April Harvest of the Month POTATOES
By Josh Eng, Communications Coordinator
Posted in: Hot Topics, Parenting Concerns, You & Your Family
Topics: COVID-19 + Family Mental Health, Stress
Many families have been homebound due to COVID-19, and kids and teens have been learning online across much of the country. As the pandemic continues, there are growing concerns about how the disruptions in norms and routines are affecting their mental health.
After almost a year of remote learning, more communities are preparing to bring students back to school in person. But this transition poses new challenges and concerns for families. Is it safe to go back? Will kids feel ready for a full schedule of in-person or hybrid learning? Will they be able to catch up academically?
Recently, on our podcast, Dr. Gene Beresin and Dr. Khadijah Booth Watkins took a look at the different anxieties and concerns of kids and teens, and how parents can address them as families prepare to return to school. Below are highlights from their conversation.
School-Aged Kids
Teenagers
Signs to Watch Out For in Kids and Teens
As a parent, you know your child best. Here are some signs that your child’s or teen’s emotional or mental health could be struggling.
How to Support Kids and Teens
There are many ways to support kids of all ages and prepare them for returning to school. Here are some guidelines that can help.
We may not know how this pandemic will continue to unfold, and not having all the answers isn’t easy for any of us. However, thoughtfully addressing young people’s concerns and supporting them in building resilience can help them face the uncertainty ahead.
The Black Box Theatre was designed to offer a rare commodity: an affordable and fully-equipped performing arts space for Boston Area artists.
Thanks to The Boston Foundation, we were able to create a Resident Artist Program in 2019 and transform the Black Box Theatre into a space brimming with creative energy and exciting programming. Theater companies, dancers, choreographers, playwrights, theatre devisers, actors, and musicians were developing and bringing to life exciting pieces. And then the pandemic hit, cutting short the program’s inaugural year. Renewed Boston Foundation funding helped us to weather some very challenging months. Now we are looking ahead to the future and how we can continue to serve our larger performing arts community!
For many talented, hard-working artists, making a living in Boston has always been difficult. Juggling day-jobs and family while finding time and resources to make and share art is not a sustainable model. Covid has made the situation even worse for artists.
The Resident Artist Program will help artists get back to creating live performances! And art-lovers, hungry to return to the theatre, will have exciting performances to attend!
Informational Q&A Sessions will be held online on Wed. April 7th at 1:00pm and 6:00pm.
Hello Community Partners!
Hope you are all well and are navigating our new normal as best you can. Just wanted to quickly forward along an attachment with employment opportunities out of our Chelsea office which services the Metro and North Shore area! If you happen to know of anyone looking for employment during these difficult times, feel free to send them our way.
Thank you in advance and happy spring! J
Nurtury FCC Available Positions – March 2021 POSTINGS (Pdf)
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– MGB Community Care Van
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Public Infrastructure Projects
Our City Hall Tower Restoration Project is progressing well, and it will be completed by June. Chelsea City Hall is one of the only two buildings remaining from the Peabody and Stearns Architectural firm. The other structure is the Custom House Tower in Boston. Both include Tower Clocks by the Howard Clock Company.
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We have two Mental Health First Aid trainings in April open for registration, please share among staff and networks.
Adult Mental Health First Aid
Wednesday, April 21 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Youth Mental Health First Aid
Saturday, April 10 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Virtual Mental Health First Aid is a two-part, eight-hour class that involves:
Two-hour, self-paced, online prework on Mental Health First aid topics and brief training on the online Zoom platform, which is used to host the live part of the class.
Six-hour, instructor-lead, live training on Zoom.
Advance registration is required. To register, please click on a link below for the class that interests you. You can enroll in both youth and adult mental health first aid classes since the certifications are different.
Register Here for 4-10 Youth MHFA
Register Here for 4-21 Adult MHFA
Registration is provided on a first come, first served basis.
Youth Mental Health First Aid is designed to teach parents, family members, caregivers, teachers, school staff, peers, neighbors, health and human services workers, and other caring adults how to help someone who is developing a mental health or substance use problem or crisis.
Adult Mental Health First Aid helps community members learn about risk factors and warning signs for mental health and addiction concerns, and gives them skills and strategies to help someone in both crisis and non-crisis situations.
For registration questions please send to Kerry Mello, kmello@challiance.org