Current:Home > InvestIncarcerated students win award for mental health solution -Capitatum
Incarcerated students win award for mental health solution
View
Date:2025-04-17 13:15:22
A simple but impactful video submission on mental health was awarded first place in a nationwide competition, but the group of high school students behind it is remaining anonymous, known only as "The Voices Behind The Walls."
The students who created the video are incarcerated and study at Travis Hill School inside New Orleans' juvenile detention center. According to its website, the public school serves about 40 students ranging from 13 to 18 years old. Because the cases of students who entered the competition have not been heard yet, they've been instructed not to talk about their situations. Three students, accused of committing serious crimes and facing decades in prison if convicted, were able to speak to CBS News without revealing their identities.
The students said their experience gives them a unique perspective on mental health.
"They label us crazy because they don't even know us," one student said. "They don't know us. They don't understand that I'm really a good child. I've been through some things. I did some things I regret, but at the end of the day, I'm a good child."
"I had a lot of hatred in my heart and I always felt, like, you know, I wasn't enough," said another student. "So, I just tried to ... find that wound and that love somewhere else. And I thought I found it in the streets."
The video was submitted to the Aspen Challenge, which solicits solutions on domestic issues from high schoolers in select cities. Unlike the 18 other groups they competed against, the students from Travis Hill School didn't have access to technology, which one student said was a "challenge." However, coming up with the actual plan to address mental health challenges was "easy," they said. Their suggestion was to host biweekly family counseling sessions that could bring an understanding of each other's grief and trauma.
"The parents will learn skills," said one student. "They will also get the understanding of what trauma is, what grief is, like stress, anxiety."
The students couldn't make it to their ceremony where they took home first place, but Byron Goodwin, the director of Travis Hill Schools, said he was able to tell them about the impact they had.
"My first words to the kids was, like, 'Y'all are being heard now, not just here but all over the United States. Y'all have just spoken for every kid that's incarcerated or detained in this United States," Goodwin said.
Goodwin said that the competition gave the students a valuable opportunity.
"They've been told so long that they can't be educated, they can't be learned, they'll never be nothing," he said.
The students said that entering the challenge did give them an important lesson and show that they could be someone even outside the detention center's walls.
"Doing this, it just gave me a voice, and I expressed it," one student said. "I want to achieve greatness."
"A lot of people wouldn't think that we could do something like this, but we actually can," added another. "And this is not even the best thing we could do. We can do greater than that."
- In:
- Incarceration
Michelle Miller is the co-host of "CBS This Morning: Saturday." As an award-winning correspondent based in New York City, she has reported for all CBS News broadcasts and platforms. She joined CBS News in 2004.
TwitterveryGood! (6)
Related
- Messi injury update: Ankle 'better every day' but Inter Miami star yet to play Leagues Cup
- Pentagon updates guidance for protecting military personnel from ‘blast overpressure’
- California, Massachusetts or Hawaii? Which state has the highest cost of living?
- 'Emily in Paris' Season 4: Release date, cast, where to watch this season's love triangle
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- As Colorado River states await water cuts, they struggle to find agreement on longer-term plans
- December execution date set for man convicted of killing a young Missouri girl
- Prince William and Kate Middleton Share Touching Letter to Widow After Husband Dies From Cancer Battle
- American news website Axios laying off dozens of employees
- Utah's spectacular, ancient Double Arch collapsed. Here's why.
Ranking
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Is America ready for our first woman president? Why Harris' biggest obstacle is gender.
- Alabama corrections chief discusses prison construction, staffing numbers
- More than 2,300 pounds of meth is found hidden in celery at Georgia farmers market
- The GOP and Kansas’ Democratic governor ousted targeted lawmakers in the state’s primary
- Vince Vaughn, ‘Ted Lasso’ co-creator Bill Lawrence bring good fun to Carl Hiaasen’s ‘Bad Monkey’
- Texas woman recovering after dramatic rescue from submerged vehicle
- Another person dies at Death Valley National Park amid scorching temperatures
Recommendation
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Jackson Zoo turns away visitors who don’t have cash, costing thousands in potential revenue
Sandra Bullock tells Hoda Kotb not to fear turning 60: 'It's pretty damn great'
Contenders in key Wisconsin Senate race come out swinging after primaries
Small twin
Tori Spelling Tried to Stab Brother Randy Spelling With a Letter Opener as a Kid
Brat summer is almost over. Get ready for 'demure' fall, a new viral TikTok trend.
Michael Bolton says 'all is good' after fan spots police cars at singer's Connecticut home