Consider the two journal articles attached. Then, put together a 2 to 3-page reflection that discuss characteristics that might increase the risk of experiencing trauma. For ex
Consider the two journal articles attached. Then, put together a 2 to 3-page reflection that discuss characteristics that might increase the risk of experiencing trauma. For example, consider how different populations may be at greater risk for experiencing trauma or how trauma might occur in on-campus, online, after-school, or community settings. Think about how trauma risk might be elevated for students and educators.
2-page reflection
Include three scholarly sources in addition to the attachment.
European Journal of Educational Sciences, Special Edition, October 2019, ISSN: 1857- 6036
76
Chronic Poverty: The Implications of Bullying,
Trauma, and the Education of the Poverty-Stricken
Population
Kevin Johnson, M.Ed. Liberty University, United States
Doi: 10.19044/ejes.s.v6a6 URL:http://dx.doi.org/10.19044/ejes.s.v6a6
Abstract
Chronic poverty is a worldwide epidemic, and communities must take
a proactive approach to assist the poor by extending a hand to lift them up and
not hold them down. Tribulations are part of life, but are some afflictions self-
imposed, escalated, or reinforced by living in deprived contextual
environments. Poverty-stricken people experience more trauma throughout
their lifetime; they are less educated than their counterpart, causing them to
become targets in school, increasing their chances of being bullied and
demoralized. Bullying is not a rite of passage, and it has lifelong effects that
reveal itself in adulthood by strengthening generational curses, oppressing
families and communities, expanding the educational gap, and reinforcing the
cycle of chronic poverty. The research depicted in this article explores the
correlation between poverty, human development, trauma, pedagogical
implications, and bullying, characterizing the detrimental ramifications in
adulthood. The paper analyzes bully symptomology, the etiology of traumatic
experiences, and how the consequences of chronic poverty affect human
development that expands the educational gap between minorities and white
students. Trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy is an effective
empirically-based treatment modality to combat the symptoms of
posttraumatic stress. School systems must do a better job of educating
traumatized children living in poverty. The research ventures to explain
chronic poverty's role in human development, traumatology, and education,
taking an inclusive approach to providing solutions to create a cultural shift
that will change the contextual environment and propel people to become self-
sufficient, more educated, and equipped to break the generational curse of
chronic poverty.
Keywords: Chronic poverty, trauma, bullying, CPTSD, education.
European Journal of Educational Sciences, Special Edition, October 2019, ISSN: 1857- 6036
77
Introduction:
President Thomas Jefferson wrote, "We hold these truths to be self-
evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator
with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are life, liberty and the
pursuit of happiness." In the eyes of their Creator, all men are created equal –
in the image of God, but throughout history, a man divided equality and justice
for all during slavery, Jim Crow, and the Civil Rights Movement. Many people
are miseducated and do not comprehend that the Civil Rights Movement was
not just for the Black race but all people, nationalities, ethnicities, gender, and
the disabled; the fight was for fairness for every color and creed. During this
period, the mentally challenged and disabled had struggles and battles of their
own. Fortunate enough, there were advocate groups and parents who were
willing to stand up and fight for the equal rights of those who could not stand
and fight for themselves. The mentally challenged and disabled have been
marginalized from society and the classrooms for years. Is it possible for
people who are reared in chronic poverty to beat the odds and succeed when
all odds are stacked against them? How is it possible to provide quality
education and security when children living in poverty normally stand out
from the crowd due to hunger, lack of resources, and poor hygiene, not
adequately having clothing, shelter, and other basic needs?
In President John F. Kennedy's inaugural address, he proclaimed, "And
so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you—ask what
you can do for your country." What happens when the country placed certain
people at a significant disadvantage by being born the wrong color? How can
those who live a life of chronic poverty and generational curses of destitute do
anything for their country when they lack education and financial resources?
Chronic poverty orchestrates a life of injustice, discrimination, prejudice, and
unequal opportunities, regardless of the misconception that people are created
equal. Chronic poverty puts people at higher risk of poor mental and physical
health, risky behaviors, substance use disorders, complex posttraumatic stress,
and live a traumatic and detrimental lifestyle that stifles education, religious
beliefs, maturity, and personal growth, which has the propensity to bind
individuals mentally, spiritually, and emotionally. Lifetime adversities and
trauma correlate with low self-esteem, mental illness, lower socioeconomic
status, and small educational achievement, especially in the Black and Latino
populations who happen to be underrepresented to most studies. Myers,
Wyatt, Ullman, Loeb, Chin, Prause, Zhang, Williams, Slavich, and Liu (2015)
asserted that minorities experience unique stressors that impact their health –
including stressors such as neglect by society, discrimination, and multiple
traumatic experiences. Hardships in life devitalize people, resulting in pain,
suffering, and stress, while others who perceived the same traumatization rally
up the power to not only survive but thrive.
European Journal of Educational Sciences, Special Edition, October 2019, ISSN: 1857- 6036
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Generational poverty poses a distinct predisposition to the etiology of
the essence of traumatization because poverty can be a "little leaven" that
levels an entire generation. As the root cause of many traumatic events,
poverty has the proclivity to construct a unique dynamic that makes trauma
challenging to isolate and identify as a tragedy because families are described
as dysfunctional. Lowdermilk and Brunache (2013) professed that many
children reared in poverty mirrors the same behaviors as parents and their
community. They reflect those individuals growing up in demanding
environments, reporting negative/absent parent, parents with multiple sexual
partners or engaged in prostitution, substance use disorder, violence in the
home and community, verbal/physical abuse, unsanitary conditions, lack of
finances and resources, and parents demonstrate very low educational
expectations for their children, and all of this happens within the children's
nuclear family. With the dismantling of the family structure, is it possible to
close the achievement gap and break the generational curse of the chronicity
of poverty?
Chronic Poverty and Human Development
Researchers examine the psychological and emotional development of
children living in poverty based on parental guidance and the methods parents
use to rear their children. Evans and Kim (2012) reported that "in the last two
decades, many scholars have investigated the underlying psychological
processes that explain why childhood poverty has such pervasive ill effects on
human development" (p. 43). Evidence substantiates that poverty causes
chronic stress, which deteriorates human functioning in every faculty of the
body, especially memory, brain development, and emotional regulation.
Children in poverty face unusual stressors that children living in middle-class
do not know about because they live in a contextual environment perceived as
safe and nurturing. Amatea and West (2007) declared that children living in
poverty are considerably more likely than children from the middle-class to
report increased levels of anxiety and depression, exhibiting a higher
frequency of behavioral and academic difficulties, and a lower level of
positive academic interaction and engagement in the school system. Collins,
Connors, Donohue, Gardner, Goldblatt, Hayward, Kiser, Strieder, and
Thompson (2010) reported that children who grow up in urban poverty display
symptoms of complex posttraumatic stress disorder; "complex trauma is a
varied and multifaceted phenomenon, frequently embedded in a matrix of
other psychosocial problems (e.g., neglect, marital discord, and domestic
violence that carry ongoing threat)" (p. 12). As reported by Gabrielli, Gill,
Koester, and Borntrager (2013), it takes a thorough understanding of the
ramifications of trauma and the unfolding developmental processes of
childhood as it is experienced in a particular culture, without neglecting to
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understand the nature of historical trauma, as aggregated spiritual, physical,
emotional, and psychological wounding over the lifespan and across
generations.
Studies show that the ability to sense touch occurs around eight weeks
of gestation, and fetal development of the other sensory organs begin around
five weeks of conception and continue to refine through birth and early
childhood (Uhernik, 2017). While in utero, the fetus can hear and respond to
sounds and noises outside of the womb. Many parents play music, read books,
and talk to their fetuses throughout the pregnancy, interacting by touching
certain spots of the mother's belly by poking or grabbing a hand or foot when
it is visible. At birth, the newborn can only see eight to ten inches, and research
denotes this short distance is "precisely the range required for gazing into the
caregiver's eyes when held and for beginning the visual and interactive dance
of attachment and bonding" (Uhernik, 2017, p. 54). Establishing a bond and
attachment between the mother and the baby is the first step in psychosocial
development, which is vital for successful progression throughout life. As
reported by Kim, Fonagy, Allen, and Strathearn (2014),
Maternal sensitivity to infant distress and non-distress as predictors of
infant-mother attachment security. Maternal attachment trauma, particularly
when unresolved, presents to the mother's attunement to and management of
her infant's distress. Although this has not yet been the subject of direct
empirical scrutiny, attachment researchers have long speculated that infants'
distress signals may activate unresolved traumatic memories in their
respective mothers, thereby initiating a cascade of compromised maternal
responses. (p. 354)
The maternal reactions manifest traumatic memories for the mother
and can affect memory and cognitive abilities for the newborn.
Erik Erikson was a renowned psychologist and anthropologist who
identified eight stages of psychosocial stages of development, from birth to
old age. Everyone must discover her sense of regulation as she interacts with
the environment and the biological, emotional, and psychological
idiosyncrasies in life. Infants must establish trust so that they feel safe in
knowing that their needs will be met, and they will not be neglected. Stability
and a sense of security allow infants to see the world as secure and a
dependable place, encouraging optimism about the future and having
confidence in themselves and other people. Mounting research postulates that
fetuses can learn and have short term memory, which is believed to help the
fetus bond with his or her mother. When researchers used vibroacoustic
stimulation, Gonzalez-Gonzalez, Suarez, Perez-Pinero, Armas, Domenech,
and Bartha (2006) asserted that newborns in utero recognized the stimulus.
Newborns habituated sooner than babies who were not stimulated before birth.
This evidence suggests that babies encouraged during fetal life were able to
European Journal of Educational Sciences, Special Edition, October 2019, ISSN: 1857- 6036
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learn, recall, and memorize. Fetuses demonstrate advancement in cognitive
abilities throughout the fetal development period because the brain is this
amazing organ that has the potential for plasticity, neurogenesis, and the
creation of new neural pathways. Researchers like Otto Rank and Wilfred
Bion hypothesized that being born is a traumatizing experience because the
brain becomes bombarded by outside stimuli, causing the infant to experience
chaos and traumatization.
The hypothesis is not too far-fetched, considering that research
postulated that learning and memory formation occur in utero. Memory and
cognitive abilities learned inside the womb clash with the new environment
when the infant is removed from the womb. The baby takes in an array of
sounds, light, and different touches and smells that were limited in utero. If
the trauma of being born is significant, it is the caregiver's responsibility to
ensure that a secure attachment is formed, because this lessens the "traumatic
experience" by providing a contextual environment where the infant can
establish trust instead of mistrust. The strength of the mother's attachment,
mentally and physically, predicates the extensiveness of the trauma or
determines if the traumatic birthing experience will be lessened and managed
by providing love and trust instead of neglect and mistrust. Aside from the
possible functions of recognition and attachment to the mother, the
significance of fetal memory and cognition are necessary for the promotion of
breastfeeding and language acquisition (James, 2010).
Lipina, Colombo, and Jorge (2010) postulated that SES levels are
associated with a degree of hemispheric specialization and gray/white matter
volumes, concluding that reduced language skills were associated with lower
SES and related to less underlying neuronal specialization. According to
James (2010), "A large amount of evidence from habituation, classical
conditioning and exposure learning in humans substantiate that the fetus can
learn; however, there is no sound evidence showing that extra auditory
stimulation is of benefit to child development" (p. 52). Chronic poverty adds
a different variable to how newborns learn; the implications poverty has on
babies as they develop through the various stages of life impact their
education, increase stress levels, exposure to violence, and put them at a higher
risk of being traumatized.
Mounting studies show the detrimental impact of poverty on brain
development in children and adolescents, revealing how and why there is an
achievement gap in education between Blacks, Latinos, and their white
counterpart. Cortisol is the stress hormone needed when there is distress and
the fight and flight response catapults into high gear when the body senses
imminent danger or significant stress. High levels of cortisol affect the
amygdala that regulates emotions, and it can cause coronary heart disease,
hypertension, and high cholesterol levels. Children living in poverty have
European Journal of Educational Sciences, Special Edition, October 2019, ISSN: 1857- 6036
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higher levels of cortisol and other stress markers that have disadvantageous
effects on emotional intelligence, regulation, academics, and executive
functioning. According to Blair and Raver (2016),
Executive function is essential for self-regulation and school readiness
and is a fundamental building block of early cognitive and social competence.
Available evidence indicates that the effects of socioeconomic and early
psychosocial disadvantage on cortisol and brain structure partially mediate
effects of poverty on the development of executive function in childhood.
Impact of poverty on brain development and executive function are likely one
critical pathway, along with reduced stimulation for learning, through which
poverty is associated with gaps in school readiness and achievement and
positive life outcomes. (p. 4)
Taylor and Barrett (2018) professed that "the impact of developmental
trauma in the early years can have a disproportionate effect on the growth,
day-to-day functioning and life chances of a young person" (p.73).
Other studies have shown how nonhumans' neural pathways evolve,
creating new and advanced channels when placed in environments where they
were stimulated and challenged to interact with devices and manipulatives that
promoted higher levels of cognitive functioning. According to Lipina and
Colombo (2009), elements of executive function, memory, and self-
monitoring tend to be lower in children who live in poverty. The researchers
used basic tasks to "assess skills related to dorsolateral prefrontal (working
memory), anterior cingulate (cognitive control), and ventromedial (reward
processing) prefrontal systems, the results showed a consistent disparity
between children from lower and middle SES groups" (p. 583). As various
studies report, poverty-stricken children are placed at a disadvantage from
birth throughout the different stages of life. If preventive measures,
interventions, and programs are not tailored to meet this demographic, the
cycle of generational poverty will continue, creating a new environmental
DNA passed down to its offspring. How do society and educational systems
close the divide in education, learning, and development? According to Ladd
(2012), "Addressing the educational challenges faced by children from
disadvantaged families will require a broader and bolder approach to
education policy than the recent efforts to reform schools" (p. 204).
Chronic Poverty and Trauma
The majority of psychological research on the consequences of trauma,
poverty, and education has been conducted at the level of the individual,
typically studying the persons' trauma histories, and trauma exposures with
their symptoms, demographics, and contextual environment (Klest, 2012). As
reported by Collins et al. (2010), there is critical evidence suggesting that
children, adolescents, and families growing up in poverty are more likely to
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experience multiple traumas, significant adverse life events, and develop
convoluted symptoms of traumatic distress at disproportionate rates. The
research presented in this literature explores trauma from a specific group that
it impacts and consists of a subset or region of individuals, instead of looking
at trauma as a single catastrophe but a subset of issues or deficiencies that
culminate into traumatic experiences from living a life of generational curses
and chronic poverty. It is no secret that Blacks, Latinos, and other minorities
constitute most of this vulnerable and underserved group. As reported by
Collins et al. (2010), "Efforts to explain the severity and chronicity of reactions
to repeated traumas traditionally focus on the cumulative effects of multiple
traumatic episodes" (p. 11). Trauma can be experienced or witnessed
vicariously, and second-hand trauma can be worse for the person who is
helping the survivor or the one who saw the event from a different perspective.
After the 911 attack in New York, people suffered from posttraumatic stress
as far as Texas and Oklahoma; it is understood as a profoundly disrupting
experience that can threaten the well‐being and safety of those involved
(Gabrielli, Gill, Koester, & Borntrager, 2013).
Many psychologists and researchers describe trauma differently,
characterizing a common thread that ties the theories together, but a definitive
definition of trauma is difficult to establish because tragedy can be subjective.
A clinician and client can disagree about an episode being traumatic or not,
because of the client's apperception, resiliency, and personal growth. Scott and
Briere (2015) discussed the ambiguous description of trauma that is
characterized by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Disorders, 5th
edition (DSM-5), which provides a broad definition with limitations, causing
conflicting information in determining if an event satisfies statistical
definitions of trauma. Scott and Briere (2015) denoted their interpretation and
professed that "an event is traumatic if it is extremely upsetting, at least
temporarily overwhelms the individual's internal resources, and produces
lasting psychological symptoms" (p. 10). If the definition defined by the DSM-
5 is adhered to strictly, many clients would not be classified as a trauma
survivor.
There is a fallacy that a traumatic event must be a devastating isolated
experience that keeps resurfacing in a person's life. Trauma does not have to
be a single catastrophe but a culmination of small, insignificant issues that
converge together until all the pieces of life's problems connect like the perfect
jigsaw puzzle. The mental symptomology of traumatic experiences can
debilitate people from being able to access coping skills to keep intrusive
thoughts at bay, and they lack the cognitive abilities to manage and process
the traumatic experience and the possible manifestation of psychological
disorders. It takes a thorough understanding of the ramifications of trauma and
the unfolding developmental processes of childhood as it is experienced in a
European Journal of Educational Sciences, Special Edition, October 2019, ISSN: 1857- 6036
83
particular culture to understand the nature of historical trauma, as aggregated
spiritual, physical, emotional, and psychological wounding over the lifespan
and across generations (Gabrielli, Gill, Koester, & Borntrager, 2013). Trauma
that affects poverty-stricken cultures covers a broad range of atrocities that
destroys the sense of safety within the individuals' community, including
neighborhoods, schools, churches, towns, and other places where people
conjugate together but separately ("Center for Substance Abuse," 2014).
Studies have identified the problem and determined that increased
trauma is associated with poverty and deprivation. The consistent restriction
and limited opportunities that characterize poverty can lead to daily hassles
and unexpected traumatic events like the lack of food or disconnection from
water, electricity, and other supplies (Shamai, 2017). It is normal to experience
trauma across the lifespan; for most people, individuals and communities
usually respond to tragedy with resilience, because many influences shape the
effects of trauma among individuals and families. Due to other factors and
circumstances, it is not just the traumatic episode that predicts the outcome,
but also the episode's context and the interactions between family support, first
responders, counselors, psychological first aid providers, and community
leaders ("Center for Substance Abuse," 2014). Severe childhood adversity, in
the form of traumas such as physical and sexual abuse, alters young people's
transition into adulthood due to social and behavioral reasons, but also due to
the physiologic and neurobiological changes that occur due to chronic
stressors. Considering the impact and effects of poverty and trauma, Myers et
al. (2015) proclaimed that numerous studies refute the results expected
because both African Americans and Latinos(as) appeared to be rather
resilient, despite their higher than normal stressors and burdens of adversities
and traumatizing experiences. It is safe to infer that people who have lived a
life of trauma and lack resources all of their lives have become conditioned to
become content in whatever state they find themselves in their contextual
world. They do not know the hidden rules of the middle-class, so what appears
to be poverty and trauma for the middle-class is healthy everyday living for
people residing in poverty.
Research substantiates that fifty percent of people will experience
trauma in their lifetime. This traumatic experience for only fifty percent of the
population is up for debate if we believe in the work of Otto Rank who
proclaimed that being born is a traumatic experience, beginning when the
infant inhaled his or her first breath. Stewart (2014) purported that Arthur
Schopenhauer and Otto Rank discussed suffering because of birth itself,
referring to being born as a traumatic experience. Aside from birth, people in
poverty are exposed to the daily hassles that cause stress. Klest (2012) reported
that models of trauma and coping include the erosion of family processes and
dynamics (structure, relations, coping) in the context of community violence
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