Toolbox talk 1 The impact of trauma on young children.

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Presentation transcript:

Toolbox talk 1 The impact of trauma on young children

What is trauma? A persistent and negative emotional response to a past event in a child’s life Left untreated, all but the mildest of childhood trauma can have an impact on children’s ability to learn Children may experience trauma as victims, witnesses or perpetrators Sources: American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, accessed 1 August 2012 and National Child Traumatic Stress Network, types, accessed 1 August 2012.

What is a traumatic event? Events that a child experiences as distressing Can be something experienced only by the child Up to one-in-four children experience traumatic events in their childhood Some children experience a number of traumas and the effect may be cumulative making these children more vulnerable to stress reactions such as difficulty concentrating, loss of social skills and poor academic outcomes Adapted from Australian Child and Adolescent Trauma, Loss and Grief Network, How children and young people experience and react to traumatic events, ANU College of Medicine, Biology and Environment, May 2012.

Types of trauma Single episode trauma Repeated trauma

The effect of trauma

Children’s reactions to trauma Self-protective Spend a lot of their energy scanning their environment for threat Their bodies act as if they are in a constant state of alarm Their brains are endlessly vigilant Focus is to stay alert to the next time they will be hurt or rejected Focused on survival (it becomes uppermost in their minds) Experience problems with learning new things, coping with new people or new situations. Anything new is often perceived as a threat to them.

Children’s reactions to trauma For traumatised children, the best option is to stay alert to danger and consider any change, even positive change, a possible threat Source: Australian Childhood Foundation, Making Space for Learning: Trauma Informed Practice in Schools,