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Race Resilience Victoria E. Romero

Race Resilience By Victoria E. Romero

Race Resilience by Victoria E. Romero


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Race Resilience Summary

Race Resilience: Achieving Equity Through Self and Systems Transformation by Victoria E. Romero

Review, rethink, and redesign racial support systems NOW

As schools engage in courageous conversations about how racialization and racial positioning influences thinking, behaviors, and expectations, many educators still lack the resources to start this challenging and personally transformative work. Race Resilience offers guidance to educators who are ready to rethink, review, and redesign their support systems and foster the building blocks of resiliency for staff.

Readers will learn how to:

  • Model ethical, professional, and social-emotional sensitivity
  • Develop, advocate, and enact on a collective culture
  • Maintain a continuously evaluative process for self and school wellness
  • Engage meaningfully with students and their families
  • Improve academic and behavioral outcomes

Race resilient educators work continuously to grow their awareness of how their racial identity impacts their practice. When educators feel they are cared for, have trusting relationships, and are autonomous, they are in a better position to teach and model resilience to their students.

Race Resilience Reviews

Fostering Educator Resilience is practical, useful, and very realistic. I would love to use this book in professional development with my staff or in a workshop. The activities, vignettes, and reflection activities will help administrators create or change the culture and climate in whatever environment they find themselves.

-- Janice Wyatt-Ross
Fostering Educator Resilience provides timely and immediately applicable guidance. The resources and ability to reflect on them with prompts guides your reflection. The book provides realistic and practical guidance that educators can easily relate to and that resonate with their current needs.

One of the major strengths of the book is the variety of ways resources are being shared. I walked away knowing new people I wanted to read up on, new resources I needed to check out, and thinking about how I could take the exercises in this book into my work. It's a resource full of resources!

-- Tamisha Williams

A major strength of this book is the reflective opportunities and personal perspectives which give the reader the opportunity to internalize the information that is presented.

-- Jayne Ellspermann

About Victoria E. Romero

Victoria E. Romero taught elementary students in one suburban and two urban school districts; significantly improved the academic standing of two schools as a principal; and coached administrators, directors, and school leadership teams for sustainable school improvement in five school districts. She facilitates professional development for K-12 teachers on classroom strategies that promote student academic success, infuse multiple perspectives into regular curriculum, and establish classroom management systems that promote autonomy, positive well-being, and resiliency. Victoria co-authored the Reflection Guide for the third edition of Gary Howard's book, We Can't Teach What We Don't Know. She also coordinated two teams of science teachers, one in the US and the other in the country of Namibia. She is currently a consultant for Corwin Press, working once again with her colleague, Gary Howard, bringing his Deep Equity process to school districts around the country. Amber N. Warner is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, with over 20 years of experience. She has had the privilege of serving as a community outreach case manager (4 years), school social worker (8 years), medical social worker (5 years) , and behavioral health therapist (3 years). As a School Social Worker, in addition to her work with children and their families, she was part of the school wide Modern Red School House Leadership Team and the Positive Behavior Interventions and Systems Team. She facilitated K-6 monthly classroom discussions utilizing Second Step and Character Counts curriculums. Amber is also a co-author of Building Resilience in Students Impacted by Adverse Childhood Experiences: A Whole Staff Approach. In 2011 Amber worked in healthcare and part of the organization's leadership team, she was introduced to the work of Dr. Bryan Sexton on healthcare providers' staggering burnout rates and the healing proponents of Positive Psychology. A new passion and interest developed for her. She became a Certified Duke Patient Safety Officer in 2013 at Duke University's Patient Safety Center. Amber has also studied under the direction of Dr. David Burns, leading Psychiatrist, and adjunct professor at Stanford University and the developer of TEAM a new form of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for the treatment of depression and anxiety. She has achieved Level 2 TEAM certification from the Feeling Good Institute. She has a certification from the National Clearinghouse on Families and Youth in Trauma-Informed Care. Most of all, Amber has a passion for people, their wellness, and quality of life. She currently resides in California. She enjoys spending time with family and friends, hiking, Inferno Pilates, learning new things, traveling, community service, attending church, and an occasional new pair of shoes.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Nancy Boyd-Franklin, PhD Preface Acknowledgments About the Authors Chapter 1. The Implementation Process: Steps to Becoming a Race Resilient School Year 1: Planning to Become a Race Resilient School No Need to Reinvent the Wheel Years 2-4 and Continuous Improvement Chapter 2. The NEED: Societal Changes Change Schools Changes in the Workplace Household, Community, and Environment: The Three Realms of Adverse Childhood Experiences Chapter 3. Creating the Culture for Developing a Race Resilient Climate School-to-Prison Pipeline Blind Spots Impact Other Groups of Students Measuring Up: Culture and Climate Are Not Synonymous Locus of Control Chapter 4. Educators' Emotions Matter: Building Up Stamina for Developing a Race Resilient Climate So How Do Educators Feel? Our Daily Goal: Minimizing Distress and Maximizing Eustress Our Hormonal Brain Under Distress and Eustress Chapter 5. Racialization Can Be Blinding Racial Positioning United We Stand, Divided We Crawl The R Word 2020 and America's Racial Awakening Through the Eyes of a Child: Racialization and Historical Trauma Historical and Generational Trauma Genes Load the Gun, Environment Pulls the Trigger E Pluribus Hurt, E Pluribus Healing This Is Us Chapter 6. Race Has Mattered in the School House The Effects of Racialization: White Identity Dispositions, Internalized Racism, and Stereotype Threat White Identity Dispositions Internalized Racism and Stereotype Threat Chapter 7. Mindful of Race Mindfulness in Teaching and Learning The Weight Room Versus the Wait Room Positive Psychology's Five Building Blocks of Life Chapter 8. Educator Resilience, Educator Race Resilience, and Mindfulness for Racial Equity Transforming a District Transforming a School In the Space Between Is Mindfulness Introduction to Space Between Appendix Appendix A. Processing for Racial Awareness and Creating a Race Resilient Action Plan Appendix B. Race Resilient School Checklist Glossary of Terms References Index

Additional information

NGR9781071833063
9781071833063
1071833065
Race Resilience: Achieving Equity Through Self and Systems Transformation by Victoria E. Romero
New
Paperback
SAGE Publications Inc
2021-11-08
224
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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Customer Reviews - Race Resilience