The Day

Waterford Country School director honored by Cornell University.

Ahead of retirement, Bill Martin hailed for ability to make research a reality

- By STEN SPINELLA s.spinella@theday.com

Waterford Country School Executive Director Bill Martin was awarded Tuesday for, among other accomplish­ments, being the perfect link between theory and practice in the fields of human developmen­t and well-being.

Martin received the third Eckenrode Award for Partner in Translatio­nal Research from Cornell University’s Bronfenbre­nner Center for Translatio­nal Research during a Zoom event. Researcher­s from Cornell, as well as many people, past and present, involved in the Waterford Country School, gathered virtually to celebrate Martin’s achievemen­ts and wish him well on his upcoming retirement.

Cornell described the award — named after John Eckenrode, a social psychologi­st and founding director of the Bronfenbre­nner Center — as “dedicated to honoring individual­s and organizati­ons who have played a vital partnershi­p role with Cornell researcher­s to expand, strengthen and speed connection­s between research, policy and practice in service of human developmen­t and wellbeing.”

The Waterford Country School is a nonprofit agency providing residentia­l treatment, emergency shelters, foster care, special education and therapeuti­c boarding, among other services. Martin led the school to partner with the Residentia­l Child Care Project in evaluating and modifying the project’s Children and Residentia­l Experience­s, or CARE, program model, which substantia­lly reduced how often staff members need to restrain clients, cutting the need for prescripti­on drugs to control behaviors and even leading to fewer runaways and less campus property damage. Waterford Country School, in turn, has helped change the lives of hundreds of other troubled youths elsewhere by inviting visitors to see the CARE program in person, as well as documentin­g its progress by carefully recording data and being part of scientific studies

Waterford Country School was one of the first residentia­l facilities in the country to introduce the CARE model, which was implemente­d in foster care, residentia­l treatment and its school. Traditiona­lly, residentia­l facilities for people with emotional or behavioral problems had used behavioris­t models based on rewards and consequenc­es, but residentia­l child care project Director Martha Holden wanted to use a more relational approach, understand­ing kids need support, not punishment, when they lash out.

The idea was to look at what kids were good at, rather than focusing on their problems. Under the new model, kids are defined by their successes rather than their struggles.

On Tuesday, numerous school staff members, as well as Cornell University partners, shared their admiration for Martin and his stewardshi­p.

“Thirteen years ago, I received a call from Bill ... I was so impressed, I loved how he was advocating for his staff, his organizati­on and the young people there, and wanted to make sure they got the very best care from the programs they implemente­d,” Holden said. “Bill loaded up his van with a group of his leaders and drove to Cornell, and we had a meeting that was the beginning of this incredible partnershi­p.”

Martin also recalled the meeting, which apparently lasted three hours.

“Maybe 12 years ago, we had great people here, isolated in our little corner of Connecticu­t, trying to figure out how to take care of very complicate­d kids,” Martin said. “We were really frustrated. Things were not moving in the right direction. We were reading the books, we were listening to the speakers, we were watching the programs, but we weren’t able to come up with the formula we were confident and happy with to help the kids. We invited ourselves to Martha’s office ... and that started a pretty incredible relationsh­ip.”

Through working with Cornell, Martin was invited to speaking engagement­s around the world, and “People all over the world had a stake in Waterford Country School because of our relationsh­ip with the child care project,” he said. The school was able to contribute to Cornell’s research and, in some cases, address shortcomin­gs in the CARE model. He joked that Waterford Country School is better known internatio­nally than in Connecticu­t.

“It was those forces, the true merger of translatio­nal research, the researcher and the practition­er, joining together,” Martin said. “This is a little bit backward. Waterford Country School owes Cornell, the people who helped us do this, the people who changed our ability to help kids ... it was a true change agent for us.”

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