Category Archives: Reaching Adolescents and How to Respond

MVP #13 Teacher’s role should be clarfied and the awareness of Mental Health Knowledge on teachers and students

“one of the factors we had to overcome when working with the educators on the website was their initial feelings of inadequacy about dealing with student mental health. We heard statements such as ‘mission impossible,’ ‘I am struggling too,’ and ‘I will have to ask my school board mental health lead if I can participate.” (Yet One More Expectation for Teachers, P119). “Mental health professionals must remember that building teacher capacity in MHL feels overwhelming to teachers as learners: they are not experts, they know it, and the problems are severe” (Yet One More Expectation for Teachers, P119).
The mental health knowledge and issues are not only happening on students but also happens to teachers. Since teachers are not supermen and superwomen, they cannot know every single knowledge. Teachers also would have felt overwhelming in their work. However, in fact, it is less to think about teachers’ wellness and their mental health cares. I personally think the mental and wellness health problems that teachers have are coming from the students because the teachers struggle with students every day in every single detailed matter. However, teacher, as the teaching role, instead of mental health treatment role, they are actually working on many types of roles. Teachers take care of students’ academic works and daily life, even students’ physical health. While teachers are doing all these works, they have to take care about the students are on the pace of academic learning, which is very hard for the teacher to balance so many different matters into a good direction. So I think the role clarify is really needed. School should provide more supports for students’ mental health knowledge and other fields so that teachers could easily pay attention to academic teaching.

MVP: Failure of the Foster Care System

“Between the ages of 9 and 11, Makeba was placed in seven different foster homes, and five schools. As she put it, ‘When we go to a new house, foster care kids don’t unpack our bags. ‘Cause we are so used to moving all the time’” (personal communication, September 27, 2017) (Goodman, 112)

This quote in particular stood out to me because it shows how children at that young age are already so traumatized and affected by their circumstances that they already have figured out little ways of coping. When we go through trauma, our brains can shut down or repress memories in order to protect us, and in this case, the foster children had their usual routine which was meant for them to protect themselves, whether they realized it or not. They don’t even want to feel “at home” with any of these foster families because they already realize how temporary it is. To go through seven different homes of unfamiliar families and five schools in a two year period, during critical years of development, is something I could not imagine or ever understand experiencing. I agree that the system has and continues to fail our children by giving them more trauma and less stability than they had to begin with.

The Gap

“One has only to look at the gaps between professional education, professional responsibilities, and the policies that direct learning, teaching, and working to recognize that we have important work to do in clarifying not only the role of teachers in school mental health but also in including teachers on the front end and inviting their voices to be heard.”
(Weston, 2018, p. 116)

       This sheds light on an important topic that we’ve touched based on in class: What is the teacher’s role? Well, it’s definitely not just one. This made me think and agree that we must not only clarify our roles and responsibilities as teachers but also make known our concerns, opinions, doubts, and ideas. For example, some of us are taking the course “Ss with Disabilities” and we discussed how IEP accommodations are being made by a psychologist. The school psych observes and tests a student, but usually doesn’t consult the main teacher, and doesn’t discuss with the main teacher what is feasible or what can realistically be done in the classroom to support that student. This is concerning because most of the IEP accommodations are for the main teacher to implement in their classroom, but again, they’re being recommended without conferencing the teacher. This leads up to the challenge that we face as teachers, which is, balancing the demand to meet all student’s needs. I say challenge because of the gap that exists and the article explains it perfectly, teachers care about their student’s well-being, we want to support all students, but sometimes, as we mentioned in class, we don’t feel that we’re trained enough or at all nor capable to meet the requirements of all the roles ‘assigned’ to us. Therefore, it’s been important and valuable to learn throughout this course the resources that are available to us as teachers when it comes to providing any and all support to our students.

Second Class Citizens

“…,political leaders and the mass media have succeeded in publicly denigrating poor Black mothers as the undeserving, criminal poor.” (Goodman, 2018. P.117)

And we have bought it. They both (politicians and the media) keep selling us alienation of “the other” and we keep buying it. I come from a passionate country that sees no gray scales in its passion: passionate hate or passionate love. It wouldn’t be so terrible if it didn’t come with an uneducated crowd that keeps voting with the hatred side of their passion (and the prop$ that come with it). In 2002 that unconscious crowd elected a dictator under a disguised democracy. He corruptly got himself re-elected in 2006 and decades later keeps placing puppets in power to do the dirty job and pay for it to, while he remains untouched and immaculate, sitting as a congressman moving pieces into the most convenient ladders and pushing the useless down the snakes.
Among his many sins, the called “falsos positivos” in army slang, is to my eyes by far the worst. He decided to put a price on every guerrilla rebel’s head, the way Pablo Escobar put a price on police officers’ heads back in the dark 90’s. Soldiers from the Colombian army went to the poorest possible neighborhoods in the forgotten barrios of Bogota (among other cities), where they lured teenagers at risk with the promise of work to other cities that were miles away. The soldiers filled trucks with these “second class citizens” that would be missed by no one (because who can miss the poor), drove them for hours to where they were bound to have a war encounter, murdered them, dressed their corps with guerrilla uniforms and declared them rebel fighters in order to boost their stats in the war against leftist insurgents.The suspiciously inflated numbers, wrongly called “false positives”, got the officers and troops who carried out the executions rewards in the shape of money, promotions or vacation time. They also justified United States aid military packages, which have been helping keep the business of war alive for so long. It was the mothers of these children (because most of them were still on their teens) who made this visible and stood for their sons to say that they were not undeserving, nor were their criminals, even if they were poor. These extrajudicial executions made me feel the hopelessness that was woken again by this painful chapter 5 in the book “It’s not about Grit”. How much longer can we take?