Healing-Centered Leadership
The challenge of balancing the collective trauma communities have experienced with the responsibility of teaching and learning at high levels
BY JENNIFER P. CHEATHAM/School Administrator, August 2022

Jason Kamras, superintendent in Richmond, Va., cultivates healing through a curriculum he helped to launch about the city’s history that includes attention to its brutal past as the nation’s capital of the slave trade.
PHOTO COURTESY OF RICHMOND, VA., PUBLIC SCHOOLS
When Sonja Santelises started her job as CEO of the Baltimore City Schools in 2016, she could see that the young people in her community were in pain. The city was still reeling from the arrest and death of 25-year-old Freddie Gray and subsequent citywide protests against racial injustice. Black youth were justifiably angry about the murder of a Black man in police custody, and their hurt manifested in school walkouts and sit-ins and confrontations with police.

Santelises would have to address her students’ need for healing head-on.

She also knew these protests were symptoms of a larger problem stemming from a long history of planned disinvestment in Baltimore’s Black communities. The history of redlining had left whole neighborhoods cut off from essential resources, dramatically affecting the quality of life and making it much more challenging for residents to attain the well-rounded support their young people needed to excel in and out of school. It was no wonder deep distrust festered between the community and its institutions, including the school district, going back generations. The community needed healing, too.

So, Santelises worked with her community to design the “Blueprint for Success,” a strategy that better matched its needs and desires. The strategy would focus on supporting students academically, as well as on their wholeness and wellness as human beings, emphasizing the shared leadership to carry out the plan with the support of teachers and other caring adults.

From their focus on teaching local history to their expansion of youth leadership opportunities to their commitment to bringing community leaders into classrooms, the approach would center on the collective healing essential for a generation of students to thrive as learners. 

Collective Trauma

Today, school districts across the country are grappling with the collective trauma caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. Many schoolchildren were home for 18 months without the stability and human connection needed to learn. They lost loved ones. And while they are now back in school, many are not emotionally or physically OK.

Even in schools with supportive cultures, students are struggling, exhibiting signs of depression and anxiety, bursting into uncontrollable tears or acting out. And in schools whose cultures were not strong, those issues are more frequent and intensified.

For school system leaders, the challenge is balancing the collective trauma their communities have experienced with the real responsibilities of schools: to teach and help students learn at high levels.  

The situation calls for the kind of healing-centered leadership we’ve seen in communities facing crisis. But what does it mean to lead for healing? Looking to superintendents like Santelises, who have taken a healing-centered approach to organizational change, may provide clues to help superintendents in every community do more than mitigate the pandemic’s harm but find their way to a better future.

Addressing Harm

Shawn Ginwright, a professor of education and Africana studies at San Francisco State who frequently works with superintendents and other education leaders on youth development, emphasizes that our work to address trauma must be about more than addressing individual harm.

In his article in Moment magazine titled “The Future of Healing: Shifting from Trauma Informed Care to Healing Centered Engagement,” Ginwright explains: “A healing-centered approach to addressing trauma requires a different question that moves beyond ‘what happened to you?’ to ‘what’s right with you?’ and views those exposed to trauma as agents in the creation of their well-being rather than victims of traumatic events.”

Students today undoubtedly need counseling and mental health support to address individual and acute harm caused during the pandemic. But to heal collectively in a way that promotes learning, which is a process, they need community. They need a positive sense of self and agency to make change. They need exposure to new possibilities. And they need their wellness to be prioritized without fail, which means they also need the adults who serve and support them to be well.

Here are a few examples demonstrating what it might mean for superintendents to lead for healing now.

Teaching Local History

One way to cultivate healing and collective well-being is to identify spaces and places that promote healthy identity development and a more profound sense of belonging.

For Jason Kamras, superintendent in Richmond, Va., one way to do so is to teach a holistic history of one’s local community. Kamras emphasizes that Richmond has “a tortured history when it comes to race … that casts a long and dark shadow today. These issues are still real and raw.” Developing and preserving a positive sense of identity requires an authentic exploration of the place in which one lives.

Designed in collaboration with community members, clergy and historians and launched as an elective pilot in the 2020-21 school year, the district’s “REAL Richmond” curriculum (REAL stands for Relevant, Engaging, Active and Living) doesn’t skirt the brutal realities — including the fact that Richmond was, for a time, the country’s leading capital of the slave trade. But it also doesn’t leave out the history of strength and progress. Students explore in thematic units Richmond’s economy, its arts, its education system and more, all culminating in a capstone project for the course.

When students continually see and experience disparities that fall along racial lines and don’t understand their historical roots, there is a real possibility they may internalize oppression or superiority, depending on their racial backgrounds, exacerbating the trauma of having to experience those disparities. Likewise, when students get to explore the many strengths of their communities, including untold accounts, it can help those of every racial background form a more positive sense of identity, possibility and belonging in relation to place.

In Baltimore, Santelises considers teaching a well-rounded local history an essential strategy for promoting a healthy identity, as evidenced by Baltimore’s BmoreMe curriculum. Teaching the rich history of one’s community can give students protection, she says. Through deep study, students are “inoculated” from internalizing negative narratives about their communities and buoyed by examples of strength, success and perseverance that she believes offer a “counter to hopelessness.”

This exploration is never about telling students what to think, but about giving students the chance to make sense of this history for themselves. In it, there is healing.

Expanding Possibilities

To cultivate healing, however, students need to do more than learn how to make sense of the past. They ought to explore their possible futures. 
Joe Davis (second from right), superintendent of Ferguson-Florrisant School District in Hazelwood, Mo., grappled with the after-math of the police shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown Jr. of Ferguson when he assumed his post. PHOTO COURTESY OF THE FERGUSON-FLORRISANT SCHOOL DISTRICT


Joe Davis, superintendent of the Ferguson-Florrisant School District in Hazelwood, Mo., remembers how challenging it was to enter his district in the top leadership post in 2014, shortly after the death of 18-year-old Michael Brown, a graduate of a neighboring district. As part of Davis’ entry process, he invited a transition team to develop recommendations.

In one significant move, instead of emphasizing remedial interventions, the transition team pressed for new challenging programs in science and technology and gifted education as well as access to advanced coursework. Davis embraced the strategy. He wanted to show students what was possible instead of simply managing the adverse effects of inequality.

Today, in the district’s two STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math) schools, one each at the middle school and high school levels, the majority African-American student body learns robotics, engineering, biomedical science and computer science. Building on this momentum, the district intends to open a new early-college program soon where students can graduate with a high school diploma and two-year college degree, an important launching pad for students who are first-generation college-goers.

Similarly, Santelises recognizes the importance of exposure. “Sometimes kids don’t know what is even possible,” she says, pointing to how a single summer robotics program in Baltimore exploded into competitive and award-winning robotics after-school robotics clubs.

Whether it is the rapid expansion of robotics in Baltimore or STEAM in Ferguson, when leaders introduce these programs through a healing-centered framework, they are no longer just programs but a liberating expansion of possibilities that promotes students’ collective healing.

Student Agency

Not only do students need to make sense of the past and look forward to possibilities, healing also occurs when students have the agency to make change.

When Santelises originally envisioned the leadership strategy embedded in Baltimore’s Blueprint for Success, she focused rightly on the leadership of teachers and the other adults who support children. But over time, she realized student leadership was essential too. Students deserve opportunities to practice problem solving, critical thinking and civic responsibility, but more importantly, they need to have the authority to make real change. In Baltimore, the building back of youth organizations with diverse representation from across the city has been vital.

In addition to providing feedback on the BmoreMe curriculum, Santelises herself receives feedback regularly from a 12-member Youth Leadership Advisory Council. This is the group that advised her on distance learning when the Baltimore schools went remote in March 2020 and eventually on the return to school more than a year later.

The district also engages students through focus groups when critical issues arise that affect youth directly. These opportunities do more, however, than garner much-needed feedback. They give young people space to make sense of their world. Santelises shares that in a student focus group, one young female student said, “I thought you just didn’t care about us.” For the student, the realization was eye-opening that the poor condition of her school building and the lack of public transportation in her neighborhood was not intentional but the result of a larger social system. These conversations alone can be healing.

The real power, however, is in following through on the most important issues for students, the ones that will have an immediate impact on their lives. During the COVID-19 pandemic, it became readily apparent how necessary it was for some students to be able to work while attending school to have supplemental income. Santelises views these as high-impact problems requiring aggressive action in partnership with students.

When students have a seat at the table and are granted agency to make change, it fosters their collective well-being.

Wellness of Adults

In every instance, Santelises, Davis and Kamras appear to be on a mission to prioritize wellness as a permanent way of working instead of a temporary strategy to address immediate harm. That includes the wellness of the adults who serve children.

By offering more unplanned prep time, they are supporting teachers to do what they need to do to be fully present. By establishing clear priorities, which requires limiting or even banning new programs and initiatives for now, leaders provide the stability and sense of control staff need to do their best work. They also are establishing new, permanent leadership and support positions focusing on mental, physical and emotional health with a recognition that teachers can’t do it all.

Perhaps most importantly, district leaders are looking to schools with strong cultures, with healthy and trusting relationships between students and adults, for clues about what matters most in schools. Santelises is exploring how schools can use time differently with healing in mind. What does it look like to re-envision the school day and year with an emphasis on student and teacher wellness?

 Jennifer Cheatham
Each of these district leaders understands that centering on wellness represents a necessary change in organizational culture that will take time.

Their Own Wellness

These leaders also have come to understand that their own wellness matters.

Santelises believes the pandemic has given her permission to “aggressively prioritize.” This includes a monthly prayer circle with leaders from across the city that she never misses.

For Davis, wellness means time to work out every day. When asked what he does to stay well, Kamras laughs and says, “My wellness? Mindless Netflix or making a good dinner. I married my best friend 15 years ago, and we’re in it together.” For each of them, family, including protected time with their own children, has become paramount.

In all, these leaders understand that students, families and teachers in every community, no matter its demographics, always have needed a healing-centered approach to change to flourish, not reserved for times of crisis. When we all lead for healing, we lead for the change our students and teachers deserve.

JENNIFER CHEATHAM, a former superintendent, is a senior lecturer on education and co-chair of the Public Education Leadership Project at Harvard Graduate School of Education in Cambridge, Mass. She is the author of a forthcoming book Entry Planning for Equity-Focused Leaders: Empowering Schools and Communities. Twitter: @JenCheatham1. MERRI ROSENBERG, a freelance education writer, assisted with the interviews.