Helping Children, Families, and Communities Cope with Grief
Watch this video to learn strategies and find Sesame Workshop resources to help children and others cope with grief.
Head Start programs support the mental health of children, families, and staff every day. Early childhood mental health is the same as social and emotional well-being. It is a child’s developing capacity to express and regulate emotions, form trusting relationships, explore, and learn—all in the cultural context of family and community. The mental health of children and the adults that care for them is essential for school readiness.
Watch this video to learn strategies and find Sesame Workshop resources to help children and others cope with grief.
This resource helps families and Head Start staff understand the effects of stress and trauma, so children can get the support and care they need to cope.
Explore this resource to learn about trauma, how traumatic events impact families and staff, and how to promote healing, resilience, and family well-being.
Learn the definition of trauma and how it impacts young children. Discover how programs can be more trauma-informed.
Explore how staff can plan and prepare before a natural disaster for the mental health needs of children, families, and staff that follow in the wake of an event.
Find out how Head Start staff can recognize their role in supporting children and families when they experience a loss.
Crisis and support hotlines can offer immediate help. They provide counseling, resources, and support that are confidential and free. Many are available 24 hours a day.
Review strategies for coping with and healing from trauma. Learn how families’ strengths help the healing process.
Explore this collection of resources to learn how trauma affects young children and find strategies to reduce its effects in children and adults.
Ongoing research continues to show us how adversity and toxic stress in early childhood can have a negative impact throughout a person's life. These videos are designed to help them understand what toxic stress is, what it does to a person, and easy things to do to help prevent it.