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糖心vlog Course Meets Growing Demand for Trauma and Resilience Training

Developed in partnership with New Jersey鈥檚 Office of Resilience, From Trauma to Healing transforms how professionals support youth, families and communities through healing-centered approaches

Posted in: College for Community Health, University

Two women stand side by side in a courtyard on the 糖心vlog campus.
An email exchange between 糖心vlog鈥檚 Family Science and Human Development Chair Lyndal Khaw (left) and Rebecca Bryan, Executive Director of the New Jersey Department of Children and Families鈥 Office of Resilience, resulted in a trauma-focused, healing-centered online course offered by the University.

Family therapist and Student Assistance Counselor (SAC) Joy Przywara didn鈥檛 expect an online trauma course at 糖心vlog to reshape her work and family relationships.

鈥淭he From Trauma to Healing: Healing-Centered Approaches to Trauma in Families and Communities course was so much more than I expected. I feel so much better prepared as a professional,鈥 says Przywara. 鈥淚 can say with confidence that this has changed my approach and deepened my understanding.鈥

A Needed Collaboration

Now in its third cohort, which begins October 13, the trauma-centered certificate course is a collaboration between Montclair鈥檚 Department of Family Science and Human Development (FSHD), in the College for Community Health, and the New Jersey Department of Children and Families鈥 (DCF)

The program is designed for professionals in the education, law enforcement, social services and mental health fields where understanding trauma鈥檚 impact is critical.

鈥淲e鈥檙e so deeply appreciative to Montclair for creating a course of this caliber,鈥 says Office of Resilience Executive Director Rebecca Bryan. 鈥淢ontclair was a perfect fit for this kind of work because it’s community focused, and we’re community focused.鈥

FSHD Chair Lyndal Khaw adds: 鈥淭his course fulfills New Jersey鈥檚 goal of being a trauma-informed and healing-centered state, while advancing President Jonathan Koppell鈥檚 mandate to be a public-serving institution. It benefits professionals who work with people and helps strengthen communities around us.鈥

Impact on Professional and Personal Life

Przywara says the course has changed how she interacts in all her roles:

As a SAC at a vocational school where students are referred to her for a range of matters, sometimes behavioral issues: 鈥淭here’s a story behind what students are doing. There’s a why, and once you get to that, you鈥檙e usually able to find a connection with the student.鈥

As a private practice counselor: 鈥淚t is important to use a lens of understanding and compassion which comes from knowing and identifying the trauma and the ways to help them understand their own strengths in coping and processing that impact.鈥

As a wife, mother of a child with autism and a cancer survivor: 鈥淭his has saturated my parenting, my relationship with my husband of 20 years; it鈥檚 made me reflective.鈥

For Przywara, the course revealed a key insight: 鈥淲e鈥檙e not just damaged, we鈥檙e damaged and coping. That鈥檚 a special piece because then you’re not counseling 鈥榓t,鈥 you鈥檙e counseling 鈥榳ith.鈥欌

Developing the Curriculum

The 10-week online course explores healing-centered approaches within the context of social connection. Unlike traditional trauma-informed care, it emphasizes strength, resilience and wholeness in individuals, families and communities.

The curriculum blends research on neurobiological responses to trauma with practical applications. Graduates earn continuing education credits and a micro-credential certificate jointly from Montclair and the DCF Office of Resilience.

Khaw notes: 鈥淭his was the first time FSHD offered a course designed to be community-serving and responsive. It鈥檚 an interactive, comprehensive look at trauma and how professionals can be more trauma-informed in their everyday practices to support families and children.鈥

Robin Wanner, a care manager supervisor at Bergen鈥檚 Promise, a community-based, nonprofit organization serving more than 1,700 youth and families in Bergen County, found the course invaluable: 鈥淚n general, it helps you be a more sensitive individual, to understand or have a sensitivity to where people might be coming from in their humanity. It makes you step back and look at your own life or parenting or generations in your own family to recognize things you may not have understood before.鈥

Creating Resiliency in New Jersey

The uses a Trauma-Informed Continuum 鈥 trauma aware 鈫 trauma sensitive 鈫 trauma responsive 鈫 healing centered. Bryan explains: 鈥淲hen you take the final step to become healing centered, you realize that we are more than our trauma. The trauma is a part of the story, but we’re already whole; we’re incredibly resilient. The focus is strengths-based.鈥

Demand for the course continues to grow, with enrollment doubling between the first and second cohorts. Khaw also sees potential for Montclair to expand teachings in professional development and micro-credentialing for graduates and early-career professionals.

About the Partnership

The , created in 2020, addresses the long-term effects of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and promotes resilience. The office offers free statewide training, organizational support such as the Trauma Responsive Understanding Self-Assessment Tool and hosts networking opportunities through Resilient NJ Collaborative meetings.

In early 2021, New Jersey launched the with the goal of preventing and reducing childhood trauma and adversity. The aim is to keep students safe, healthy and in school and create opportunities to prevent and empower healing from individual, transgenerational and community trauma,

Through its partnership with Montclair, the state reserves seats for employees and provides scholarships to community members to ensure accessibility. 鈥淥ne of our deeply held beliefs is that cost should not be a barrier to this knowledge,鈥 says Bryan, emphasizing that 鈥淢ontclair is a key component of taking trauma training to the next level. This is meant to be a long-term relationship.鈥

Ready to Start Your Montclair Journey?

Prospective Students and Parents: Plan your visit and in applying to become a Red Hawk. Learn more about the Department of Family Science and Human Development in the College for Community Health.

Journalists: Contact Media Relations for assets or to schedule an interview with faculty or students.