STSEM
Results
Story of this Project
Sweden and, especially, Poland are coping with an influx of migrants from Ukraine, many of them schoolchildren – 144,000 in Poland alone; while, as evidenced in our pilot project, Ukrainian teachers struggle to support their dispersed pupils, most of whom are suffering not only from dislocation but also from traumatic experiences.
Mental ill-health is not only devastating for the sufferer but also socially expensive. Whether a traumatic experience over time becomes debilitating depends largely on immediate response. Teachers are particularly effective as ‘first responders’. With adequate support they can play a strong role in mitigating the effects of their pupils’ traumatic experiences, thus easing their integration into their new environments.
On a positive note, pupils who are enabled to successfully integrate into schools in their new countries have mastered valuable skills enabling them to marshal personal, inner resources to cope with their situation; for instance resilience, self-confidence, emotional and social intelligence. Pupils with such skills will also be an asset in re-building society once they return to Ukraine.
