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2008 NASP Convention Keynotes
Yearbook 2006: A Web-Based Documentary About the Displaced Senior Class of 2006
Sponsored by Sopris West Educational Services, a
Cambium Learning Company
1:00–3:00 p.m., Thursday, February 7
Josh Goldblum, Principal and Creative Director, and
Joshua Cogan, Art Director, bluecadet Interactive,
Washington, DC; Jordan Bridges, Benjamin Franklin
High School Graduate, New Orleans, LA
Schools play a vital role in the recovery of children
and families in the aftermath of crisis, providing a
sense of community and the opportunity for healing.
Slowly, re-opened schools became beacons of hope in
the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Benjamin Franklin High
School, a magnet public charter school, was one of
the first.
Creators Joshua Cogan and Josh Goldblum narrate a
guided journey of Yearbook 2006, an interactive
narrative project that followed Benjamin Franklin’s
senior class, one of New Orleans only returning senior
classes in the aftermath of the storm. By giving a
human scope to the event, the project shows how the
trauma of Katrina affected students and how they
were able to heal. In the process of creating this Webbased
documentary, Cogan and Goldblum received an
intimate understanding of how students from varied
walks of life respond differently to disaster events.
They share these lessons using photo and video
collected in the weeks and months following the storm
and leading up to graduation. Project participant
Jordon Bridges shares his experience of evacuating to
Virginia and then returning to New Orleans to finish
his senior year.
View the project at www.y06.org.
Josh Goldblum is the founding principal and lead
designer for bluecadet Interactive
(www.bluecadet.com). Josh has produced a wide
range of websites including a number of corporate
sites, fully administrable e-commerce sites, videorich
CD-ROMs and educational games. His work has
been featured in numerous publications, including
Communications Arts and People magazine, and has
won several prestigious awards, including Best
Education Site at the Museums and the Web, a MUSE
Gold Award at the American Association of Museums,
and the Macromedia Site of the Day.
Joshua Cogan is a documentary photographer and
anthropologist whose work has appeared in such
publications as the Washington Post, the New York
Times, the Los Angeles Times, the New Yorker, the Wall
Street Journal, and Travel and Leisure magazine. Using
his training in anthropology, Joshua works to provide
context to shifting cultural landscapes through his
photography. He recently received the German
Marshall Fund Fellowship for his work on agribusiness
in Brazil and is publishing his first book, Cochin Diary,
of interfaith relations in India.
Supporting Children in the Aftermath of Crisis
Sponsored by Sopris West Educational Services, a Cambium Learning Company
1:00–3:00 p.m., Thursday, February 7
David J. Schonfeld, MD, FAAP, Thelma and Jack Rubinstein Professor of Pediatrics,
Director, Division of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, and Director, National
Center for School Crisis and Bereavement, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center,
Cincinnati, OH
Good to Know: The New Orleans Recovery School
District (RSD) anticipates that approximately 79
public and charter schools will be open for the
2007–2008 school year, roughly two thirds of pre-
Katrina levels. For more information on the status of
schools in New Orleans, visit
http://www.nolapublicschools.net.
Disasters and crisis events, whether they have a
direct impact on an individual child or family or a
large population, can have profound and longlasting
effects on children that result in significant
difficulties with learning, academic failure, and
emotional and behavioral problems. In the
aftermath of a crisis, school mental health
personnel are often the first—and too often the
only—responders to address the mental health
needs of children. Any adult who interacts with
children in the aftermath of a crisis can be a
potential source of assistance and support; but if
unprepared, they can instead be a source of further
distress. School staff need to understand the likely
adjustment reactions to crisis, how they may affect
learning, and how to help children cope.
Keynote speaker David Schonfeld, MD, reviews the
common reactions of students and adult staff to
crisis situations, the risk factors for difficulties with
adjustment, and some of the underlying reasons why
parents, teachers, and other school personnel often
underestimate children’s adjustment difficulties. He
discusses the importance of commemorative
activities, like the Yearbook 2006 project, which can
aid the recovery process and outline guidelines
about how schools can help engage students in such
processes. Dr. Schonfeld shares examples drawn
from over 20 years of experience consulting with
school systems throughout the country and abroad
on crisis preparedness and response.
David J. Schonfeld, MD, FAAP, is a
developmental–behavioral pediatrician, the Thelma
and Jack Rubinstein Professor of Pediatrics, Director
of the Division of Developmental and Behavioral
Pediatrics, and Director of the National Center for
School Crisis and Bereavement (NCSCB) at Cincinnati
Children’s Hospital Medical Center
(www.cincinnatichildrens.org/school-crisis). He has
written and lectured extensively nationally and
internationally on pediatric bereavement, school
crisis response, and the mental health needs of
children in crisis situations. Dr. Schonfeld served as
a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics
(AAP) national Task Force on Terrorism from 2001 to
2004 and as a consultant to the NYC Department of
Education following the September 11 terrorist
attacks. He also is actively engaged in school-based
research and is the current chair of the Committee
on Pediatric Research for AAP, a member of the AAP’s
Disaster Preparedness Advisory Council, and
president of the Society for Developmental and
Behavioral Pediatrics.