Local & Community
CSUSB Palm Desert Campus Receives $20,000 Grant for Neurofeedback Program
The Palm Desert campus of Cal State San Bernardino was awarded $20,000 by a local nonprofit to deliver mental health treatment to children in the Coachella Valley affected by the coronavirus pandemic, it was announced Tuesday. Brianna Uhlhorn (left), director of grants and media at Anderson Children’s Foundation, presents gift toConnie McReynolds, director of the Institute for Research, Assessment & Professional Development,and professor of special education rehabilitation and counseling at CSUSB. The Palm Springs-based Anderson Children’s Foundation gifted the funds to expand CSUSB’s Neurofeedback Center, which will now be able to provide brain training therapy to an additional 100 students each year. Connie McReynolds, a psychologist and the center’s director, said children often experience a plethora of benefits after receiving therapy at the center. "Anxiety and depression levels decrease, academic performance improves, behavioral interventions decrease, and the overall positive outcomes enhance the lives of the children, their parents, their teachers, and the community as a whole," she said. The center will be "partnering with school districts in the Coachella Valley to provide innovative mental health services to children whose mental well-being has been adversely affected by the global pandemic," according to the university. Students who have received 10 to 20 hours of brain training at the center have gone on to better self-regulate their moods, listen better, increase attention and expand their memory capacity, center officials said. Additional information about can be found here.
By: NBC Palm Springs
July 13, 2021