
about us
The Institute for Trauma, Adversity, and Resilience in Higher Education
began as an interdisciplinary conference on Trauma and Learning in Post-Secondary Education hosted by MassBay Community College in 2012. MassBay has generously continued its support of the Institute. Additional previous support was received from a United States Department of Education Title III grant. For more information on how to support or partner with us, see the Get In Touch section.
What is Trauma?
- Trauma is not stress or bad things happening.
- Trauma is when bad things happen that overwhelm the individual’s ability to cope.
- Trauma is also characterized by a stuckness. Time passes, but the body remains locked in the overwhelmed threat response.
- Trauma is a social and political construction. Bessel Van Der Kolk calls attention to how American society responds to the presentation of trauma rather than addressing its origins: poverty, racism, violence.
What Does it Mean to be Trauma-Informed?
- Trauma-aware means to understand that trauma is common and prevalent, and being trauma-informed means integrating this awareness into practices, pedagogies, and policies. Trauma-informed education necessitates collective awareness of how trauma, adversity, and violence impact academic resilience. The focus is not on the diagnosis of individuals as in a therapeutic context, but rather intentional awareness of the personal and systemic violence already present in the lives of campus members and also in the institutional history and practices. Trauma-informed education emerges from neurobiological research and findings on the power of resilience behaviors and interventions to build progressive, positive outcomes.
- Unaddressed trauma affects traditional benchmarks of post-secondary success, including retention, course completion, and graduation rates. Interruptions in school attendance, not being cognitively present due to overwhelming stress and trauma, documented socio-economic pressures of homelessness, food insecurity, and poverty, systemic and institutionalized identity-based violence such as racism, all these factors adversely impact progress in the everyday skills critical to higher education and the workplace.
TRAUMA IN POST-SECONDARY LEARNERS:
WHAT YOU MIGHT SEE
Problematic behaviors
as maladaptive attempts or strategies to solve problems
Davidson, S. (2017). Trauma-informed practices in higher education. Retrieved from Education Northwest.

Difficulty focusing, attending, retaining, recalling

Challenges with emotional regulation

Anxiety about deadlines, exams, group work, or public speaking

Withdrawal and isolation

Tendency to miss a lot of classes

Fear of taking risks

Anger, helplessness, or dissociation when stressed

