Facing Collective Trauma, Prioritizing Protective Factors

BOLD Game Changer Anat Weisenfreund’s relationship-based approach

National Head Start Association
2020 BOLD Leadership
3 min readJul 9, 2021

--

In early spring, NHSA named 14 individuals as 2020 BOLD Prize winners in recognition of their extraordinary leadership in response to the unique challenges they encountered in 2020… Over the course of this summer, NHSA is sharing insights from each BOLD Prize Winner about leading through unprecedented times and overcoming uncertainty and adversity to support both staff and the children and families Head Start serves.

A profoundly reflective, relationship-based approach, believing that although physical distance is necessary in the pandemic, emotional connection is imperative as the most important protective factor for children and families, makes Anat Weisenfreund a 2020 BOLD Game Changer.

Anat Weisenfreund is a fierce advocate for Head Start children, families, and staff. Since 2009, she has been the director of Community Action Pioneer Valley (CAPV)’s Head Start and early learning programs in western Massachusetts. They serve pregnant women and the youngest children and families in center-based, home-based, and family child-care options in a 1,700 square mile, mostly rural service area.

Under Anat’s leadership, CAPV has adopted a strengths-based and trauma-informed approach in which families are valued as essential partners and staff also are valued, cared for, and recognized as each other’s most valuable resource. As the pandemic hit, Anat knew it would put this approach to the test — would staff and families truly feel supported and empowered as they were engulfed in such collective trauma?

“Through the unprecedented disruptions of 2020, we learned that it works,” Anat says. “Consistent, empathic, and reflective listening and messaging to staff resulted in a workforce that felt deeply supported and appreciated, and were then able to offer the same connection, recognition, and support to children and families.”

While addressing the physical and emotional needs of her own staff and families, Anat was also able to look at the bigger picture. She recognized her staff as essential workers that showed up each and every day, enabling parents to return to their essential jobs. And yet, they were not being prioritized for testing and vaccination with the same priority as K-12 educators.

Anat initiated and led weekly meetings for all Massachusetts Head Start grantees to support and learn from each other and identify important advocacy items. She leveraged her position as Chair of the Massachusetts Head Start Association and Board member of the Massachusetts Association for Infant Mental Health, and her strong relationships with national, state, and community leaders to influence national and state guidance, which resulted in revised requirements, increased flexibilities, and eventually the prioritization of the early childhood workforce for COVID vaccinations.

In her own words:

“At the center of my work and deeply aligned with the mission of Head Start, is to use all possible resources and strategies to ensure the healthy development of the youngest, most vulnerable children and families…On an advocacy level, energized by the urgency of the pandemic, I learned to trust my instincts and my voice as never before. My advice: build strong, diverse teams invited to think and speak independently so that you have true partners in this difficult work. Seek and receive regular reflective mentorship so that you can become increasingly effective. With vulnerable babies and families always at the center, know that it’s the strength of relationships that will determine the quality of care.”

--

--

National Head Start Association
2020 BOLD Leadership

NHSA is a nonprofit organization committed to the belief that every child, regardless of circumstances at birth, has the ability to succeed in life.