"This is the book on trauma-informed education I've been waiting for. Practical and inspirational, affirming and challenging, patient and urgent, Venet invites us to consider the political dimensions of trauma and healing, correctly steering us away from savior narratives of damage and rescue and instead toward dreams of collective well-being and justice."
Carla Shalaby, author of Troublemakers: Lessons in Freedom from Young Children at School
"Equity-Centered Trauma-Informed Education should be required reading for every educator and education leader."
Cindy Johnson, Executive Director, Edutopia
"Venet's book has provided a critical framework for trauma-informed practice that centers the goals of educational equity and liberatory education. Teachers, administrators, district, and state leadership would be well served by applying this perspective as they aim to serve their students and communities."
Colleen Wilkinson, Director of Montessori Country Day School Houston and Consultant at Trauma Informed Montessori
"This book is the book that I wish I had when started my journey as an educator. Venet's work is not just important, it has the ability to recast our collective future into something more healthy, more human—more powerful."
Cornelius Minor, educator and author of We Got This: Equity Access, and the Quest to Be Who Our Students Need Us to Be
"[B]rimming with timely and critical insights. Classroom teachers and school leaders will find it expansive in scope, intimate and engaging in style, and actionable in content. Crucially, Venet centers antiracism and social justice as fundamental to trauma-informed schooling, making this a vital resource for educators."
Elizabeth Dutro, PhD, Professor, School of Education, University of Colorado Boulder, author of The Vulnerable Heart of Literacy: Centering Trauma as Powerful Pedagogy
"Equity-Centered Trauma-Informed Education is the perfect book for our times (and beyond)...In reading this book, different teachers will see themselves and their practices, and the practices and policies of their schools, in different ways. And we will all find that Venet has written her book not only to inform us but also to call us, gently but firmly, to reflect and take action."
MiddleWeb
“This book is a valuable resource for educators throughout PK-26 education in the US, where many students struggle to access equitable learning through the educational opportunities presented in public schools. Venet centers the question of how teachers can serve as role models for students, creating equity-centered trauma-informed school environments while teacher wellness remains elusive. ... Venet advances the call for equitable access to education nationwide to include attention to equity for all students and educators who support students within a school, including those who have experienced trauma and those who continue to experience trauma within schools. The author develops a clear vision of the complex nature of work needed to achieve equity in education.”
Book Review by Kimberly A. Mahovsky, University of Northern Colorado, and Anne O. Davidson, University of Northern Colorado, Journal of Educational Research and Innovation, Volume 11, Issue 1, Article 6, 2023