Last week I had the pleasure of listening to a presentation by Mavis Averill. She has done research on students who have experienced extreme trauma, or "SWEET," based on her experiences working for Boyle Street Education Center. Mavis says, "Our work is to engage them long
enough at school so that we may uncover their strengths and support them in looking at a
new way of being; one which leads them away from crime, chaos and loss, to one which
includes acknowledgement and the possibility of successful attainment of needed skills to
go forward into a life that has more options than the one they came from" (Retrieved from LINK).
This encapsulates so many themes. Transformation. Wellness. Basic education learners, or those who are under-represented by literature and programming. It speaks to modifying and adapting our approaches and programming to recognize the learner as a unique individual who is more than a receptacle for information.
One of the overriding barriers within educational environments is
the idea that failing is the fault of the learner. This kind of approach can feed the idea that survivors of
abuse have caused their own victimization, as well as issues of power and
culpability within teaching practices (Horsman, 2008). Awareness and information that brings to light the very real barriers caused by the experience of violence and trauma upon a students' learning is an often under-represented and not well understood.
It would serve all educators well to become familiar with research like Mavis's SWEET and the information that can be found on Learning and Violence.net that comes from Jenny Horsman's research.
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