“It’s Just Not What We See”

There is a growing interest in the provision of trauma interventions in schools, including support for refugees being educated in Canada. Very little research, however, has explored trauma training for those working in schools, particularly from the perspective of teachers. This qualitative case stu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Christine Mayor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Windsor 2019-07-01
Series:Critical Social Work
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.uwindsor.ca/index.php/csw/article/view/5953
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author Christine Mayor
author_facet Christine Mayor
author_sort Christine Mayor
collection DOAJ
description There is a growing interest in the provision of trauma interventions in schools, including support for refugees being educated in Canada. Very little research, however, has explored trauma training for those working in schools, particularly from the perspective of teachers. This qualitative case study focused on one school district in a mid-sized city in southwestern Ontario, Canada, examining perspectives on existing trauma training held for teachers who work with Syrian refugee students. Results from seven teacher interviews suggest that social workers must be careful not to slot teachers into pre-existing general trauma training, but must design specific trainings that consider the setting, developmental needs, and forms of trauma unique to war, displacement, and resettlement stressors in order for the trainings to be most helpful to teachers. Further research from the perspective of teachers, as well as Syrian students, is needed in order to create more equitable educational environments.
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spelling doaj.art-197d0f9ba3d543ad9ddb1928644a171f2022-12-21T21:04:31ZengUniversity of WindsorCritical Social Work1543-93722019-07-0120110.22329/csw.v20i1.5953“It’s Just Not What We See”Christine Mayor0Wilfrid Laurier UniversityThere is a growing interest in the provision of trauma interventions in schools, including support for refugees being educated in Canada. Very little research, however, has explored trauma training for those working in schools, particularly from the perspective of teachers. This qualitative case study focused on one school district in a mid-sized city in southwestern Ontario, Canada, examining perspectives on existing trauma training held for teachers who work with Syrian refugee students. Results from seven teacher interviews suggest that social workers must be careful not to slot teachers into pre-existing general trauma training, but must design specific trainings that consider the setting, developmental needs, and forms of trauma unique to war, displacement, and resettlement stressors in order for the trainings to be most helpful to teachers. Further research from the perspective of teachers, as well as Syrian students, is needed in order to create more equitable educational environments.https://ojs.uwindsor.ca/index.php/csw/article/view/5953trauma trainingschoolteachersSyriarefugeeeducation
spellingShingle Christine Mayor
“It’s Just Not What We See”
Critical Social Work
trauma training
school
teachers
Syria
refugee
education
title “It’s Just Not What We See”
title_full “It’s Just Not What We See”
title_fullStr “It’s Just Not What We See”
title_full_unstemmed “It’s Just Not What We See”
title_short “It’s Just Not What We See”
title_sort it s just not what we see
topic trauma training
school
teachers
Syria
refugee
education
url https://ojs.uwindsor.ca/index.php/csw/article/view/5953
work_keys_str_mv AT christinemayor itsjustnotwhatwesee