Category

Understanding Trauma-Informed Therapies and Why They Matter in Schools

Joth Smith

Thrivenest
22 Sept 2025

Every human being is different; part of that difference is how they are biologically constructed, and part of that difference revolves around where they are from and how they are raised. Luckily, with modern advancements in how we see people and therapy, an understanding of how trauma affects human cognition has never been clearer. Enter trauma-informed therapies, a method of interacting with individuals with a fundamental understanding that they have been through traumatic experiences. Trauma-informed therapies are becoming more and more prevalent, particularly for teens and young adults.

This guide explains what trauma-informed therapies are, why they matter now more than ever, and how districts can integrate them in ways that support both staff and students.

What are trauma-informed therapies?

Trauma-informed therapies are approaches rooted in the idea that a person’s thoughts, reactions, and behaviors often reflect past experiences rather than personal failings. These therapies focus on helping people feel safe, understood, and in control as they work through stress signals their bodies may still be carrying. Instead of pushing someone to “move on,” trauma-informed care pays attention to how the nervous system responds to reminders of past events and teaches grounding, reflection, and coping skills so healing can happen at a steady, supported pace.

A brief timeline of trauma-informed therapies in U.S. schools

Where did trauma-informed therapy come from? It was seeded in the 1990s and grew over time, helped by cutting-edge research in the field. Below is a timeline of trauma-informed therapy and its role in education.

Year / Period Milestone Impact on Schools
1990s ACE Study (Adverse Childhood Experiences) Reveals the long-term effects of trauma on health, learning, and behavior. Sparks a national conversation.
Early 2000s Rise of trauma-focused research in child development Educators begin recognizing behavior as communication, not defiance. Early pilot programs emerge.
2010–2013 States begin adopting trauma-sensitive school frameworks Massachusetts, Washington, and Oregon lead state-level initiatives promoting trauma-informed training.
2014 Federal recognition (U.S. Department of Education) Guidance encourages schools to adopt trauma-sensitive discipline and relationship-centered practices.
2015 ESSA (Every Student Succeeds Act) Allows federal funding for trauma-informed training, mental-health supports, and SEL programs. Gives states the flexibility to support whole-child learning.
2017–2019 Expansion of restorative practices and SEL frameworks Districts integrate restorative circles, mindfulness, and relationship-building routines.
2020–2021 COVID-19 pandemic Schools face a nationwide surge in stress, grief, instability, and disengagement. Trauma-informed practices become essential, not optional.
2022–Present Growing adoption of whole-child, trauma-responsive models Districts invest in training, family engagement, wellness staff, and digital SEL supports like ThriveNest to build resilience and stability.

How trauma-informed therapies work in schools

Trauma-informed therapies are usually associated with more clinical types of settings, like a doctor's or therapist's office. With education, they can take quite a unique form; swap the therapist's office for a classroom. The same concept applies, though, you want to understand the root causes and emotional triggers that cause undesirable behavior.

At their core, trauma-informed therapies in schools rest on five principles:

Core Principle What It Looks Like in Schools
Safety Predictable routines, supportive adults, calm spaces
Trust Clear communication, consistency, and transparency in decisions
Choice Students are given options, voice, and shared control in learning
Collaboration Partnerships between teachers, counselors, families, and peers
Empowerment Strength-based feedback, opportunities for leadership, and recognition of progress

Types of trauma-informed therapies adapted for schools

Schools are never going to deliver full clinical therapy, nor should they. Instead, they borrow concepts and teaching from trauma-informed therapies and mold them to the education realm. These strategies can be implemented by counselors, social workers, classroom teachers, and, with training, even paraprofessionals.

Below is an example of some trauma-informed practices in schools that have their roots in trauma-informed therapies.

CBT-Informed Supports
Cognitive-behavioral foundations adapted for classrooms.
Focuses on emotional awareness, coping skills, and thought–behavior connections.

Mindfulness-Based Strategies
Breathing, grounding, and self-regulation.
Helps students reconnect to the present when emotions spike.

Restorative Practices
Relationship-centered discipline and conflict repair.
Builds belonging and reduces punitive cycles.

Example of trauma-informed therapies in schools and results

Trauma-informed practices look different from school to school, but the research tells a consistent story: when students feel emotionally safer, academic and behavioral outcomes shift in measurable ways. Below are three evidence-based examples pulled from real studies across the U.S., rewritten in a student-centered, accessible way.

Case Example 1: Reduction in classroom referrals (Tennessee, elementary school)

A mixed-methods study in a rural Tennessee elementary school examined how trauma-informed training changed student behavior and staff experiences. After full-staff training and implementation of trauma-responsive strategies, both the number of office referrals and the number of students being referred significantly decreased.

Outcomes after one year:

Indicator Before Trauma-Informed Training After Training
Total office discipline referrals High baseline ↓ approx. 20–35% reduction*
Students receiving referrals Higher proportion ↓ significant decline (effect size d = 0.45)
Teacher-reported confidence with trauma-aware practices Low–moderate ↑ strong improvement

*Effect size d = 0.45 = moderate, meaningful improvement.
Source: Cain, J. (2023). Rural Tennessee trauma-informed school study. ERIC: ED649498.

Case Example 2: Academic and motivation gains (Oklahoma, middle & high school)

A doctoral study in Oklahoma measured the impact of trauma-informed school practices on academic outcomes. The results showed measurable gains in both student grades and learning motivation.

Outcomes after implementation:

Outcome Area Before After
Overall GPA Lower average ↑ statistically significant increase
Reading skills Stagnant or declining ↑ measurable improvement
Math skills Below proficiency ↑ significant gains*
Student motivation to learn Moderate ↑ higher self-reported motivation

*Statistically significant when controlling for demographic factors.
Source: Flasch, P. (2022). Trauma-informed instruction impact on GPA & achievement. ERIC: ED634507.

Even though the research base for trauma-informed practices is still growing, several studies provide measurable, number-based insights into how these approaches influence student behavior, academics, and emotional readiness. The chart below translates those findings, allowing school leaders to visualize trends in a simple, accessible way. These numbers don’t represent every school’s experience, but they offer a grounded snapshot of what can change when emotional safety becomes part of the learning environment.

How schools can integrate trauma-informed therapies responsibly

Integrating trauma-informed therapies isn’t about purchasing a single curriculum or sending staff to a one-day workshop. It’s a gradual cultural shift, one that strengthens as staff learn, students trust, and routines stabilize. When done intentionally, these practices create a school environment where emotional safety and academic growth reinforce each other.

Integration Step What Schools Do
Assess needs Review attendance patterns, behavior data, teacher feedback, and student voice. Schools often begin by mapping where stress shows up—transitions, mornings, and certain grades—and use those insights to guide early priorities.
Provide staff training Offer professional development focused on emotional triggers, regulation strategies, and restorative communication. Effective training doesn’t overwhelm staff; it builds shared language and small, repeatable practices teachers can use immediately.
Start small Launch with a pilot group, a single grade level, a counseling team, or an advisory. Starting small allows staff to learn what works, refine routines, and demonstrate early wins before expanding schoolwide.
Build routines Create predictable openings, closings, and calm transitions during the day. These rhythms help students settle, regulate, and return to learning more quickly after stress spikes.
Engage families Communicate the purpose of trauma-informed approaches, normalize conversations about emotions, and invite families to participate. This reduces stigma and strengthens the bridge between home and school.
Track and adjust Monitor changes in student engagement, office referrals, staff capacity, and student well-being. Trauma-informed integration is iterative; schools learn, adapt, and evolve as students’ needs shift.

How ThriveNest connects to trauma-informed therapies

Thrivenest is a financial literacy app that embraces trauma-informed therapies and trauma-informed education. It's a financial sidekick for teens and young adults that they can access from any device. But how exactly does Thrivenest work in building good financial habits for teens and young adults?  It helps by:

Building emotional regulation in real moments

ThriveNest guides students through short grounding tools they can use when stress spikes, helping them settle instead of reacting automatically. For example, a teen who usually shuts down after a tense math class can open ThriveNest during the passing period, use a calming prompt, and walk into their next class feeling free as a bird and ready to learn.

Helping students see the link between emotions and choices

ThriveNest makes it easier for teens to notice how feelings shape their routines and small decisions throughout the day. For example, a student who buys candy every time they feel anxious can spot that pattern inside the app, try a grounding exercise first, and then decide whether they still want the candy.

Offering steady support outside the classroom

Many teens lose access to emotional support as soon as they leave campus, so ThriveNest becomes a quiet companion during evenings, weekends, and the transitional period that can be stressful. For example, a student who normally spirals on Sunday nights can check in with ThriveNest, reflect on what’s worrying them, and use a calming prompt to ease the tension before bed.

Giving educators a clearer view without prying

Staff receive broad, trauma-aware trends rather than personal details, which helps them respond early and with care. For example, if ninth-graders show higher stress signals during the same week, counselors can reach out proactively instead of waiting for behavior issues to appear.

FAQ

How are trauma-informed therapies different from traditional counseling?

Traditional counseling focuses on diagnosing or treating specific mental health concerns, often in structured sessions. Trauma-informed therapies emphasize emotional safety, relationship-building, and coping strategies embedded into everyday routines.

Do teachers need clinical training to use trauma-informed approaches?

No. Teachers do not need to become therapists of any sort; they just need to understand how to implement the philosophy. They need tools and predictable frameworks that help them recognize and respond to emotional triggers. Clinical staff handle therapy; teachers handle support, consistency, and relationship-building, areas where they already excel.

Are trauma-informed therapies only for students who have experienced severe trauma?

Not at all. These approaches benefit all students. Many teens face chronic stress, instability, or environmental pressures that impact learning. Trauma-informed practices help create classrooms where every student feels safe enough to engage, take risks, and grow academically.

Are trauma-informed strategies expensive to implement?

Schools can start with low-cost shifts, restorative language, predictable routines, and student voice opportunities before investing in programs or training. Many states and federal grants (including Title I and ESSA funds) support trauma-informed initiatives, making it accessible for districts of all sizes.

"Ipsum sit mattis nulla quam nulla. Gravida id gravida ac enim mauris id. Non pellentesque congue eget consectetur turpis. Sapien, dictum molestie sem tempor. Diam elit, orci, tincidunt aenean tempus."

Heading 1

Heading 2

Heading 3

Heading 4

Heading 5
Heading 6

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur.

Block quote

Ordered list

  1. Item 1
  2. Item 2
  3. Item 3

Unordered list

  • Item A
  • Item B
  • Item C

Text link

Bold text

Emphasis

Superscript

Subscript

Subscribe to newsletter

Subscribe to receive the latest blog posts to your inbox every week.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Browse all blogs