# Schools as Neighborhoods: A Holistic Framework for Student Well-Being, Opportunity, and Social Success

**Authors:** Cordelia R. Elaiho, Constance Gundacker, Thomas H. Chelius, Brandon Currie, John R. Meurer

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/children13010059 · Children · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a framework where schools act like supportive neighborhoods to improve student well-being and social success through trauma-informed programs.

## Contribution

The novel 'Schools-as-Neighborhoods' framework integrates trauma-informed practices to buffer adversity and promote positive social development.

## Key findings

- Students showed improved emotional regulation and empathy through trauma-informed programming.
- Teachers observed better peer interactions and community building during program implementation.

## Abstract

Background: Schools play a central role in child development and socialization and can function as protective environments that mitigate the effects of adversity. Building on the Social Ecological Model and Community School Transformation, we propose a “Schools-as-Neighborhoods” framework that conceptualizes schools as intentionally designed microenvironments capable of generating social capital, promoting positive childhood experiences, and buffering harmful neighborhood exposures through trauma-informed programming. Methods: We conducted a convergent mixed-methods study across four public and charter schools in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, serving grades five through nine. STRYV365’s peak team and Brain Agents gamified intervention were implemented between 2022–2024. Quantitative surveys and qualitative data assessed students’ lived experiences, exposure to adversity, emotional awareness, coping skills, and school connectedness/climate across multiple waves. Results: Across the four schools (n = 1626 students), baseline academic proficiency was low, and exposure to adversity was high among surveyed participants (n = 321), including bereavement (74%) and family incarceration (56%). Despite these challenges, qualitative findings revealed strengthened emotional regulation, empathy, motivation, and goal setting among students engaged in trauma-informed programming. Teachers reported improved peer interaction and community building during sustained implementation. Conclusion: The Schools-as-Neighborhoods framework highlights the value of trauma-informed, relationship-centered school environments in promoting student well-being. By positioning schools as cohesive ecosystems that foster belonging and cultivate social capital, this approach offers educators and policymakers a pathway for mitigating the effects of hostile lived environments and supporting students’ mental health, social development, and engagement in learning.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** incarceration (MESH:D060725), trauma (MESH:D014947)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

55 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12839618/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12839618