当创伤来到学校:走向一个社会公正的创伤知情实践

Catriona O’Toole
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引用次数: 5

摘要

鉴于儿童创伤的普遍性和破坏性后果,帮助学校了解创伤的倡议激增。然而,尽管越来越多地采取了这种主动行动,但仍表示了一些关切。这些问题包括缺乏对权力和不平等问题的关注,包括贫困、种族主义和社区暴力,以及成年人忽视、虐待或虐待儿童的权力。当代做法还可能助长对儿童有缺陷的看法,强化消极的陈规定型观念和污名;而且,他们往往忽视了学校本身可能造成学生痛苦的可能性,尤其是在问责制和目标驱动议程的背景下。本文考察了当前与逆境、创伤和创伤知情实践相关的术语。它显示了当前的方法是如何与主流医学模式纠缠在一起的,这种模式将情绪困扰视为精神障碍的症状,而不是确保生存的合理和可理解的策略。然后讨论了另一种方法,由心理学家和服务使用者/幸存者共同撰写,并由英国心理学会出版,称为权力威胁意义框架(PTMF)。PTMF是一种理解情绪和心理困扰以及困扰或令人不安的行为的方法,主要基于权力和不平等的问题。它的选择是为了最前沿的社会正义问题,同时保持关注最先进的和基于证据的理解心理创伤和创伤知情护理。此外,通过借鉴保罗·弗莱雷的反压迫教育理论,作者认为,在PTMF的指导和指导下,创伤告知实践可以帮助纠正对学校现有方法的许多批评。
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When trauma comes to school: Toward a socially just trauma-informed praxis
Abstract Given the prevalence and devastating consequences of childhood trauma, there has been a surge in initiatives to help schools become trauma-informed. However, despite the growing adoption of such initiatives, a number of concerns have been expressed. These include the lack of attention paid to issues of power and inequality including poverty, racism, and community violence as well as the power of adults to neglect, mistreat or abuse children. Contemporary approaches can also serve to inscribe deficit-based perceptions of children, reinforcing negative stereotypes and stigmas; and they tend to overlook the possibility that schools themselves can contribute to students’ distress, especially in the context of accountability and target-driven agendas. This paper examines current terminology in relation to adversity, trauma, and trauma-informed practice. It shows how current approaches are entangled with a dominant medical model, which views emotional distress as symptoms of mental disorder, rather than as reasonable and intelligible strategies to ensure survival. An alternative approach, co-authored by psychologists and service users/survivors and published by the British Psychological Society, known as the Power Threat Meaning Framework (PTMF) is then discussed. The PTMF is an approach for understanding emotional and psychological distress and troubled or troubling behavior, based primarily on issues of power and inequality. It was chosen in order to forefront social justice concerns, whilst remaining attentive to state-of-the-art and evidence-based understandings of psychological trauma and trauma-informed care. Furthermore, by drawing on the anti-oppression educational theory of Paulo Freire, it is argued a trauma-informed praxis guided and informed by the PTMF, can help redress many of the criticisms of existing approaches in schools.
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