Fostering a safe learning space for higher education students who experience trauma Higher Education Tricia Shalka, associate professor at the Warner School of Education, is an esteemed expert on trauma among college students. Her research explores the implications of traumatic experiences on student learning and best practices for educators to help students with trauma succeed.In her research, Shalka aims to explore how trauma impacts students鈥 relationships, identities, and education as they navigate the college environment. 鈥淲hat I found was that experiencing trauma as a college student changes how you move through these campus spaces,鈥 says Shalka, who teaches in the Warner School鈥檚 higher education 尘补蝉迟别谤鈥檚 and doctoral programs. 鈥淪tudents may alter how they move around campus, their schedules and seating arrangements, and even avoid class, to steer clear of potential triggers.鈥She uses her research to cultivate safer campus environments for students of all backgrounds who are affected by trauma. In faculty workshops, Shalka discusses trauma-informed practices, informing faculty about how trauma manifests in classroom settings and sharing strategies for helping struggling students feel more comfortable. At the Warner School, students come from all different backgrounds, bringing new perspectives to its programs. 鈥淚 think that prospective students would find that we鈥檙e very open and approachable. That鈥檚 one of the strong points of Warner,鈥 Shalka says. She adds, 鈥淥ur personal experiences can really only take us so far, and when we get to the edges of those personal experiences, we need other ways of understanding how somebody else might be experiencing a particular situation.鈥Shalka has a new book, (Routledge, October 2023), that will serve as a resource for student affairs practitioners, university administrators, and college-level educators supporting students to understand the implications of trauma and how to cultivate a trauma-informed higher education experience through intentional student affairs work.