College of Education Self-Care

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Students need self-care, too

February 8, 2021

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Dear Michael D. Eisner College of Education Community,

Recent surveys indicate that college students are under great stress due to the combined crises of the pandemic and anti-black racism. And students in Deaf Studies have additional stressors, such as the challenge of ASL communication virtually. Surveys also indicate that faculty and staff worry about student well-being, especially for those students from low-income communities with limited living and educational resources.  A recent  article by Stephanie Pappas in the American Psychological Association Online states that “programs don’t usually teach their students how to make time for self-care, despite evidence that self-care behaviors make for happier, healthier trainees.” Her article offers strategies for graduate students' well-being, which also can easily apply to credential and undergraduate students.  https://www.apa.org/monitor/2020/07/student-self-care  These strategies are summarized below.

Strategies for faculty to promote self-care in students

Know the stressors and barriers. Financial stressors and time pressures repeatedly top the list of challenges that students face. Program or class culture can be a barrier to self-care, too.

Check in. The first step is to make self-care a welcome topic of conversation in class.

Incorporate self-care in coursework that students are already doing, suggests Robyn Gobin, PhD, an assistant professor of clinical psychology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. “During class time, they’re invested in learning, they’re invested in getting good grades,” Gobin says. “So, I make it part of their grade.” She encourages self-care through extra-credit assignments such as asking students to reflect on their own self-care practices.

Encourage small steps. Another key strategy is to encourage students to start small. Part of helping students identify small steps they can make involves identifying how self-care fits into their values systems. Focusing on what a student most wants to get out of self-care—an energy boost? A mental break?—can help them identify activities that will get them what they need.

Sponsor a wellness committee. Launch a student wellness committee to work toward making self-care a part of the education culture.

Model self-care. The most important way to encourage self-care is to take care of yourself—and let your students know you’re doing it.

Self-care Tools for students and others who are deaf and hard of hearing

https://nationaldeafcenter.org/news-items/self-care-part-mental-health/ Beatrice Bachleda, National Deaf Center on Postsecondary Outcomes, The University of Texas at Austin

NDC has put together a tip sheet with basic but powerful tools that can benefit everyone, including deaf youth, families, educators and service providers. These tools – breathing, mindfulness, connection – aligned with appropriate mental health services may improve coping skills and allow individuals to eventually shift from reacting to responding to crises as they arise.

Self-care counseling and related resources for students and community are available through our CSUN COE centers 

Self-care resources to talk with students about anti-Black racism and other racism

•      Systemic Inequities: Dismantling systemic inequities in our schools and building schools that work for all students  Webcast recording YouTube link:  https://youtu.be/6bIXQZAcess

Other self-care resources for students at CSUN

For a list of  self-care options available to students and anyone, please see our COE self-care website for  resources for faculty, staff, and COE students at:

 https://www.csun.edu/eisner-education/self-care/articles-information-self-care

Thank you for your care and concern in guiding our students during these challenging times.

Warmly,

Shari and Josh