October
30, 2016
Dear
Parents and Guardians:
We
learned yesterday that a tenth grade student, Emma Ryan, died unexpectedly early
Saturday morning. We would like to share with you what we are doing in school
to support students as they experience the normal sense of loss and grief that
follows the death of a close friend. We would also like to offer some
suggestions for talking with your child and some resources for additional
support.
On
Saturday, many high school and middle school students and their parents
gathered in the high school cafeteria to be with each other and support one
another. Tonight at 7 PM, many will gather at L Street for a candlelight vigil
in memory of Emma. On Monday morning, each
school will have multiple counselors available to help students deal with the
myriad of emotions that they will be feeling. Students will be encouraged to maintain
their normal routines as much as possible, because keeping typical structure in
place is best for children. However, any student who wants to speak with a
counselor will have the opportunity to do so.
All
of us, in our own way, try to make sense of death, particularly the death of a
child. Children want to understand, but are often unsure and awkward at
expressing their concern. The following normal developmental responses are
taken from the Good Grief Program’s
description of psychological tasks for children when a friend dies.
UNDERSTANDING
Preschoolers (ages 3-5): These youngsters see death as temporary and
reversible. They believe the dead live on under changed circumstances - either
on a cloud, in a city called Heaven, in a box under the ground and connected to
other boxes by tunnels. Preschoolers ask many questions, often gross and grubby,
about how one lives on. No matter how well
death is explained, many will persist in their beliefs about its reversibility.
These children are likely to be literal and concrete in their thinking.
Latency (ages 6-8): Children in this developmental stage see
death as a person or spirit that comes to get you if you aren’t fast or clever
enough to escape. From their perspective, three groups of people die: the
elderly, the handicapped (because I can't run fast enough) and the klutzes. Klutzes are people who die that are neither
elderly nor handicapped. In an effort to
make themselves feel different and therefore safe, children will often find
some specific way, frequently negatively, to differentiate themselves from
people who die.
Preadolescents (ages 9-11): These youngsters have a more adult understanding
of death, seeing it as final, universal and irreversible. They are interested
in rituals and concerned how the world will change because of the death of a
particular person. This age group is
frequently described as having the easiest time dealing with death and dying
because they tend to intellectualize as a way of coping with the experience.
They can sometimes sound crass and uncaring.
Adolescents (age 12+): Adolescents work
hard to make sense of their own eventual death and the death of others. Just
when they are being asked to take responsibility for their own lives, they are confronted
by experiences that challenge their own lives; they are confronted by
experiences that challenge their belief in their own immortality. They
privately worry about the consequences of their own risk-taking behaviors while
publically proclaiming their invulnerability. They are emotionally vulnerable
when a death occurs and often sob or hug each other. They are concerned about
what is worth living for and what is worth dying for. They want to understand adult
rituals at the time of death, but often prefer to develop their own. Their
grief at times of death tends to be expressed with peers rather than family
members, often causing adults to believe the adolescent is not grieving.
GRIEVING
Normal grief includes both sadness and
anger. It is often easier to tolerate children's sadness than it is to provide
opportunities for them to express the anger. A child’s style of grieving will
differ depending on the age of the child, relationship to the person who died, suddenness
of death, etc. It is important to validate all of the feelings a child
experiences associated with the death of a friend and to provide a
psychologically safe environment for doing so.
COMMEMORATING
When a friend dies, children,
particularly adolescents, must find some way to formally or informally remember
the person who died. Such activity confirms the reality of the death and the
value of human life. It is important that students be included with the faculty
in planning school commemoration. Commemoration activities may take place
several weeks or months after the death and should not be rushed.
GOING ON
When children have accomplished the
tasks of understanding, grieving, and commemorating, they often need a kind of
verbal permission to go on. They wonder when it is all right to laugh again, to
have fun, and to not be sad all the time. We can help them understand that
going on does not mean forgetting.
When speaking to adolescents about death,
the skills of active listening are helpful. Without pressuring, let your child
know you are available to talk. Listen and accept what is said. Encourage your
child to express his/her feelings, but let him/her know that we all have
different ways of expressing our grief. Some of us are more demonstrative than
others. Just because they are not crying doesn't mean they don't care. Acting withdrawn
or distracted are also signs that they are concerned about what happened.
Intense feelings are characteristic of adolescents, though they do not mean
that the feelings will persist beyond the appropriate time.
Below
are the names of the counselors that work in each of our schools. If you would
like additional information or support please do not hesitate to call or email
them, or call or email the school’s principal with your questions or concerns.
I
know that this small, close and wonderful community will pull together to help
the Ryan family deal with their tragedy.
I also know that we will provide the support and comfort that our
students need to deal with the loss of someone held so dear by so many.
Very
truly yours,
Michael
F. Devine
Principal,
Hull High School
Jacobs Elementary School
Juanita
Reppucci, Interim School Psychologist
Maureen
Rosenplanter, Adjustment Counselor
Memorial Middle School
Rebecca
MacDonald, Adjustment Counselor
Alison
Simons, School Psychologist
Hull High School
Michelle
Burke, Guidance Counselor
Andrea
Centerinno, Adjustment Counselor
Meghan
Preble, Guidance Counselor
Ann
Sullivan, Social Worker