Developing Best Practices for Trauma-informed Teaching and Learning (2020-2021)
Acknowledging that stress associated with trauma is likely present in every student gathering at Duke University, this team explored a series of essential questions including:
- How does trauma affect students’ experience of academic work at Duke?
- How do students perceive faculty approaches to addressing trauma in the classroom?
- How do faculty perceive, address and engage in the way that trauma affects learning in the classroom?
- How might classes be taught, and academic programs be administered, in order to cultivate an environment in which survivors of trauma can thrive in their academic work?
The team used the data collected in response to these questions to develop Trauma Engaged Duke (TED), a series of informational seminars for students from Trinity College of Arts & Sciences, the Divinity School and the School of Medicine. TED seminars educated students about the effects of stress and trauma broadly defined to include child abuse and sexual violence as well as stress and trauma in the context of racism, homophobia and other forms of social oppression.
Participants learned where they can receive additional information and care and completed survey questionnaires assessing their knowledge of trauma before and after the seminars. Participants from the TED seminars engaged in focus group interviews that explored how trauma reveals itself in the classroom or academic programs, how they perceive faculty intervention or lack thereof and strategies for helpful responses among both students and faculty.
Team members learned about IRB proposals, designed the content of TED seminars and participated in leadership for TED seminars and focus groups. The resulting data, once deidentified was coded and analyze by the team. Outcomes included foundational qualitative data; two academic articles on trauma-informed undergraduate education and theological education.
Timing
Fall 2020 – Spring 2021
Team Outputs
Qualitative data
Two academic articles on trauma-informed undergraduate education and theological education
This Team in the News
Devoted Team of “Trauma Champions” Envisions Changes to the University Classroom
This project team was originally part of the Education & Human Development theme of Bass Connections, which ended in 2022. See related team, Developing Best Practices for Trauma-informed Teaching and Learning (2021-2022).
Image: Members of the class of 2019 gathered at the Durham Performing Arts Center to hear a reading and talk by Alison Bechdel, by Les Todd/Duke University