Remember: Trauma is not about the event itself but how someone reacts to the event.
An example of a trauma-informed mindset: If a child is having a temper tantrum after not getting his way, think, "how can I help this child self-regulate?" rather than, "what is wrong with this child? (in a judgement tone)" Reframing our mindsets go a long way! I'll be putting out more information on the Pediatric Speech Sister Show! You can check out the latest episodes in the meantime here: tinyurl.com/pssmedia
Another way we can cultivate a trauma-informed mindset when working with diverse populations is to recognize that trauma looks different for different people. For example, what's traumatic for a child may be different than what's traumatic for an adult. Regardless, we should approach this child with care and take their traumatic reactions seriously and valid.
Where do you like to go to learn more about tra...
Scope of practice in speech-language pathology
Although SLPs should consider the impact of trauma when working with multicultural populations, we should always know when to REFER. Do not stay out of our scope of practice. You can refer to the scope of practice here: https://www.asha.org/policy/sp2016-00343/
One way we can cultivate a trauma-informed mindset is to educate ourselves on how regulate our nervous systems!
Specialists should make it a PRIORITY to keep a trauma-informed approach in our daily practices!
I’m eager to share more details about how SLPs can be interventionists for domestic violence survivors. Stay tuned!
How to support ell students?
SLP
Verified
How can we support Spanish ELL students in their language development? Specifically birth-8 years old?