The article by Costa (2017) explains how trauma sensitive schools can help traumatized students by being aware of triggers and preventing trauma from re-occurring again and again. The article explains how children have to develop cognitively, socially and emotionally just to be able to keep up with the demands of the classroom and the expectations of the teacher. Traumatized children cannot do this and teachers have to be aware of that lest they place undue burdens on their already negatively impacted minds. Costa identifies REWIRE as a practice framework that can be used to promote trauma sensitive instruction.
The article does a good job of explaining traumatized students’ situations and why teachers have to be better prepared to handle them. It explains how a proper and effective approach is needed and why REWIRE is such an approach. The one weakness of the article is that it does not provide any substantial or significant testing to prove its hypothesis. It simply presents the conclusion with arguments but offers no real world data to back up its argument—such as how effective REWIRE actually is based on this or that quantitative study. So I would change the research this way to include that aspect of it.
The importance of the research-based article to the field of education is that it does provide some new information that teachers and administrators should find helpful as they consider approaches to developing a strategic way to help traumatized students. The REWIRE approach may not be adequately defended in the article but it does at least serve as a foundation for further research. For that reason, the article is helpful to educators in that it sheds light on trauma sensitive approaches that might work.
Costa, D. A. (2017). Transforming Traumatised Children Within NSW Department of Education Schools: One School Counsellor's Model for Practise–REWIRE. Children Australia, 42(2), 113-126.
The study by Plumb, Bush and Kersevich (2016) looks at adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and places them into three categories: acute, chronic and complex. Complex trauma make up most of the cases of ACEs, and they...
Costa, D. A. (2017). Transforming Traumatised Children Within NSW Department of Education Schools: One School Counsellor's Model for Practise–REWIRE. Children Australia, 42(2), 113-126.
Plumb, J. L., Bush, K. A., & Kersevich, S. E. (2016). Trauma-sensitive schools: An evidence-based approach. School Social Work Journal, 40(2), 37-60.
Statman-Weil, K. (2015). Creating trauma sensitive classrooms. Young Children, 70(2), 72-79.
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