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Trauma is emotional distress from experiencing violence, abuse, a disaster, or an accident. Experiencing chronic Trauma in childhood releases stress hormones that lead to permanent changes to the brain. These changes during this critical time of brain development can have negative consequences on academic achievement, including learning to read.

Main Ideas

Trauma is divided into two categories:

  • Interpersonal Trauma refers to Trauma that has occurred between people (e.g., assault, abuse).
  • Non-interpersonal Trauma refers to Trauma inflicted by some other source (e.g., a motor vehicle accident, a natural disaster).

Experiencing Trauma can result in long-term changes to health, behavior, social skills, and brain structure and functioning that have far-reaching, negative impacts on academic outcomes. According to the 2014 National Survey of Children’s Exposure to Violence from 2014, within the year preceding the study:

  • 37.3% of youth experienced a physical assault most often by siblings and peers, and 9.3% of youth experienced an injury resulting from an assault;
  • 15.2% of children were maltreated by a caregiver; and
  • 2% of girls had experienced a serious sexual assault (the rate increased to 4.6% for girls between 14-17 years of age).

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