What Are Adverse Childhood Experiences?
Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) are potentially traumatic events that occur before the age of 18 and can have a profound impact on a child's development, health, and life outcomes. The original CDC-Kaiser ACE study (1995–1997) identified ten categories of childhood adversity across two domains: household dysfunction and abuse/neglect.
Nearly half of all children in the UK have been exposed to at least one ACE. Around one in ten have experienced four or more — and the evidence shows that the greater the number of ACEs, the greater the risk of a wide range of negative health and social outcomes in adulthood.
The Ten ACE Categories
What the Evidence Actually Says
The evidence base for ACEs is substantial — but it is also more nuanced than it is often presented in school training. Key findings include:
- High ACE scores are associated with significantly increased risk of poor physical and mental health outcomes across the life course
- The relationship is correlational, not causal — ACEs increase risk, they do not determine outcome
- Resilience is real: many children with high ACE scores develop into healthy, thriving adults, particularly where protective relationships exist
- Schools themselves can be a powerful protective factor — a safe, predictable, relational environment directly buffers the impact of adversity
Common Pitfalls in Schools
ACE awareness has transformed the conversation about behaviour in many schools — but poorly applied, it creates its own problems.
A Practical Route to Trauma-Aware Practice
Rather than focusing on individual ACE scores, effective trauma-aware schools build the conditions that serve all children — particularly those who have experienced adversity:
- Predictability: Clear routines, consistent expectations, and reliable relationships reduce the threat response in children who have learned the world is unsafe
- Attunement: Staff who notice and respond to emotional states — not just behaviour — build the relational safety that enables learning
- Co-regulation before self-regulation: Children cannot regulate their own emotions until they have experienced being co-regulated by a calm, reliable adult
- Behaviour as communication: Asking "what happened to this child?" rather than "what is wrong with this child?" fundamentally reframes the response
How Teach+ Addresses ACEs
Module 1 (Understanding SEMH and Trauma) and Module 2 (Supporting SEMH Needs Through a Trauma-Informed Approach) of the Teach+ Positive Intervention course provide staff with a thorough grounding in ACEs, the neuroscience of trauma, and practical strategies for creating trauma-aware classroom environments.
Our Trauma Informed Practice course goes deeper still — building a whole-school cultural shift that equips every member of staff with the knowledge and skills to support children affected by adversity.