Promoting Reflection Nurturing a Reflective Practice Dr. Lily Cosico
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Promoting Reflection Nurturing a Reflective Practice Dr. Lily Cosico
ETTING WCWC VI Conference September 18, 2015 Lily Cosico-Berge, PsyD, ATR-BC, RPT, I-F ECMH RPM Neighborhood House Association Head Start Learning Objectives Demonstrate a basic understanding of how trauma affects self-regulation and coregulation. Identify a respectful and traumainformed, relationship-based approach to early care and education. Practice strategies that promote self-regulation and co-regulation, as well as foster feelings of mutual respect and connectedness. Review a mental health screening tool (MHST 0-5) that can be used by teachers and home-visitors to assist in further referrals for mental health consultation and services. HHSA’s Trauma-Informed Systems of Care • Relationships are the vehicle for healing • • • • • • • • Safety Trustworthiness Choice Collaboration Empowerment Trans-disciplinary training Education and Coaching/Supervision Peer/Family Support Partnerships HHSA: Health & Human Service Agency Core Components for Trauma Intervention Strong therapeutic relationships Psychoeducation about normal response to trauma Parental support/parent training Emotion expression and regulation skills Anxiety management and relaxation skills Trauma processing and integration Personal safety training Resilience and closure Video: Adult Theory of Change Parallel Process “Do unto others as you would have others do unto others.” Jeree Pawl Children • Young children develop in relationships. • Young children use relationships with caregivers to: • Regulate physiological response • Form internal working • Provide secure base for exploration and learning • Model coping behaviors Parents Engagement starts with rapport. Relationships with parents have the potential to: Regulate physiological response Create new meaning to “positive relationships” Provide a safe environment to ask questions & express concerns Model coping behaviors “It’s all about the relationship and selfregulation…” What can I do? ACTIVITY Fold paper in half: • What do I love about my job? • What stresses me most about the job? • When I’m with family, I’m expected to…….(HV, Teacher, Fam Srvc.) • What would make my job less stressful, more fulfilling? What is your role? Your goal? Your job requirement? What is the parent/child role? What is the goal? What is the job? What do you need most right now? Do they match or conflict? What gives you strength to keep going? There is power and meaning in every story….what’s your story? The Foundation for Relationships: Really Listening and Engaging Pay attention and minimize distraction Invite dialogue Acknowledge feelings Promote self-regulation Reserve judgment Toxic Stress and Trauma Not All Stress is Bad…. the ‘fight or flight’ vs. ‘tend and befriend’ response. When we feel supported, we can begin to find hope for the future. Positive Stress •Refers to moderate, short-lived stress responses, such as brief increases in heart rate or mild changes in stress hormone levels. Learning to adjust to it is an essential feature of healthy development. Examples: meeting new people, getting an immunization, entering child care. •Events that provoke positive stress tend to be those that a child can learn to control and manage well with the support of caring adults and which occur against the backdrop of generally safe, warm, and positive relationships. National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, Excessive Stress Disrupts the Architecture of the Developing Brain. (2005). Working Paper No. 3., Summer 2005. Tolerable Stress • Refers to stress responses that could disrupt brain architecture, but generally occur within a timelimited period and are buffered by supportive relationships that facilitate adaptive coping. These conditions usually give the brain an opportunity to recover from potentially damaging effects. • Examples of stressors include death, a serious illness of a loved one, a frightening injury, divorce. National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, Excessive Stress Disrupts the Architecture of the Developing Brain. (2005). Working Paper No. 3., Summer 2005. Toxic Stress Refers to strong and prolonged activation of the body䇻s stress management systems in the absence of the buffering protection of adult support, disrupts brain architecture and leads to stress management systems that respond at relatively lower thresholds, and increases the risk of stress-related physical and mental illness. •Examples of stressors include extreme poverty, physical or emotional abuse, chronic and serious neglect, enduring maternal depression, family violence. National onal Scientific Sciientiifi fic Co C Council ounciil on tthe h D he Developing evellop piing Child, Ch hil Excessive Stress Disrupts the Architecture of the Dev veloping g Brain. B Developing (2005). Working Paper No. 3., Summer 2005. Tolerable and Toxic Stress Alarm Relaxation Alarm, Alarm How Stress Harms • Higher risk for developing learning disabilities, emotional and behavioral problems, as well as asthma, immune-system dysfunction and heart disease • Early, frequent, and intense stress tunes the brain to set 䇾stress regulation䇿 at high levels. What is Trauma? • An exceptional and dangerous experience which overwhelm the capacity to regulate emotions. • Children䇻s reactions to trauma vary at different ages. Early intervention can be very helpful to allow them to get back on a normal developmental path Video: First Impresssions What does this mean to us? • We need to have a new lens through which to see and understand where are families have been and what they have experienced • Recognize that parents are the most important people in children䇻s lives • Relationships and structure help reframe the world as a safe place What affects the way we respond to the child䇻s cues for attention and nurturance? What we believe about attention and nurturance What we are told, what we have heard and read in the media External demands of your job Your current emotional state…how you are feeling at the time… What affects the way we respond to the cues parents show us when they need attention and nurturance? What we believe about adults’ need for attention and nurturance What we are told, what we have heard and read in the media External demands of your job Our feeling at the time… RESPECTFUL & RELATIONSHIP-BASED STRATEGIES: • • • • ACKNOWLEDGE, ASK & ADAPT…. Respectful, Responsive & Reciprocal WATCH, WAIT & WONDER How To be, How to Understand, and How to Influence Group Activity Respectful Strategies That Build Relationship CASE STUDY & GROUP EXERCISE • Establishing Rapport • Creating a safe space • Engaging in Partnership • Sharing Concerns and Addressing Challenges From: bulletinboardideas.org MHST 0-5 • Recognizing redflags • Sharing observations • Role of ECMH Staff/Consultant Strategies For Teachers Schedules & Routines lcosico-berge2014 More Ways to Support Parents Recognize that parents and caregivers are the most important people in children䇻s lives Support parents as their children’s first teachers Help parents see the power of their relationships w/ their children Give parents information and community resources Help with follow-through with referrals and appointments lcosico-berge2014 Time to Reflect… What does this work mean to you personally? What are you bringing to your particular role from your life experiences? How do these things help you or hinder you in your work? • I WILL IMPLEMENT THIS STRATEGY RIGHT WAY________________________ ____________________________ ____________________________ ________________ • I pledge to assist families to ____________________________ ____________________________ ____________________________ ____________________________ ____________________________ ____________________________
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