Creating Healing School Communities
3 authors - Paperback
£37.00
Catherine DeCarlo Santiago, PhD, is a licensed clinical psychologist and an assistant professor in clinical psychology at Loyola University Chicago. Dr. Santiago specializes in community intervention research with children and families. She studies how children and families respond to stress and trauma and evaluates interventions designed to improve functioning and promote resilience. She has worked directly with the Cognitive Behavioral Intervention for Trauma in Schools (CBITS) team, conducting school-based intervention research, designing evaluations, and supervising clinicians who are implementing CBITS. Dr. Santiago has partnered with school-based clinicians, school administrators, and community parents to inform school-based interventions and improve their implementation and sustainability. She provides supervision and implementation support to graduate students and school-based clinicians. She received her bachelor of arts degree from the University of Notre Dame and a doctoral degree in clinical psychology from the University of Denver. Dr. Santiago completed her clinical internship and postdoctoral fellowship at the University of California, Los Angeles Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior.
Tali Raviv, PhD, is a clinical psychologist at Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago and an assistant professor at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. She is part of the Center for Childhood Resilience at Lurie Children’s whose mission is to increase access to high quality mental health services for youth affected by poverty, trauma, and violence through providing training and technical assistance to school- and community-based clinicians as well as educators and other youth-serving organizations. Dr. Raviv has trained hundreds of clinicians in school-based interventions to trauma, including Cognitive Behavioral Intervention for Trauma in Schools (CBITS) and Bounce Back, and hundreds of educators and community members on the impact that trauma has on students’ learning and emotional and behavioral health. She has also worked directly with multiple schools on the creation and implementation of Behavioral Health Teams, school-based teams that meet to address the needs of at-risk students, including those affected by exposure to violence and trauma. She provides direct clinical services to youth and families exposed to trauma through her work on the Trauma Treatment Service at Lurie Children’s Hospital and participates in advocacy initiatives through membership in the Illinois Child Trauma Coalition and her role on the Steering Committee of the PATHH Collaborative of the Chicago Children’s Advocacy Center. Dr. Raviv received her bachelor of arts degree from Emory University and a doctoral degree in clinical psychology from University of Denver.
Lisa H. Jaycox, PhD, is a clinical psychologist and senior behavioral scientist at the RAND Corporation. Dr. Jaycox’s work focuses on the mental health consequences of stress and trauma and on interventions that facilitate recovery. She has worked on the development and implementation of the Cognitive Behavioral Intervention for Trauma in Schools (CBITS) program and related interventions (Support for Students Exposed to Trauma, Bounce Back, Life Improvement for Teens) for more than 15 years, and she has conducted research on stress and a broad range of traumatic events in children and adults. After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, she developed a toolkit for schools that described trauma-focused school interventions. Dr. Jaycox received her bachelor of arts degree from Brown University and her doctoral degree from the University of Pennsylvania.