
Wilson's Weekly
BPS...where books come alive!
Core Beliefs, Vision, and Mission
We believe all students can learn:
- Learning must have a clear purpose.
- All learners deserve a safe, respectful, and structured environment.
- Learners grow with mutual support, responsibility, and compassion.
- All learners have the ability to grow.
Shaping the future one child at a time
Mission
Blytheville Primary School fosters a safe and positive learning community. We educate students to be innovative thinkers today and productive leaders of tomorrow.
Behavior Expectations
We are...
- responsible.
- respectful.
- safe.
- positive.
- motivated.
Strategic Plan
Our school plan can be found here.
Week at a Glance
On Monday I will be based in my primary office. I will be out of district Tuesday through Friday for ALA Master Principal Institute. If you absolutely must call in, please, call/text Mrs. Garris before 6:30 each day.
This WEEK
- Monday - Picture Day; Tier 1 Team Meeting (Newsom, Pugh, Poole, Evans, Jenkins, Hepler, Wilson) 3:30 in Conference Room
- Tuesday - Wilson out (master principal institute); Staff Meeting (online...video will be emailed to you)
- Wednesday - Wilson out (master principal institute); Building Leadership
- Thursday - Wilson out (master principal institute)
- Friday - Wilson out (master principal institute); First Quarter Ends
- Saturday - Chili Cookoff (come visit our booth!)
Next WEEK
- Monday - RTI Meetings (schedule coming soon); Report Card grades due in TAC by 9:00 am; 1st/2nd grade Vision and Hearing screenings
- Tuesday - RTI Meetings (schedule coming soon); New Teacher PLC 3:30 in Hepler's room; Family Literacy Night (5:30-7:00 in MPB); 1st/2nd grade Vision and Hearing screenings
- Wednesday - RTI Meetings (schedule coming soon); SPED training at admin (Clark, Moriarty, Evans, Clay, Shepard); Wilson out for BLI until 1:30 pm; 1st/2nd grade Vision and Hearing screenings
- Thursday - RTI Meetings (schedule coming soon); Tenaris coming to read to Kindergarten classes (morning...more details coming soon); Birthday Lunches; PTO Meeting 4:00 pm
- Friday - RTI Meetings (schedule coming soon); PBIS Celebration Tech Day (more details coming soon)
Upcoming Events
The school calendar can be found HERE.
Reminders and Announcements
2. PBIS Behavior Matrix Focus: We are respectful (classroom)
- Monday - Reteach lesson plan and display poster from here.
- Tuesday - Focus on: Listen to others
- Wednesday - Focus on: Raise your hand
- Thursday - Focus on: Respect personal space
- Friday - Choose an activity (different from the one you chose last week) from here to complete with your class.
3. FanTABulous Contest - Our goal is to save more than last year's total of 168 pounds. Turn your tabs into Mrs. Moriarty with your class name. The class in each grade level with the most tabs wins a prize.
- Kindergarten - Newsom (2 lbs.)
- 1st grade - There is a tight battle for first place...Jones and Jaques are going back and forth but Jones with 3lbs. 9 oz.
- 2nd grade - Bennett's class is ahead by 6 oz, but Murphy is sneaking up on them.
- Special - Galbratih (13 oz.)
- TOTAL so far = 38 lbs. 5 oz.
4. Box Tops for Education - We are collecting box tops to help pay for our PBIS store. Please turn them into Ms. Newsom in kindergarten or put them in the box in the office.
5. 1st and 2nd GRADES: The 1st quarter of this school year ends on Friday, October 12. The 1st quarter report card grades are due by 9:00 AM on Monday, October 16. All grades must be submitted through TAC. Please look at the GUIDE for instructions on how to submit your grades.
Trunk or Treat on Main Street
THANKS TO ALL THAT HAVE VOLUNTEERED! I am so proud to be a Primary Chickasaw! I love that you all were eager to connect with the kids outside of school. (If I missed someone, please, let me know.)
Volunteers:
- Setup: Hepler, Jenkins, Fox
- 4-5: Sawyer, Newsom, M. Rogers, Hopkins, Aldridge, Wilson, Garris, Bennett
- 5-6: Moriarty, McDowell, Wright, Sparks, Davis, Clark, Billups, Wilson, Garris, Bennett, Shepard, Echols
Thanks for your help in connecting with our community!
Picture Book Recommendation of the Week
The Adventures of Beekle: The Unimaginary Friend by Dan Santat
This magical story begins on an island far away where an imaginary friend is born. He patiently waits his turn to be chosen by a real child, but when he is overlooked time and again, he sets off on an incredible journey to the bustling city, where he finally meets his perfect match and-at long last-is given his special name: Beekle.
New York Times bestselling and award-winning author and illustrator Dan Santat combines classic storytelling with breathtaking art, creating an unforgettable tale about friendship, imagination, and the courage to find one's place in the world.
Resources
1. An Unimaginary Party kit (discussion questions and activities)
2. Create an imaginary friend with playdough
3. Lessons for key details and text dependent questions (if would like it, email me and I will purchase for you)
4. Marshmallow craft
5. Preschool activities
6. 15 extension activities
7. Discussion questions
Coping with Student Trauma
Normally, I put links to long articles instead of posting the whole thing; however, I feel that this article is important. Our students go through much in their lives and share a good portion of that with us (the good, the bad, and the ugly). Finding ways to cope with what we know is happening in our students' lives on a daily basis can be overwhelming.
We have to find ways to cope with the trauma that our students experience. This article has a few ways. I would love for you to share ways that you are using to cope as well. One way I cope is to have dedicated time each night to read to Abigail before she goes to bed. No matter what is happening, this happens each night. We have recently added rocking in our chair and quietly talking about what she really enjoyed doing that day. I look forward to this every night and it helps bring a sense of being home and peace to my life.
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When Students Are Traumatized, Teachers Are Too
Trauma in students’ lives takes an emotional and physical toll on teachers as well. Experts weigh in on the best ways to cope.
October 4, 2017
Alysia Ferguson Garcia remembers the day two years ago that ended in her making a call to Child Protective Services. One of her students walked into drama class with what Garcia thought of as a “bad attitude” and refused to participate in a script reading.
“I don’t care if you’ve had a bad day,” Garcia remembers saying in frustration. “You still have to do some work.”
In the middle of class, the student offered an explanation for her behavior: Her mom’s boyfriend had been sexually abusing her. After the shock passed, the incident provided an opportunity for the class—and Garcia—to provide the student with comfort, and to cry.
When Garcia first started teaching, she wasn’t expecting the stories her students would share of physical and sexual abuse, hunger, violence, and suicide. The stories seemed to haunt her all the way home, she says, recalling nightmares and sleepless nights spent worrying about her students. They also dredged up deep-seated memories of her own experiences with abuse.
“When you’re learning to be a teacher, you think it’s just about lesson plans, curriculum, and seating charts,” said Garcia. “I was blindsided by the emotional aspect of teaching—I didn’t know how to handle it. I was hurt by my students’ pain, and it was hard for me to leave that behind when I went home.”
The Real Costs of Trauma
35% of children have experienced more than one adverse childhood experience.
Data shows that more than half of all U.S. children have experienced some kind of trauma in the form of abuse, neglect, violence, or challenging household circumstances—and 35 percent of children have experienced more than one type of traumatic event, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). These adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) can have impacts that extend far beyond childhood, including higher risks for alcoholism, liver disease, suicide, and other health problems later in life.
Trauma in children often manifests outwardly, affecting kids’ relationships and interactions. In schools, the signs of trauma may be seen in a student acting out in class, or they could be more subtle—like failure to make eye contact or repeatedly tapping a foot. (To learn more about how trauma impacts students, read “Brains in Pain Cannot Learn!”)
For teachers, who are directly exposed to a large number of young people with trauma in their work, a secondary type of trauma, known as vicarious trauma, is a big risk. Sometimes called the “cost of caring,” vicarious trauma can result from “hearing [people’s] trauma stories and becom[ing] witnesses to the pain, fear, and terror that trauma survivors have endured,” according to the American Counseling Association.
“Being a teacher is a stressful enough job, but teachers are now responsible for a lot more things than just providing education,” says LeAnn Keck, a manager at Trauma Smart, an organization that partners with schools and early childhood programs to help children and the adults in their lives navigate trauma. “It seems like teachers have in some ways become case workers. They get to know about their students’ lives and the needs of their families, and with that can come secondary trauma.”
When you’re learning to be a teacher, you think it’s just about lesson plans, curriculum, and seating charts. I was blindsided by the emotional aspect of teaching—I didn’t know how to handle it.
Vicarious trauma affects teachers’ brains in much the same way that it affects their students’: The brain emits a fear response, releasing excessive cortisol and adrenaline that can increase heart rate, blood pressure, and respiration, and release a flood of emotions. This biological response can manifest in mental and physical symptoms such as anger and headaches, or workplace behaviors like missing meetings, lateness, or avoiding certain students, say experts.
Yet many teachers are never explicitly taught how to help students who have experienced trauma, let alone address the toll it takes on their own health and personal lives. We reached out to trauma-informed experts and educators around the country to get their recommendations for in-the-moment coping strategies and preventative measures to help teachers process vicarious trauma. We share their tips below.
Talking it Out
Garcia, now a teacher of eight years, says she’s found that confiding in others—either a therapist, her boyfriend, or colleagues—helps her process students’ trauma and her own emotions.
Connecting with colleagues to talk through and process experiences can be invaluable for teachers coping with secondary trauma, according to Micere Keels, an associate professor at the University of Chicago and founder of the TREP Project, a trauma-informed curriculum for urban teachers.
“Reducing professional isolation is critical,” said Keels. “It allows educators to see that others are struggling with the same issues, prevents the feeling that one’s struggles are due to incompetence, and makes one aware of alternative strategies for working with students exhibiting challenging behavior.”
It doesn’t serve anybody to pretend that we’re teacher-bots with no emotions, which I think sometimes teachers feel like they have to be. Finding a wellness-accountability buddy—a peer who agrees to support and keep you accountable to your wellness goals—or using a professional learning community as a space to check in with other teachers are also ways to get that support, offers Alex Shevrin, a former school leader and teacher at Centerpoint School, a trauma-informed high school in Vermont that institutes school-wide practices aimed at addressing students’ underlying emotional needs.
At Centerpoint, time for a monthly wellness group—where teachers, administrators, and social workers support each other on their personal wellness goals like exercising and creating work-life balance—is built into the professional development schedule. Staff also use in-service time to focus on taking care of their health together, by hiking, biking, going to the gym, or even learning to knit.
“If I had one wish for every school in the country, it would be that they made time for teachers to really sit down and talk about how they’re feeling in the work,” said Shevrin. “It doesn’t serve anybody to pretend that we’re teacher-bots with no emotions, which I think sometimes teachers feel like they have to be.”
Building Coping Strategies
Students affected by trauma can have combative personalities and learn which buttons to press to upset you in class, says Garcia. When a student acts out in class, Garcia takes a few deep breaths, drinks coffee, or goes to a different part of the classroom to help another student.
“If I get upset, it never goes anywhere,” Garcia said. “When you try to have a battle in class, you automatically lose as the teacher.”
That’s a good approach, says Keck, who suggests developing proactive coping strategies to address stressful situations in advance. A strategy may be counting to five, visualizing a calming place, or responding with an opposite action—like talking to a student quietly when you want to yell. Waiting until you’re actually in a stressful situation means you’re likely to overreact or to say or do something unhelpful.
Keck also recommends mapping out your school day and taking note of the times of day you feel most stressed, and then integrating scheduled coping strategies into your daily routine. If you feel stressed when students start to lose focus midday, for example, guide your students in a quick group stretch and some deep breathing to shift energy before getting back to work.
“Look at your schedule. If you see a stressful pattern, don’t wait for it to happen. Don’t wait to feel overwhelmed and stressed,” urges Keck. The important part is customizing the strategy to meet your needs. Garcia applies this strategy when she’s at home. She knows that after she puts her daughter to sleep, the worry for her students creeps in—so she makes sure to take time for things she enjoys, like watching movies and playing video games.
While many teachers say they don’t have time for self-care, experts insist that it’s necessary to develop long-term self-care practices—and stick to them—to build up your overall well-being and resilience. These self-care activities could be going for a walk, reading, watching a movie, practicing mindfulness, or talking with a friend—whatever invigorates you. Some teachers incorporate walking into their self-care routine.
Establishing Coming Home Rituals
It can be hard to leave work at work, but to address vicarious trauma, teachers need to create clear boundaries between work and home life. Part of that can be developing a ritual or routine that signifies the end of a work day, either before you head home, on the way home, or at home.
“For me, sometimes it’s just as simple as turning off my work phone before I go into my house,” Shevrin says. “I hear the sound of my phone turning off and then I know that I’m home."
After an emotionally difficult day, many teachers will write about their experiences before they leave, or sit down with a colleague to help process it, Keck told us.
Others organize their desk or create a to-do list for the next workday so they can let go of worry before heading home. While driving home, teachers listen to audiobooks, call a friend, or sit in silence to decompress. A ritual could even be as simple as changing clothes or taking a bath once you get home. For Garcia, it’s about putting her daughter’s needs first and making the most of the time she has with her. “It’s very easy to get overwhelmed and let the job consume you. But teaching is about balance,” she said. “When I come home, I try to just focus on my kid so she gets as much of me as she can. It’s not always easy, but I’ve learned to put my life and my daughter’s life first.”
Motivational Quote of the Week
I first saw this video on Facebook. It is one of the most inspirational videos I have watched in a long time about making an impact. I am going to share some highlights, but I urge you to watch the entire video. I laughed. I cried. I was inspired.
- "...combine knowledge and wisdom to make an impact."
- "...catch me in the act of excellence."
- "If you want to make your impact, find your broom."
- "While you are struggling, rock bottom can also be a great foundation on which to build and on which to grow."
- "Just stand."
- "How are you living?"
After watching the video, what is something that resonated with you? Email your responses with an explanation of why it resonated with you by Friday, October 13 at 3:00 pm. Each staff member that responds will be entered into a drawing for a $10 sonic gift card or $10 McDonald's gift card (winner's choice).
What the Principal is Reading
Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin
School Culture Recharged by Steve Gruenert and Todd Whitaker
For We Are Many (Bobiverse #2) by Dennis E. Taylor
Bob left Earth anticipating a life of exploration and blissful solitude. Instead he’s a sky god to a primitive native species, the only hope for getting humanity to a new home, and possibly the only thing that can prevent every species in the local sphere ending up as dinner.
Archives
About the Principal
Email: jwilson@blythevilleschools.net
Website: http://www.blythevilleschools.com/o/bps
Location: 1103 Byrum Road, Blytheville, AR, United States
Phone: 870-763-6916
Facebook: facebook.com/cimeronejana
Twitter: @cimeronejana