About me
Vivien Villaverde is an Associate Professor Practicum Education at the Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work. She is an Education Doctorate candidate at the Rossier School of Education. She teaches and coordinates 2nd-year MSW internship placements. Prof. Villaverde creates and maintain community partnerships and collaborations for MSW workforce development. She is the Lead Coordinator for Teaching Institutions (TI) developing programs and building service capacity for community partners and to elevate the MSW internship program. Additionally, Prof. Villaverde combines her knowledge of social work and education to consult, train, and collaborate with schools and districts. She supports various projects to build trauma focused and multi-tiered infrastructure, create organizational culture shifts, and enhance trauma-informed practices and services to create trauma-informed schools and districts. She is subject matter experienced in crisis response and clinical and non-clinical trauma interventions in response to natural and man-made disasters and various adverse and trauma events. Ms. Villaverde has numerous publications and presentations in national and international conferences on trauma practices and evidence-based interventions; disaster preparedness and planning; and MSW coordinated services, workforce development, and capacity building.
Prof. Vivien Villaverde is the Co-Founder of the Center for Safe and Resilient Schools and Workplaces providing consultation, technical support, and training on trauma-informed interventions, disaster/crisis response, and trauma-responsive program development. She has an extensive background in multi-tiered/professional collaboration and education systems change. Her expertise includes training and consultation with school districts in trauma focused organizational transformation at the micro, mezzo, and macro level including service and program development, EBI training, and policy development. Prof. Villaverde is a national and international trainer for Trauma-Informed Skills for Educators (TISE), Psychological First Aid (PFA-TEACH), Supports for Students Exposed to Trauma (SSET), and Bounce Back. Various consultation and training partnerships include SAMHSA Southwest and Northwest MHTTC Grants, the California Department of Education, the Philippine Department of Education, the National Center for School Mental Health in South Korea, and various schools and districts in the US.