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Youth mental health: Racial trauma and stress

Youth mental health: Racial trauma and stress

On this episode of School’s In, Assistant Professor Farzana (Saleem) Adjah discusses racial trauma and its effects on student mental health.

In 2021, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention declared racism a serious public health threat due to its deleterious effects on the mental and physical health of people of color. This includes school-age students, who may not have the tools to identify what they’re experiencing and navigate their experiences in a healthy way.

Assistant Professor Farzana (Saleem) Adjah at Stanford Graduate School of Education (GSE) says equipping students with strategies to process and heal from racial trauma is one of the best ways to support their success.

“We want young folks to be able to name it, be able to resist, be able to respond, and then ultimately be able to thrive,” she said on the latest episode of GSE’s School’s In podcast.

Adjah joins hosts GSE Dean Dan Schwartz and Senior Lecturer Denise Pope as they discuss how racial bias can show up in schools and how educators can adopt a culturally-responsive, trauma-informed lens when interacting with students. Adjah also shares research-based strategies to help young people thrive amid adversity.

Her research focuses on the impact of racial stressors on health, wellbeing, and academic success, and she has experience providing therapy to children and adolescents, delivering treatment, and consulting and coaching others in trauma-informed, evidence-based intervention in schools.

“We know that having a healthy sense of ethnic racial identity for young people of color is a buffer against race-related stressors,” Adjah said. “We tend to see that having that sense of cultural pride, knowing about your heritage, knowing the strengths of your cultural group, knowing how your cultural group has overcome, or even how they’ve used strategies around resistance or empowerment, can also reduce the impact.”

In addition to community-based interventions, Adjah and her colleagues are using technological tools like virtual classrooms to study how educators respond to students’ questions about race-related topics race-related distress.

 “Eventually our goal is to figure out how we can help teachers be able to increase their self-efficacy and confidence and skills to respond to student race-related topics and distress within the classroom,” she said.

If you or someone you know is struggling with their emotional health, the National Institute of Mental Health lists resources on their webpage.

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Faculty mentioned in this article: Farzana Saleem, Dan Schwartz, Denise Pope

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