Trauma-Informed Students & Schools

Bring The Nervous System Era of Learning to Your Classrooms, Staff Rooms, and Beyond

Our Trauma-Informed Students & Schools program makes nervous-system-aware learning accessible to every part of your school community – not just classrooms. Designed to engage students, staff, and parents alike, this whole-school approach brings evidence-based, trauma-informed practices to life across daily routines, relationships, and learning environments.

Because Safety and Connection Come First

Every child’s capacity to learn is shaped by how safe and supported they feel in their environment. When stress or uncertainty enters the classroom – whether from life experiences, social dynamics, or the pace of modern learning – it can quietly affect attention, behavior, and connection.

A trauma-informed approach helps schools respond with understanding rather than reaction. When teachers, staff, and parents all share the same nervous-system-aware language, students are wrapped in an environment of safety and connection; the conditions most conducive to healthy development and meaningful learning.

By integrating the science of the nervous system into the fabric of school life, we help every member of the community feel safe enough to teach, learn, and grow together.


What Sets Our Program Apart

Designed for whole-school transformation, our program brings trauma-informed and nervous-system-aware practices to every layer of your learning community. What sets it apart:

  • Whole-community learning: Students, staff, and parents all learn the same foundational language of safety and connection – creating consistency across classrooms, staff rooms, and homes.
  • Developmentally aligned: Content is tailored for each age and role: From early learners to high-school students, educators, and caregivers – so everyone can meet the material where they are.
  • Multi-modal learning: A mix of stories, visuals, activities, reflection prompts, and classroom applications keeps learning meaningful and memorable for every age group.
  • Grounded in Universal Design for Learning (UDL): Every element is built with accessibility, flexibility, and engagement in mind, ensuring it supports diverse learning needs and styles.
  • Trauma-informed by design: Safety, choice, and trust are built into every lesson – without necessarily needing to use the word “trauma.”

  • Rooted in Polyvagal Theory: Every component is informed by the science of safety and connection. This program helps students and educators understand how our nervous systems shape our behavior, learning, and relationships – and how to work with these responses instead of against them.

  • Easy to Implement: Available as a comprehensive package for schools, with clear pathways for training educators, onboarding parents, and engaging students year-round.

Why This Matters


Every school invests deeply in supporting students’ learning and well-being. Educators set the tone, and their presence makes a difference.

But a truly supportive environment isn’t created by teachers alone. It’s shaped in every hallway conversation, playground interaction, and parent exchange. That’s why trauma-informed practices are most powerful when the entire school community shares the same foundation of safety, connection, and understanding.

When everyone – students, staff, and parents– speaks the same nervous-system-aware language, the impact multiplies. Classrooms feel calmer. Relationships strengthen. Difficult moments become teachable ones.

Our Trauma-Informed Students & Schools program helps make this possible. Developed and finessed in the corporate world, we're now extending the core principles of The Nervous System Era of Work into education – equipping schools to create consistent, compassionate environments where both learning and belonging can thrive.

Learn more about The Nervous System Era of Work by clicking below:

How It Works


Our Trauma-Informed Students & Schools program can be delivered as a complete package or in flexible phases, depending on your school’s goals and readiness.

  • Begin with the foundation: Start with Trauma-Informed Leadership workshop for administrators and key staff. This anchors everyone in shared language and nervous-system-aware principles that guide how safety and connection show up day to day.
  • Extend to the whole team: All educators and support staff participate in Trauma-Informed Workplaces & Teams training to extend these principles into classroom strategies, communication approaches, and daily routines.
  • Engage students: Interactive, age-appropriate lessons help students understand their own nervous systems; building awareness, empathy, and the capacity to self-regulate and connect with others.
  • Include parents and caregivers: Optional workshops and resources help families use the same language of safety and connection at home, reinforcing consistency across the students' community.
  • Embed and sustain: Follow-up sessions, reflection tools, and implementation guides help schools integrate these practices long-term – so trauma-informed isn’t just a training, but a culture.

FAQ

What does "trauma-informed" mean in a school context?

A trauma-informed approach recognizes that stress and adversity impact how students (and adults!) learn, relate, and respond. It’s not about therapy or diagnosing; it’s about creating safety, predictability, and connection so everyone can learn and teach at their best.

How is this different from social-emotional learning (SEL)?

SEL focuses on developing skills like empathy, self-awareness, and communication. Trauma-informed practice is the foundation that makes SEL possible; it creates the sense of safety and trust the nervous system needs for those skills to take root.

What age groups is this designed for?

The program spans JK through Grade 12, with developmentally appropriate materials and examples for each stage. Younger students learn simple self-regulation and connection skills; older students explore stress responses, empathy, and leadership through a nervous-system lens.

Who participates in the training?

Everyone! Students, teachers, administrators, support staff, and parents each have tailored sessions so the entire community builds a shared language of safety and connection.

What is this program based on?

It’s grounded in Polyvagal Theory and the science of safety, connection, and co-regulation. These frameworks explain how the nervous system shapes learning and relationships – and how we can help it return to safety when stress arises.

 

How long does it take to implement?

We work with each school to design a timeline that fits their rhythm. Many begin with a foundational training series over several weeks, then extend into classroom integration, parent engagement, and long-term sustainability planning. Ideally, sessions will be run annually as students change grades, new families become part of your community, and to continue supporting staff in this work.

How is this different from professional development workshops we've done before?

Rather than a one-off session, this program is designed for culture change. It weaves trauma-informed practices into everyday interactions, routines, and policies so the learning sticks and the impact lasts.

How do parents fit into this?

Families receive optional workshops and take-home resources that mirror the same language & practices students and teachers are learning, creating consistency between home and school. 

Do we have to do the program in its entirety?

No, although it's recommended! We can run any element of this program separately as a standalone option.

How do we get started?

We begin with a discovery conversation to understand your school’s goals, challenges, and readiness. From there, we design a customized rollout plan – whether that’s a single-session pilot or a full-community initiative.

Ready to explore how this approach will transform your school?

Book a call to get started!

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