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Archive for the ‘Education’ Category


Bullying: Continuing the Conversation (A three-part series)

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

Last January, we held an educational session entitled Bullying: Starting the Conversation, led by Dr. Walter Roberts. Feedback from participants and from Dr. Roberts encouraged us to delve deeper into this topic. We did just that. A community task force was created to develop a plan that continues the conversation on bullying. The result? An upcoming three-part educational series that aims to provide more concrete methods for identifying, understanding and addressing bullying in all of its forms. Parents, educators, students and community members are encouraged to join the conversation about what we, as a community, can do to stop bullying.

Each session will be held at the Radisson Hotel Duluth (505 W. Superior St.) in the Great Hall from 6:30 – 8:30 pm. Prior to each session from 5:30 – 6:15 pm, facilitators will lead listening circles in the foyer to give attendees a chance to talk about their concerns.

January 26, 2012
Title: Steppin’ Up With Courage
Speaker: Alana Friedman, MA, National Olweus Bullying Prevention Trainer

  • General overview/definitions of bullying
  • The roles of bullying
  • How to intervene when you observe bullying

 

March 1, 2012
Title: Understanding Power and Abuse
Speakers: Nathan Kesti and Ed Heisler, Men as Peacemakers

  • Overview of issue/definitions of bullying
  • Understanding power, control and abuse
  • Creating communities free from bullying and abuse

 

March 29, 2012
Title: Becoming an Advocate for Change
Speaker: Ron Lake, MSW, LICSW, Climate Coordinator, ISD 709

  • Overview of issue/definitions of bullying
  • Understanding behavior as functional and communicative
  • Using the tool kit to advocate for change

 

The cost to attend is $10 per session. Register online at www.slhduluth.com/classes-programs and select Class Information & Registration. Or, mail a check payable to St. Luke’s Hospital to Education Department (Bullying), St. Luke’s Hospital, 915 East First Street, Duluth, MN 55805. These sessions are sponsored by the Miller-Dwan Foundation, St. Luke’s Hospital and the St. Luke’s Foundation.

Upcoming free seminar: Creating the Chemistry of Joy

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012

On Thursday, January 19, the Miller-Dwan Foundation and the Holiday Inn will host a free educational seminar given by Dr. Henry Emmons. Dr. Emmons is an integrative psychiatrist and the author of The Chemistry of Joy and The Chemistry of Calm, books that describe his models for restoring resilience in the face of depression, anxiety and other stress-related conditions. Dr. Emmons will explore the need for a healthy brain and how to incorporate lifestyle strategies, natural therapies and spiritual practices to support the recovery from depression and a return to a more resilient state.

Parents, teachers, health care practitioners and community members are welcome to attend this session. 2.0 contact units of continuing education are available through Essentia Health.

More about the speaker: Dr. Emmons received training in Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction from Dr. Jon Kabat-Zinn and completed a Bush fellowship studying the integration of natural and alternative therapies in psychiatry. He has co-developed and facilitated “A Year of Living Mindfully” and “The Inner Life of Healers” programs through the University of Minnesota’s Center for Spirituality and Healing. He practices general and holistic psychiatry and consults to several colleges and organizations in and around Minneapolis-St. Paul. He currently practices general psychiatry at The Penny George Institute for Health and Healing at Abbott Northwestern Hospital.

If you plan to attend:
Date: Thursday, January 19, 2012
Location: Holiday Inn Great Lakes Ballroom (200 West First Street in Duluth)
Time(s): 5:30-7:30 pm (doors open at 5:00 pm)
RSVP: There is no cost to attend, but please call the Miller-Dwan Foundation at 218-786-5829 to reserve your seat by January 16

Do you need a survival guide to the adolescent brain?

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

We’re very excited to announce that on Thursday, May 12, the Miller-Dwan Foundation will present international speaker and best-selling author, Dr. David Walsh. He will discuss adolescence, which has been described as a “normally abnormal stage of life.” What happens to the adolescent brain on the path from childhood into adulthood? Dr. Walsh will share the latest scientific findings in easy-to-understand terms to show why moodiness, quickness to anger, willingness to take risks, miscommunication and other familiar teenage behaviors are so common; all are linked to physical changes and growth in the adolescent brain. He’ll then discuss how parents and professionals can use this information to understand, communicate with, and stay connected to their kids.

The presentation will start at 5:30 p.m. following a 5 p.m. reception at the Holiday Inn’s Great Lakes Ballroom. Registration is required by May 9. The cost to attend is $25 and includes a light dinner. Click here to register or call 786-5829. Space is limited!

Dr. David Walsh has emerged as one of the world’s leading authorities on children, teens, parenting, family life and the impact of technology on children’s health and development. He has authored nine books, including two national best-sellers; he has contributed articles to newspapers across the country, including the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times; and he has been a consultant on numerous national television shows, including NBC’s Today Show, Good Morning America, Dateline NBC and ABC’s 20/20. He presents workshops to parents, educators and professionals throughout the world, blending humor, warmth, scientific substance and practical advice.

1.5 contact units of continuing education will be provided by Essentia Health.

You won’t want to miss this very special guest speaker!  Register now

Women Leading Change – Strong Foundations: Promoting Early Childhood Mental Health

Monday, February 28th, 2011

The Miller-Dwan Foundation and Lake Superior Medical Society Alliance present Casey Ladd, who will speak to parents, professionals and the community on the subject of early childhood mental health.

Early relationships and experiences have a permanent effect on brain development, health and mental health. The nurturing and interaction infants, toddlers and young children experience organize the brain and provide the foundation for all future learning and relationships. This presentation will provide an understanding of what infant/toddler mental well-being is and give information about early intervention services that may be beneficial to families.

Casey Ladd, MSW, LICSW, LMFT, is a family therapist with 35 years of experience working with chronically stressed families. She also has 25 years experience of teaching and training.  In 2005 Casey was invited to participate in a DHS sponsored initiative to grow a statewide community of mental health professionals skilled and trained to work with infants/toddlers/preschoolers and their families.  In 2008 she brought her passion for early intervention to the Human Development Center. She is dedicated to training professionals and developing programs in the Twin Ports to increase quality mental health services to some of our community’s most vulnerable families.

This event will be held on Thursday, March 24 at the Radisson Hotel’s Great Hall. $18 includes a light dinner. Pre-payment is required by March 21. Click here to register or call 218-786-5829. Space is limited.

We hope you’ll join us!

Women Leading Change – Goodbye Ed, Hello Me: Recover from Your Eating Disorder and Fall in Love with Life

Friday, February 4th, 2011
The Miller-Dwan Foundation, UMD Health Services, and The Emily Program are presenting internationally renowned author and speaker, Jenni Schaefer, who will speak on eating disorders, body image issues and her personal story of hope and recovery. 

Almost everyone worries about their weight occasionally. People with eating disorders take such concerns to extremes. Internationally renowned author and speaker, Jenni Schaefer, will speak on eating disorders, body image issues and her personal story of hope and recovery.

This presentation will offer inspiration and proof that those who are struggling with eating disorders – and their families – can recover and move on to live life to the fullest. “It is possible to move from being in recovery to being fully recovered,” says Schaefer. “I want people struggling to get into life and follow their dreams, not be stuck in or defined by an eating disorder.”

Schaefer is an internationally known author and speaker whose work has helped change the face of recovery from eating disorders. Her appearances on shows like Dr. Phil and Entertainment Tonight, in publications ranging from Cosmopolitan to The New York Times, and before live audiences have brought a world of hope to men and women seeking real solutions.

Admission is FREE and open to the public. Event will be held at the UMD Chemistry Building, room 200 (1039 University Drive). Meet and mingle at 6:30 p.m.; Schaefer will speak at 7:00 pm. For more information, call Dori at 726-7046 or email ddecker@d.umn.edu.

We hope you’ll join us. See you there!

Bullying: what’s next? A note from Dr. Walter Roberts

Monday, January 31st, 2011

We were fortunate to have Dr. Walter Roberts join us to speak at January 20th’s Women Leading Change event. 140 people, including educators, mental health professionals, parents, and friends joined at the Radisson Hotel’s Great Hall to talk about bullying in our schools.  So, what’s the next step? Dr. Roberts asked us to share the following comments and additional information with our guests.

Bullying: Starting the Conversation

Taking the Next Step

Please accept my sincere appreciation for the hospitality shown to Laurie and me by the Duluth-Superior community at the January 20th presentation, Bullying: Starting the Conversation.  Your willingness to trek to the event during one of the coldest nights of the year is nothing but testament both to your resolve to start a realistic conversation about the negative impacts of bullying and intimidation, and to take those next steps toward action.

So, what do we do now?  In addition to moving forward on the ten recommendations covered at the presentation, I would encourage all who attended to connect in the immediate future and take advantage of the momentum generated in the room.  A community task force is a great way to make the issue a permanent focus and you have two great groups already in place to make that happen—Women Leading Change and Men as Peacemakers.  I urge you to connect with these two organizations and get involved. 

It is also essential to speak out publicly in opposition to those behaviors that we know are unacceptable.  One of the reasons we have the problem of unchallenged intimidation is that too many of us fail to call on those who engage in bullying to stop.  We have to be willing to call it when we see it and do so in such a way that encourages others to join us in the effort.  Write letters to the editor.  Address governmental leaders—school boards, city councils, members of the legislature—ask them to be a part of the solution.

Making communities safe for all ages is a quality of life issue.  It begins in our homes and spirals outward.  We have to start those spirals of caring and feed them with our creative energies. 

Again, thank you for your wonderful generosity.  Let’s keep moving forward to prevent and end the terrible emotional and physical damage that bullying, intimidation, and violence cause within our society.  I’ll continue doing my part, and I look forward to hearing about the successes that the Duluth-Superior region have in the days, weeks, and months to come.

Best wishes!

Walter Roberts, Jr.
Professor of Counselor Education
Minnesota State University, Mankato
Author of Bullying from Both Sides and Working with Parents of Bullies and Victims

10 Options to Address Bullying in Our Communities

Walter Roberts, Jr.
Professor of Counselor Education
Minnesota State University, Mankato

1.  Refuse to continue the historical paradigms as to how we respond to bullying and intimidation among children and adolescents.

2.  Accept that ignoring the problem will not solve it.  It will not go away.  The evidence is clear that the problem will only get worse if ignored.

3.  Make a personal commitment to refuse to tolerate intimidating behaviors in all community settings.  This is not just a “school problem.”  It is a community issue. It starts in the home and spills over into any setting—public, private, and parochial—where young people gather.

4.  Intervene on behalf of those who are targeted for victimization.  They need you.  It does make a difference that, when, and how adults get involved in stopping the bully-victim relationship.  This is not a job for “someone else” to solve.

5.  Challenge those who do not believe that bullying is an issue worthy of their time or concern.  You/We cannot be silent anymore.  Silence supports the status quo.  Is the status quo acceptable in our community?

6.  Ask tough questions within the community:  What are we really doing to address this problem?  Be persistent in pursuit of an answer.

7.  Volunteer with youth.  A “resource” is not always money.  Active supervision by adults is one of the most effective tools to reduce bullying.

8.  Community organizations can make bullying prevention curricula and resources for schools one of their funding priorities.  Ask what your schools need, then help find ways to obtain it.

9.  Engage the PTBs—the Powers That Be.  Call/Contact relevant office holders—in the legislature, on school boards, at the local government level—and ask them what they are specifically going to do/are doing to help stop bullying in our schools and communities.  Don’t accept excuses. Don’t accept generalities. Don’t accept platitudes. Seek commitments!

10. Do not back down in your resolve to address the problem! Remember, systems wait for “problems” and “problem people” to “just go away.”

Women Leading Change – Bullying: Starting the Conversation

Thursday, January 6th, 2011
The Miller-Dwan Foundation, Men as Peacemakers, and Spirit Valley Media are presenting the first Women Leading Change event of 2011.  Professor and author, Dr. Walter Roberts, will speak on bullying prevention, school safety and mental health; and Bullying: Starting the Conversation, a film by Spirit Valley Media, will be presented. 
  

This event will be held on Thursday, January 20 at the Radisson Hotel’s Great Hall. $18 includes dinner. Registration is required by January 17. Click here to register or call 218-786-5829. Space is limited.

 
About the speaker: Dr. Walter B. Roberts Jr., is a professor of counselor education at Minnesota State University, Mankato and author of Bullying from Both Sides and Working with Parents of Bullies and Victims. He is a national speaker and trusted media source on the subject and has spent more than 25 years working with those who bully, their victims, the parents of both, school personnel and concerned communities. Books will be available for purchase at the event.
 
 
About the video: “Bullying: Starting the Conversation” is an emotionally-charged documentary that clearly demonstrates the scope and consequences of bullying in schools. Presented from the kids’ point of view, it is used as a tool to help adults more easily see bullying in all its forms. The faces and stories presented are real, the experiences genuine and the pain profound.
 
 
We hope you’ll join us. Register now!

Women Leading Change – The Jordan Burnham Story

Friday, October 29th, 2010

The Miller-Dwan Foundation’s Women Leading Change and the College of St. Scholastica’s Active Minds present The Jordan Burnham Story on Tuesday, November 2, from 5:30-7:30 p.m. in the College of St. Scholastica’s Mitchell Auditorium.

The following is an excerpt on Jordan that aired on ESPN earlier this week (the 5-minute video can be seen at http://espn.go.com/video/clip?id=5732813):

‘The chances of surviving a nine-story fall are less than one percent, but Jordan Burnham is alive. He was given a second chance. Three years ago, at 18, he was a star high-school pitcher and golfer, a homecoming hero, and class clown. He seemingly had everything a teenage athlete could ever want. On the evening of September 28, 2007, Burnham jumped out the ninth-floor window of his apartment in suburban Philadelphia. He fell 90 feet at approximately 50 mph. Miraculously, he survived. Jordan Burnham is one of a million American high-school students who attempt suicide each year, according to a federal study. Most of them suffer from mental illness. Jordan Burnham was suffering from depression, but no one ever expected he would do something like this. His body badly broken, and unsure if he would ever be able to walk again, his athletic dreams seemed over.’

Today, at 21, Jordan travels the country talking to teens, young adults, parents, and professionals about his story of depression, recovery, and support. His remarkable journey back provides a rare glimpse into a young boy and his family’s struggle with teen depression.

Jordan will speak on Tuesday, November 2, in the College of St. Scholastica’s Mitchell Auditorium; this event is free and open to the public. A free will donation will benefit the Miller-Dwan Foundation’s Turning Point Campaign and the College of St. Scholastica’s Timothy Martin Miller Fund.

5:30 – Social Hour
6:30 pm – Presentation

About the Turning Point Campaign:
Turning Point is the Miller-Dwan Foundation’s $5 million campaign to build a mental health and wellness center here in Duluth for children, adolescents, and young adults—and their families—who are struggling with mental health issues. We are currently at just over $3.5 million in our fundraising efforts and have $1.5 million to go before we can break ground and start building this new facility.

About Women Leading Change:
Women have the power to drive change, and we can’t wait to see what they have in store for us. The Women Leading Change initiative is about gathering women together to wrap their arms around pressing community issues and advocate for positive change. Our first project is to build a bold vision for mental health care that will provide our young people and their families with a warm, home-like place to find the right care, at the right time. Join other ambitious, intelligent and inspiring women in our area to take bold steps and create change.

Women Leading Change

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

The Miller-Dwan Foundation and Women Leading Change invite you to join us for an evening to inspire and be inspired. Duluth child and adolescent psychologist and author, Rick Gertsema, will speak on his new book, Peaceful and Practical Parenting. Gertsema’s talk will highlight areas of child development, stages of parenting, communication, and discipline via his extensive clinical experience with children and families. Guests will leave with new, insightful, and practical ideas on how to parent, with the belief that through the family rules of love, respect, and honesty, all things are possible.

We’re hosting the event as a fundraiser for our Turning Point Campaign to build a mental health and wellness center here in Duluth for children, adolescents, and young adults—and their families—who are struggling with mental health issues.

The Women Leading Change event will be held on September 16 at 5 p.m. in the Greysolon Ballroom at 231 East Superior Street. The cost to attend is $30 and includes dinner, the program, and Gertsema’s book. Pre-registration is required by September 13 and can be completed online (click here) or by calling 218-786-5829. Don’t miss it!

5 pm – Conversation and cocktails
5:45 pm – Welcome and seating
6 pm – Dinner and guest speaker
7 pm – Social hour and book signing

**All genders are welcome!

About Women Leading Change:
Women have the power to drive change, and we can’t wait to see what they have in store for us. The Women Leading Change initiative is about gathering women together to wrap their arms around pressing community issues and advocate for positive change. Our first project is to build a bold vision for mental health care that will provide our young people and their families with a warm, home-like place to find the right care, at the right time. Join other ambitious, intelligent and inspiring women in our area to take bold steps and create change.