“Homelessness is not a choice, but rather a journey that many find themselves in.” ~ Asa Don Brown #WednesdayWisdom
Learn how Rainbow Village walks alongside the families we serve: https://t.co/dklIrvMdzL
#Help#Hope#Housing#Healing
Talking to someone with an opposing view may shift our own views more than we expect.
Read more highlights from recent peer-reviewed studies: https://t.co/yMCPVNLu93
A consequence can end an incident. That does not mean it changed anything.
In schools, the real test comes later. What happens the next time the student is angry, embarrassed, impulsive, challenged, or given the same opportunity to make a poor decision?
That is where discipline has to do more than communicate, “Do not do that again.”
Students need to examine what happened, understand the impact, repair what they can, and rehearse a better response for next time. Accountability is not removed from that process. It is the process.
The goal is not a student who behaves only when an adult is watching.
The goal is a student who can eventually make a better decision without us standing there.
Burnout doesn’t just follow stress, it can create it.
See more highlights from recent peer-reviewed studies: https://t.co/yMCPVNLu93
#stress#psychology#brain#burnout#research
As America marked its 250th anniversary this past weekend, an NBC News poll showed many are willing to set political differences aside to celebrate together. Psychological research shows not all national pride works the same way. Learn more: https://t.co/pxgGRLJ268.
#patriotism
“Domestic violence is any behavior involving physical, psychological, emotional, sexual, or verbal abuse. It is any form of aggression intended to hurt, damage or kill an intimate person.” ~ Dr. Asa Don Brown #Abuse#StopHonourKilling#SayNoToViolence#DomesticViolence #AsaDonBrown
Prevention works. Get the tools and resources to help start the conversation with youth about preventing underage drinking and other healthy lifestyle choices at SAMHSA's “Talk. They Hear You.” https://t.co/g1Tg9FQucx
Certain blood tests already used for people with Alzheimer’s may also help identify people in midlife who have elevated levels of Alzheimer’s-related proteins in their blood, according to an NIH-funded study. While more research is needed, these findings could help people at increased risk take steps earlier to delay Alzheimer’s symptoms.
Learn more:
https://t.co/3GyM8LFNKz