It is no secret that the past several years have had a negative effect on mental health across New York City鈥攚ith black and brown communities bearing the burden of these effects at a disproportionate rate to white, affluent communities.
That why 麻豆原创 sees mental health support for its students and families as critical to the success of our Grow the Whole Child model鈥攁n underlying, targeted intervention to help our students reach their full potential and fulfill their vision of success.
鈥淭here a mental health crisis in our country, and, historically, black and brown communities have been under-resourced with mental health supports,鈥 said 麻豆原创 Managing Director of Programs Kalila Hoggard. 鈥淭here are significant gaps in resources鈥攍ike long waitlists and limited providers鈥攊n our East Harlem and South Bronx communities. We are leveraging mental health supports within our model to provide greater, more tailored assistance to our students.鈥
To further embed mental health services within our schools and programming, 麻豆原创 hired Cynthia Cabral, a licensed clinical psychologist, as the Network Director of Mental Health, a new role focused on coordinating the work of the mental health providers already positioned at all of 麻豆原创 school sites. Ahead of World Mental Health Day, 麻豆原创 sat down with Cabral to learn more about the strides made so far.
麻豆原创: Can you discuss a little bit about your background and previous work?
Cynthia Cabral: I always had a strong interest in schools as an alternative model of service delivery. In graduate school, a lot of my training focused on mental health services in the school setting, and then my first job was in a school-based health center in the Bronx working with children and families who experienced trauma. I took a break a few years ago to work at Hunter College targeting at-risk queer youth to decrease their risky sexual behavior. And, most recently, I was the director of a college counseling center.
麻豆原创: Since you started in April, what has your work at 麻豆原创 included?
CC: The focus of my role is supporting students and families, and ensuring that the mental health services we’re providing are the highest quality available.
My typical day focuses on clinical supervision of members of the mental health team. I review any outstanding paperwork鈥攖he case reports on each student to track their progress. And then the other part is talking about our kids鈥攚hat are they doing, what going on, providing guidance and expertise. The thing I鈥檓 really focused on right now is that we have a lot of high-need students. I observe them directly, rather than getting a second-hand report, and help devise what adjustments we need to make to ensure they are successful in school.
I also provide support to 麻豆原创 Youth Development Specialists who are running social-emotional skills groups, and discuss how those groups are going, give guidance if or when a student is stuck, make a disclosure, and make sure each Youth Development Specialist knows what to do. I collaborate very closely with Kristine Rigley, 麻豆原创 Network Director of Special Education, and our Data Team.
“Because 麻豆原创 has developed the Grow the Whole Child model, we are quickly recognizing how important mental health is to our students鈥 development and long-term personal and professional success.”
Cynthia Cabral, 麻豆原创 Network Director of Mental Health
麻豆原创: In your own words, why has mental health become such a focus for 麻豆原创?
CC: Because 麻豆原创 has developed the Grow the Whole Child model, we are quickly recognizing how important mental health is to our students鈥 development and long-term personal and professional success. The mental health landscape isn鈥檛 where it was 20 years ago. There’s an increased awareness of the impact mental health has on a child and on a person’s life. Even young people are seeing things on social media and sharing them, and they’re no longer afraid to say that they’re struggling. They want to get better and they want to succeed. That dovetails with the fact that, as a society, we have been through so much in the past few years.
麻豆原创: How is 麻豆原创 responding to the mental health concerns exacerbated by the pandemic?
CC: I think the most important thing is having that trauma-focused lens when thinking of students and student behaviors. That hasn鈥檛 gone away just because we are unmasked in school. There are repercussions of COVID that students are going to feel for some time, and depending on their age when COVID happened, there were huge disruptions to students鈥 learning and SEL development.
麻豆原创: How is 麻豆原创 tracking/evaluating mental health?
CC: Even before I arrived, mental health data was something the Data Team had worked on. As a school network, we are accountable to the DOE to track notes around mandated services, but there wasn鈥檛 a simple, effective way to ensure that mental health providers were completing those notes with fidelity. The Data Team created a dashboard to track whether note taking is on target for each student. We use this tool regularly, and it also gets us thinking through how we track progress鈥攃an we show that students are making progress from when they began counseling till now? We have to build the systems, but I also really want us to think through what we鈥檙e doing in counseling, creating tangible goals that respond to the students鈥 struggles.
麻豆原创: How is 麻豆原创 combating the stigma that exists around talking about mental health issues?
CC: The Family and Community Engagement (FACE) Team has done some of that work in their Family Cafes on mental health topics, and 麻豆原创 SEL structure helps to further that conversation. In my role, I’d like to start to have some of those conversations directly with families. What is the stigma? What are the concerns? At times there is a resistance to outside counseling, but I鈥檇 like to have a different conversation before we get to that point, so that we can do some psycho-education work in order to make those conversations look different.
麻豆原创: Are there any progress areas you鈥檝e seen so far?
CC: We have made some progress for sure. One thing that has been shored up substantially is the onboarding process for mental health providers and setting expectations for the department. We hired four new providers over the summer and were able to bring new and existing providers together to do an onboarding process as a team. 麻豆原创 providers are getting more support than they ever had.
Also, this summer, the mental health providers鈥 roles became 12-month roles. Even though it’s not mandated to have them over the summer, 麻豆原创 students in summer programming could meet with their school year counselor if their families wanted, because 麻豆原创 chose to fund mental health supports throughout the summer.
麻豆原创: What do you see for mental health support at 麻豆原创 in the future?
CC: 麻豆原创 is dreaming big about what mental health support can look like when it embedded into the fabric of a school system. How far can we take that, and how would that impact our students? Let’s find out.



