A front page graphic for The Press. The main headline reads, "East side story".
A page layout for the contents page of the Your Weekend section of The Press.
An entry from Gallivanta's blog for 8 January 2013 entitled, "Queasy and Uneasy".
Chaplain Tom Innes performing a blessing for the new buildings in the Kirkwood Village.
The front page graphic for a supplement to The Press titled, "Champions of Canterbury".
A map showing the probability of aftershocks in Canterbury for a 24-hour period.
Returning now to the emergency finance package for Christchurch businesses, which the Prime Minister announced this afternoon.
A Christchurch school has bought ukuleles for all its children out of earthquake donations.
Workers who lose their income as a result of the earthquake in Canterbury will be eligible for compensation.
Canterbury earthquakes is recommending toughening the standards for concrete buildings and structural steel.
A logo for a Zone Life feature titled, "Wildlife".
A timeline for the consultation on changes to Christchurch schools.
The front page graphic for The Press. The main headline reads, "Facing the future".
The inside of a temporary classroom on the Ilam Oval, almost ready for students.
The "Lyttelton Review" newsletter for 17 September 2012, produced by the Lyttelton Harbour Information Centre.
The "Lyttelton Review" newsletter for 24 September 2012, produced by the Lyttelton Harbour Information Centre.
A graphic showing the status of requests for zoning review.
John Nicolle from ITCS checks a computer in the the Geography building for damage.
Wendy Lawson and John Barton from Psychology check the Geography building staffroom for damage.
John Nicolle from ITCS checks a computer in the the Geography building for damage.
A graphic describing a proposal to use demolition rubble for land reclamation in Lyttelton.
Chaplain Tom Innes performing a blessing for the new buildings in the Kirkwood Village.
An entry from Gallivanta's blog for 28 November 2013 entitled, "Thanksgiving from afar".
A logo for a feature titled, "Shaping our city".
A page banner for a feature titled, "Your new city".
Chaplain Tom Innes performing a blessing for the new buildings in the Kirkwood Village.
John Nicolle from ITCS checks a computer in the the Geography building for damage.
A timeline for the consultation on changes to Christchurch schools.
KG 6 and KG 7, temporary classrooms in the Kirkwood Oval, ready for students.
For 150,000 Christchurch school students, the 12.51 pm earthquake of 22 February 2011 shattered their normal lunch time activities and thrust their teachers into the role of emergency first responders. Whether helping students (children) escape immediate danger, or identifying and managing the best strategies for keeping children safe, including provision of extended caregiving when parents were unable to return to school to retrieve their children, teachers had to manage their own fears and trauma reactions in order to appear calm and prevent further distress for the children in their care. Only then did teachers return to their families. Eighteen months later, twenty teachers from across Christchurch, were interviewed. At 12.51pm, the teachers were essentially first responders. Using their usual methods for presenting a calm and professional image, the teachers’ emotion regulation (ER) strategies for managing their immediate fears were similar to those of professional first responders, with similar potential for subsequent burnout and negative emotional effects. Teachers’ higher emotional exhaustion and burnout 18 months later, were associated with school relocation. Lower burnout was associated with more emotional awareness, ER and perceived support. Consistent with international research, teachers’ use of cognitive reappraisal (re-thinking a situation) was an effective ER strategy, but this may not prevent teachers’ emotional resources from eventually becoming depleted. Teachers fulfill an important role in supporting children’s psychosocial adjustment following a natural disaster. However, as also acknowledged in international research, we need to also focus on supporting the teachers themselves.