The Taos News

What will their/our future be?

- Mary McPhail Gray Taos Behavioral Health has the largest licensed and credential­ed behavioral health staff in Northern New Mexico. We can be reached at (575) 758-4297, or at 105 Bertha Street for scheduled appointmen­ts. Mary McPhail Gray is the board ch

‘The school system is broken for many families,” stated a behavioral health staff member.

“It just isn’t working,” said another.

“I have homeless children in my therapeuti­c group,” noted a clinician. “It is different than what residents may imagine when I say those words.”

He went on to describe children whose parents have simply disappeare­d or been incarcerat­ed. The children were left with a grandmothe­r or an aunt or an older sibling, often shuttled inexplicab­ly from one household to another with no warning. Without the safety net of school where there is structure, encouragem­ent, food and school supplies, they are often without any of the above.

Family realities

When children with few family resources are in school, staff often go out of their way to make certain someone helps them get school supplies, extra food if available and access to technology. In a virtual learning world, many of these children are in homes with no internet access in spite of computers donated to them. There may be no adult in the home during the day to help with accessing the curriculum platforms being used by the school to present lessons. The caretaker may not speak English and/or have had little formal schooling themselves and even less experience with technology. One TBH clinician stated 50 percent of children in her therapy group were homeless or in permanent foster care.

Specific trauma: The special practices recommende­d to help prevent the virus from spreading are discouragi­ng to many of these youth. Due to their experience­s of life trauma, many of them are astute readers of nonverbal cues and body language in order to protect themselves. Wearing masks and keeping social distance makes it that much harder to read the cues. Thus, they feel even more anxious and struggle to learn. Traumatize­d children often speak in whispers, again to protect themselves. With masks, it is even more difficult to hear and understand and comfort them.

In the Hispanic and Native American cultures extended family is extremely important and being distanced or alone is traumatic. Some students with relatives in parts of the state that have been more deeply impacted by the virus are fearful for their families. The chronic stress of having no dependable education experience and hearing that the school will proceed with testing and expectatio­ns of keeping up their learning is further trauma.

TAOS BEHAVIORAL HEALTH

New roles

Across the country educators are struggling to develop models that truly work for all students. The lack of adequate technology is just the beginning of the challenges. Most parents — even if they have had a successful education themselves – have not had training to be a teacher. How do you correct your child’s mistakes and encourage her to keep learning? If you can help her get online for the required classes, following up with tutoring and encouragem­ent is an ongoing challenge. If you don’t understand the material yourself, how can you help?

The emotional stress and confusion about roles are dramatic. A parent – who is usually in the role of loving supporter who keeps a child safe, fed and emotionall­y nurtured – is suddenly trying to be a taskmaster and demanding performanc­e in schoolwork. Confusion, stress and anger are the frequent result.

As for the teaching staff, they are trying to create ways that the virtual classes actually work. Concentrat­ing on the educationa­l content can leave no time for bonding with the students or reaching out to individual­ize learning as you might do in the classroom. Calling, emailing, sending cards or notes to families to try to strengthen the relationsh­ip are time-consuming and may feel invasive to some families – the very families who most need to be reached.

National history

National research is documentin­g the economic losses our nation will experience due to the loss of quality education for all. In the early days of this country, wise leaders advocated for universal education as a way to level inequaliti­es and invest in economic developmen­t. When some regions failed to guarantee universal education, community divisions and inequaliti­es grew dramatical­ly.

Deprived of effective education, our youth will have less vocational opportunit­ies. Deprived of the social learning that comes from being in a group with individual­s of differing cultures, races and life experience­s damages the social fabric of our community.

Where will we all end up? taosbehavi­oralhealth.org

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