Libro Salud mental en la escuela: el final del miedo (PDF)

Series Vida de maestros; No. 7.

Editor: Bogotá: IDEP, 1999

Edición: 1.Descripción: 188 p.: il.ISBN: 958-8018-26-4.

Resumen: Este documento trata de la escuela que vivimos todos los días, en cuánto a su cotidianidad y la manera de resolver los problemas, puede considerarse un espacio sano, en el que modelen comportamientos y costumbres que tiendan a mejorar la salud mental.

Para acceder al PDF haga clic aquí

Fuente: http://biblioteca.idep.edu.co/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=2565&query_desc=kw%2Cwrdl%3A%20libro

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México: Artistas crearán brigadas culturales para niños en albergues

México/25 septiembre 2017/Fuente: La Jornada

Diversos artistas como teatreros, titiriteros, cuentacuentos, así como educadores crearán brigadas culturales con el propósito de llevar espectáculos artísticos a los niños afectados por el sismo que se encuentran en los albergues de la Ciudad de México.

En entrevista, Rogelio Mejía Suárez, conocido como Roger Crayola Rascatripas y responsable de La Banda del Club Papiro Plástika, explicó que varios grupos artísticos a través de redes sociales como Facebook y Twitter con el Hastang #AlegraUnAlbergue y #DePiePorLaInfancia, están convocando a los artistas de diversas disciplinas a sumarse a este proyecto de las brigadas culturales.

Mejía Suárez, quien ha colaborado con el programa Alas y Raíces de la Secretaría de Cultura, precisó que se crearán varios grupos de acuerdo a la disciplina para llevar espectáculos de calidad.

“En Papiro Plástika ya hemos apoyado en la remoción de escombros como voluntarios, pero ahora nos centraremos en las actividades de emergencia en el rubro cultural con un programa que llevaremos a los albergues”.

La convocatoria está abierta a titiriteros, cuentacuentos, teatreros, educadores y pedagogos y a los jóvenes que deseen llevar un poco de diversión a los niños.

“Nos estamos coordinando para llevar actividades de calidad. Ya hay brigadas culturales que se están organizando de manera emergente, donde la gente se puede sumar de manera inmediata.

“Los espectáculos serán rotativos en los albergues porque la idea es que sea un programa permanente mientras está la contingencia”.

Sobre el tipo de eventos que presentarán a los pequeños, Roger indicó que contarán con “contenidos de calidad en el aspecto artístico y si se puede también en lo educativo. Todas las disciplinas son bienvenidas, hay mucha gente que se dedica a pintar caritas, todo eso es bienvenido, pero el foco es que sea cultural”.

El coordinador de Papiro Plástika expresó también que esta iniciativa de oferta cultural emergente es totalmente altruista porque a nadie se le pagará. “El propósito es llevar a la gente que está viviendo momentos terribles, un poco de alegría y unos momentos de esparcimiento”.

Rogelio Mejía indicó que apenas se están reuniendo los grupos para organizar las actividades que llevarán a los albergues y espera que en unos tres días ya inicien las brigadas culturales.

“Primero vamos a recibir las propuestas y luego dividirlas por categorías, y cuando estén conformados los grupos, comenzaremos. También nos coordinaremos con las autoridades de albergues para contar con el permiso y tener el apoyo logístico”.

Otros artistas que están participando en las brigadas culturales son el grupo La Papilio del arte, Circonciente, Circo Teatro y Adriana Morales, quien está organizando una brigada de clown.

Fuente: http://www.jornada.unam.mx/ultimas/2017/09/21/artistas-crearan-brigadas-culturales-para-ninos-en-albergues-8292.html

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África: Despair and depression at law school are real, and need attention

África/Sudafrica/Agosto del 2017/Noticias/https://theconversation.com/

 

Pursuing a professional degree can be extremely stressful for students, who often experience it as a time riddled with anxiety, uncertainty, fear and financial challenge.

The emotional health of law students was recently brought to my attention in an email from a student at the University of Cape Town’s law faculty where I am the dean. The student noted a perceived hyper competitive, overly demanding and alienating environment. This, he told me, was putting the mental health of some law students under severe strain. He stated that because of the atmosphere, “the use of anti-anxiety and antidepressant medication has become the norm amongst students” and alcohol is being consumed in alarming proportions.

The disturbing email had me pondering: was this an individual case of emotional distress or did it suggest a wider problem that required urgent attention? And what kind of attention? Is there something about law school in particular that drives its students to mental health problems and substance abuse? And, if so, how can it be addressed?

In seeking answers to these questions I first looked into the University of Cape Town’s policies and practices on addressing mental health and substance abuse. I then began an investigation into the issue of mental health among law students specifically, looking at South Africa and other countries. Though most of the rigorous, scientific research on the subject has been conducted in the US, it does offer some valuable insight into what’s driving the issue and how it may be addressed.

What we know

The American media has drawn attention to issues of substance abuse and mental health among law students and lawyers. One article written about the high instances of suicides among law students and lawyers cites a study by the American Psychology Association showing that lawyers are 3.6 times more likely to suffer from depression than non lawyers.

In 2014 a comprehensive study, The Survey of Law Student Well-Being, was conducted at 15 law schools across the US. It was designed to examine and address the incidence of alcoholism and drug use, as well as mental health concerns of law students. The study found that a quarter to a third of law students reported misuse of alcohol and drugs, as well as experiencing mental health problems.

What was particularly disturbing about the findings was that a sizeable group of the students experiencing problems were reluctant to seek help. The factors that stopped them included social stigma, potential threat to job status, financial reasons, the idea that they could handle the problem themselves, or not having the time.

At South African universities, the question of student emotional wellness has been acknowledged and examined in some depth. These studies do not focus on law specifically but anecdotal evidence suggest that some law students may be experiencing similar pressure, requiring both personal and professional support and care.

All the signs seem to suggest that there is something particular to the education and training of lawyers that makes students and graduates prone to mental health problems and substance abuse. But knowing how to intervene requires a better understanding of what is driving this disturbing phenomenon.

Stresses in law

Studying law is fulfilling, rewarding and fun. But law studies are also academically tough. Success is predicated on hard work, long hours and emotional persistence. The skills of successful law graduates include resilience, perseverance and the determination and capacity to succeed despite obstacles.

This is true of other professions, but law is distinct in a few key ways.

In many ways law operates as an adversarial system with clear winners and losers. The combative prosecutor, the shrewd defence lawyer, the ruthless negotiator, the tough judge – these are all images of the strong, successful lawyer. Learning law therefore feels combative, not collaborative. This leads to a culture of competitiveness in law school, where the pressure to emulate successful lawyers is strong.

The practice of lawyering is also a more public endeavour than in other professions. Lawyers are open to public ridicule.

And because law students have to certify that they are “fit and proper” persons to practice they may feel particularly constrained to demonstrate any emotional problem, fearing that it may have an impact on their ability to be licensed to practice. They may also perceive seeking help as a sign of weakness – anathema to the perceived image of the strong lawyer.

Where to from here?

In response to the mental health challenges of its students, the University of Cape Town is pursuing a revised mental health policy for students that’s responsive to their needs and attuned to issues of inclusiveness and care.

In the law faculty, in line with the broader university-wide initiative, we are focusing on the question of how to encourage students to seek help when they need it. This means making mental health services visible, accessible, affordable and socially acceptable.

We are also addressing the way we teach law. Some aspects of the legal profession are inherently stressful. But our aim is to develop a caring institutional culture as well as solid academic support structures.

Fuente:https://theconversation.com/despair-and-depression-at-law-school-are-real-and-need-attention-81351

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España:UNICEF reclama ayuda «urgente» para sanar las «profundas cicatrices» físicas y psicológicas de los niños de Mosul

El Fondo de Naciones Unidas para la Infancia (UNICEF) ha reclamado este jueves «asistencia y protección urgentes» para sanar «las profundas cicatrices físicas y psíquicas» de los niños de Mosul, provocadas por la batalla entre las fuerzas iraquíes y los terroristas del Estado Islámico por el control de la ciudad.

«Aunque la batalla por Mosul haya llegado a su fin, las profundas cicatrices físicas y psíquicas de los niños tardarán en cerrarse», ha dicho la representante adjunta de UNICEF en Irak, Hamida Ramadhani, de acuerdo con un comunicado difundido por la agencia de la ONU.

Ramadhani ha recordado que «algunos niños continúan sufriendo los focos de violencia que persisten en el casco viejo del oeste de Mosul». «Un médico con el que hablamos nos contó que bebés de hasta tan solo una semana, niños y madres, aparecen heridos y cubiertos de polvo y arena, algunos desnutridos», ha relatado.

En los últimos días, «UNICEF y sus aliados han visto cómo se incrementaba el número de niños no acompañados extremadamente vulnerables que llegan a las instalaciones médicas y zonas de recepción», incluso «han llevado a algunos bebés que han aparecido solos entre los escombros».

Los menores sin compañía de adultos, los más vulnerables, «son derivados inmediatamente» para recibir asistencia y reunirse con sus familias lo antes posible. La organización internacional y sus socios ya han logrado reunir a 1.333 niños con sus familias.

Ramadhani ha enfatizado que esto son solo «las consecuencias que sufren los niños después de vivir casi diez meses bajo intensos combates», pero «unos 650.000 niños y niñas, que han vivido la pesadilla de la violencia en Mosul, han pagado un terrible precio y soportado muchas atrocidades durante los últimos tres años».

«Las necesidades y el futuro de los niños deben seguir siendo una prioridad durante las próximas semanas y meses», ha dicho. En este sentido, UNICEF ha subrayado que, «a medida que vuelvan a sus hogares, los niños necesitarán reanudar su educación formal o estaremos en riesgo de perder a toda una generación».

Además, ha reiterado el llamamiento de UNICEF «a todas las partes del conflicto en Irak para que traten a los niños como niños, independientemente de dónde hayan nacido o de a quién pertenezcan». «Ahora es el momento de que se recuperen, superen su trauma, se reúnan con sus familias y recobren parte de su infancia perdida», ha zanjado.

fuente :

http://www.expansion.com/agencia/europa_press/2017/07/13/20170713111019.html

fuente imagen:

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Reino Unido: Five things schools can do to help pupils’ mental health

Europa/Francia/Julio del 2017/ Noticias/https://theconversation.com/

 

There is a growing crisis within children’s mental health, and this is not a term used lightly – between 2010 and 2015 there was a 50% increase in hospital admissions because of children self-harming. And in 2016 Childline reported the highest ever number of callers expressing suicidal thoughts. This is a figure that has doubled over the last five years.

A report by the Children’s Commissioner for England warned that more than 800,000 children were living with mental health issues in the UK, with a large proportion from vulnerable families. Issues they face include parents with alcohol addiction, involvement in the care system, as well as dangers posed by street gangs and modern slavery.

As children’s mental health becomes one of society’s most pressing issues, many teachers find themselves on the frontline – with the effect being felt in schools across the country. In 2017, 79% of teachers in both primary and secondary schools reported seeing an increase in stress, anxiety and panic attacks in their pupils as well as a rise in depression, self-harm and eating disorders. But without specialist training – which isn’t currently a requirement – a lot of those working in schools feel unprepared for the challenges they are facing.

With this in mind, below are a few ways schools can try and help.

1. Start talking about it

Mental health needs to be integrated into the school curriculum, which will help increase understanding and reduce stigma around issues. Without this, pupils may not be aware their mental health is deteriorating and feel silenced or shamed when seeking help.

If both pupils and teachers have more open discussions about mental health, issues will also be easier to identify early on, and this will help to build students’ knowledge and understanding of the subject.

Ideally, mental health needs to be talked about the same way physical education or healthy eating is, because research has found that when schools adopt a comprehensive approach to discussing mental health it supports all pupils – including those who are experiencing mental health difficulties already.

Sharing’s caring. Shutterstock

2. Create a safe space

Students do better in schools when they feel safe – this means ensuring that bullying incidents are low and addressed, including the rising incidents of cyberbullying.

The evidence also shows that when students feel a sense of belonging, have good peer and teacher relationships, and feel listened to when they raise concerns, also helps to support positive mental health in schools.

It’s good to talk. Shutterstock

3. Support for all

Everyone in schools from the teachers to the teaching assistants, the school lunch staff to the school nurse, all have a role to play in improving the school environment – and making it more open to discussions around mental health.

But they can do only do this if they are supported and healthy themselves. Looking out for the well-being of staff will itself have a positive impact on the students. And research shows that when staff are trained in mental health they are more confident in supporting their students. The same research also showed that this additional mental health training even helped to boost staff’s own resilience and job satisfaction.

It’s a team effort. Shutterstock

4. Make sure teachers know how to help

Headteachers should demand mental health training for all new teachers. And before a school takes on a new or trainee teacher, they should ask to see what mental health training they have. This could include an understanding of the risk and resilience factors for their students, how to spot the signs of mental ill health, along with how to support and get help for students at risk.

This will ensure that all new teachers have a basic understanding of the mental health challenges they will face, and will make it easier for them to help pupils in need.

Knowing how to help is half the battle. Shutterstock

5. Recognise that it takes a village

Looking after children’s mental health isn’t just something that can be done on a small scale, it involves a shift in the way everyone not only works together, but also communicates on issues.

The good news is there are lots of additional things schools are already doing in this area, including working with parents and having staff as mentors for vulnerable students. Many schools have also introduced peer mentoring, where children are partnered up with older children who can look out for them.

Running extracurricular social activities for pupils has also been shown to help have a positive impact on students, by providing a space for them to work through their emotions and develop strategies to address their challenges.

Fuente:

https://theconversation.com/five-things-schools-can-do-to-help-pupils-mental-health-79376

Fuente imagen:

https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/UIVDvJSs7y6HxuvjDwHf66WBasJ3MuIhd9byjbAAi4kwuahx3CuUuPv8WYJAfBw7_W8PJN8=s85

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