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Helping Kids Cope in a Time of Crisis and Fear
Helping Kids Cope in a Time of Crisis and Fear FutureFit RL RF ? Peruse an article that is intended for parents, but has useful advice for teachers. It details, by age levels, how to explain horrific events to children. Updated on: September 12, 2001 Helping Kids Cope in a Time of Crisis and Fear: Advice for Teachers and Parents by Katy Abel Editor's note: This article was written as a guide for helping children following the attacks of September 11, 2001. However, the content of the article will be useful for teachers and parents following any national or international tragedy. In times of national agony, as we sense our security vanishing in the flames and smoke of unforeseen terrorism and tragedy, many of us wonder whatâ"and how muchâ"to say to children. The very sudden and shocking nature of September 11 attack on America makes it all the more essential for Moms, Dads, and teachers to find the right words, and the right way to communicate a message of safety and family security. Here is family therapist Carleton Kendrickâs ages-and-stages advice for how to express thoughts and feelingsâ"and listen to kids talkâ"about whatâs happened. Preschoolers: Limit Media Exposure During the Persian Gulf War and following the bombing of the Oklahoma federal building, many preschool teachers observed young children reenacting scenes from television news broadcasts in their classroom play. But while children may mimic scenes of tragedy, they lack the cognitive ability to fully comprehend what they see. Scenes of carnage may seem cartoon-like to some, truly terrifying to others. âPreschoolers are basically going to be mirroring what they hear and see around them,â observes Kendrick. âMy strong suggestion is to keep preschoolers away from television images of whatâs happened in New York and Washington.â Kendrick advises parents to share their own feelings with preschoolers on a âneed-to-knowâ basis. No four-year-old can understand a terrorist plot, but she may think itâs her fault if Mom is upset and itâs unclear why. A simple explanation (âIâm sad because some people were hurt in an accident todayâ) may be all thatâs needed. Other suggestions: Maintain the family schedule as much as possible. This is a time when a sit-down dinner and a bedtime story can signal young children that while big buildings are falling down, the family structure remains intact. oung elementary school students will get information about whatâs happened from their peers, if no one else. âJust as you donât want them to have knowledge of sex from the playground, so too you donât want them to rely on their friends for information about these attacks,â cautions Kendrick. âYou the parent have to filter the horror and the tragedy and somehow make it understandable and not paralyzing.â Since children this age are going to wonder first and foremost about their own physical safety, Kendrick suggests accenting the positive. âIâd say, âWeâre going to be a lot safer now,ââ Kendrick advises. âTell kids that weâve learned from this that we have to have better plans to protect buildings and planes. This is important reassurance because children may have fears about their parents flying off on a business trip, or the familyâs upcoming visit to Grandmaâs for the holidays.â ou can certainly initiate a conversation, but always with, âWhat have you heard?â That tips you off to what kids bring to the table.â Children are also old enough by fourth grade to express their own feelings and hear about the full range of their parentsâ emotions. At the same time, they still need reassurance that their parents are powerful caretakers who can protect them. ââIâm looking out for you as best I can, taking care of you and voting for leaders who will take care of our country,ââ is one way to express a desire to protect a child from harm. Grade 7 and Up: Identity and Security Parents can expect many pre-teens and teens to feel a heightened sense of anxiety in the wake of Tuesdayâs attacks, Kendrick believes. The current climate of uncertainty and fear mirrors the emotions that many teens are experiencing in their personal lives. âThe adolescent needs a safe harbor to retreat to after going out and testing the limits,â Kendrick notes. âBut now it appears to them that somebodyâs gone out and blown up the harbor. So with teens itâs all the more important that you reinforce whatever you can about your family being the real safe harbor, even if there are choppy seas in the distance. This is a good time to tap into the strength of âwe,â so they know they are not floundering out there.â Teens and even younger children will take comfort in hearing about the good deeds and heroics that always accompany human tragedy. Share accounts of successful rescues, and tell children about the many Americans who are lining up to donate blood. Children will also feel better when they themselves are given a chance âto do something.â Help children write condolence letters to the victimsâ families, plant a tree or bush to honor their memory, or visit a local church to light a candle and say a prayer for comfort and peace. FamilyEducation
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