Core Concepts
Teacher Mindset
Effects of Trauma
100

What is the main goal of trauma-informed care (TIC) in schools?

To understand how trauma affects student behavior and respond with empathy rather than punishment.

100

What scale was used to measure teachers’ attitudes in the study?

The ARTIC scale.

100

Trauma affects which three key areas of student functioning?

Attention, memory, and emotional regulation.

200

What does TIC emphasize about behavior?

Behavior is communication that often reflects stress or trauma.

200

True or false: Teacher attitudes can shift after even brief training.

True.

200

What happens to the stress-response system in children with chronic trauma?

It becomes overactivated, making learning harder. 

300

What type of approach does TIC require: individual, classroom, or systemic?

Systemic — involving teachers, administrators, and school policies.

300

Why is mindset more important than “strategies” alone?

Because understanding trauma shapes how teachers interpret and respond to student behavior.

300

Name one behavioral sign that may reflect trauma.

Shutting down, irritability, withdrawal, difficulty focusing, etc.

400

Which major professional organization inspired the article’s framework for prevention and equity?

The American Psychological Association (APA). 

400

What common teacher assumption does TIC challenge?

That misbehavior is intentional defiance rather than a stress response.

400

How does trauma impact students biologically?

It affects brain regions involved in learning and emotional processing.

500

Name two scientific foundations TIC draws on.

Neuroscience, attachment theory, emotional intelligence, or cultural responsiveness (any two).

500

Which group saw the highest trauma-informed attitudes?

Teachers who had both training and ongoing consultation.

500

Why might trauma-related behavior be easily misinterpreted in classrooms?

Because it can look like defiance or laziness unless teachers understand trauma.