was a professor and department...

Autism’s Race Problem [PSMag.com]

Like many parents, Camille Proctor went to her first support group for parents of children with autism to feel less alone. Her son Hunter had just been diagnosed, and Proctor had lots of questions. All of the other parents at the various support groups she went on to visit were white; Proctor is African American. When she asked questions about how she should teach her son to interact with police, given that the wrong response by a black boy or man could be deadly, she just got blank stares.

‘Toxic Stress’ Strikes At Home, School And Beyond, Educators Told [VTDigger.org]

A n expert on the way trauma at home also hurts children in the classroom encouraged Vermont educators to build a coordinated program to help affected students. Lynn Dolce spoke recently about the growing problem of “ toxic stress ” before more than 250 school superintendents, special education directors, and state employees who work in education and health. A group of children in Montpelier. File photo by Jasper Craven/VTDigger “This is not a mental health issue, this is a public health...

Poverty affects your DNA and increases the risk of depression, study finds [ScienceAlert.com]

It's clear that coming from more humble beginnings can make ordinary life tougher in a lot of ways, and now a new study suggests that the experience of poverty and adversity can also alter biological mechanisms related to brain function, giving rise to increased chances of developing depression. By analysing the brains of adolescents, researchers have found that those growing up in households with lower socioeconomic status accumulated greater amounts of a chemical tag on a gene linked to...

The Hourly Wage Needed to Rent a 2-Bedroom Apartment Is Rising [CityLab.com]

In 2015, the demand for rental apartments reached its highest level ever since the 1960s . The pinched access to mortgage credit after the Great Recession is one reason why. Another is that many Americans—especially the poor and people of color —haven’t felt the effects of the economic recovery, and may not be able to rustle up the funds for a down payment. A third reason is that Millennials, now the largest generation ever since the baby boomers , are especially loath to buy homes. The...

White Women in US Are Dying Sooner [LearningEnglish.VOANews.com]

From VOA Learning English, this is the Health and Lifestyle report. Health experts say there is evidence that many white women in the United States are dying too soon. In other words, they are dying before the average age of death in society as a whole. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Health Statistics studied death rates nationwide. The center found that life expectancy rates for every population group has either gone up or stayed unchanged. Every...

Small Ohio Town Passes Progressive Parental Leave Policy Listen· 2:54 [NPR.org]

[Photo by Evan-Amos ] The Village of Newburgh Heights, outside Cleveland, is a working class community of about 2,500 residents. It's also home to the most progressive parental leave policy of any municipality in the nation. As of last week, full-time public employees will be eligible for six months of paid parental leave after the birth of a child. [For more of this story go to http://www.npr.org/2016/05/24/479349640/small-ohio-town-passes-progressive-parental-leave-policy]

Baby Boomers Will Become Sicker Seniors Than Earlier Generations [NPR.org]

The next generation of senior citizens will be sicker and costlier to the health care system over the next 14 years than previous generations, according to a new report from the United Health Foundation . We're talking about you, baby boomers. The report looks at the current health status of people ages 50 to 64 and compares them to the same ages in 1999. The upshot? There will be about 55 percent more senior citizens who have diabetes than there are today, and about 25 percent more who are...

Mediocre Mothering Made Better by Guided Imagery

My parenting was not ideal yesterday. I'd slept three hours the night before after a condo deal fall through days before closing. I don't know where we'll be living in a few weeks. The house we are in did sell. This is high stress. All day I was distracted, distraught and on the phone over 50 times with real estate people, the bank, attorneys, friends, town hall and rental places. Not fun. It felt like my heart was a pulled muscle I couldn't unclench. I cried a little but mostly felt an...

Good Teachers Are Critical, but They Aren’t Enough [PSMag.com]

It was the first day of classes at an elementary school in Florida. In just a few moments, my first group of 4th graders would walk into my classroom. Feeling both excited and nervous, I knew I was ready to launch this new chapter in life as a teacher. As I welcomed my students, all 28 of them, I thought about how I would be the great teacher, the one who would inspire and challenge them. But the first hour passed, and hours turned into days and then weeks, and my idealistic vision of the...

‘How Do I Recover From The Breakup Of A Toxic Relationship?’ [HuffintonPost.com]

Reader Emotionally Exhausted writes, I need advice on moving forward after a toxic and controlling relationship. While I know that the recent break up was in my best interest, reasoning that things are for the better outside of the relationship doesn’t seem to be mending the hurt. I met my now ex-boyfriend about a year ago and there was instant chemistry. He was clever and funny and we enjoyed many of the same activities. We are of similar ages and had similar backgrounds. He was emotionally...

Is Bail Causing Convictions? [TheAtlantic.com]

Of the many surprising statistics about America’s money bail system, this one may be the most astounding: More than 60 percent of people in America’s overcrowded jails are there because they can’t afford to pay their bail amount . That works out to roughly 450,000 Americans in jail daily, and how long they stay there can vary with waiting times for trials potentially lasting months (or sometimes, years ). The American money-bail system, which has been around since 1789 , has ripple effect.

We Weren’t That Resilient [MaureenOLearyAuthor.com]

In response to the bell ringing that kids these days aren’t resilient the way their parents were growing up in the Wild West of the seventies and eighties suburban American neighborhoods and schools: I call bullshit. We weren’t that resilient. Those of us growing up in the seventies and eighties were not tilling Victory gardens and whittling useful things out of sticks that we found on the ground. I know. I was there. I can only speak to my own experience, and trigger warning, I’m not prone...

What role did care play in alleged prison abuse? [PostCrescent.com]

A new approach being championed by the state of Wisconsin is being blamed by a union official for breakdowns in security at Wisconsin’s two juvenile prisons that are now the targets of criminal and civil rights investigations . Beginning in 2012, staff at the Lincoln Hills School for Boys and Copper Lake School for girls were trained in and began using trauma-informed care principles. A 2014 report by the Division of Juvenile Corrections summarizing use of the approach credits it with a...

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