From Recovery to Readiness: Using the Arts as a Tool for Sarasota’s Youngest Storm Survivors

Early Learning Coalition and Sarasota Performing Arts Foundation Launch $350,000 Arts-Based Resilience Program for Preschool Children and Educators

SARASOTA, FL — April 21, 2026– Hurricane Ian made landfall in September 2022. The winds eventually stopped. The floodwaters receded. But for thousands of Sarasota County families with young children, the storm didn’t end there. Before the region had fully caught its breath, Hurricanes Debby, Helene, and Milton tore through in the fall of 2024. This relentless sequence left families, educators, and our littlest learners absorbing wave after wave of disruption with no real window to recover in between.

Today, this quiet weight is still being carried in child care classrooms in our hometown.

That’s exactly why the Early Learning Coalition of Sarasota County (ELC) and the Sarasota Performing Arts Foundation are joining forces this fall to launch Mindful RecoveryAn Arts Integration Approach for Early Learning. The $350,000 program, funded through the ELC’s Hurricane Ian Impact Disaster Grant, will reach up to 60 early learning sites and 260 classrooms in total.

Mindful Recovery in Action

Ten trained teaching artists from the Sarasota Performing Arts Foundation, the region’s affiliate of the prestigious Wolf Trap Institute for Early Learning Through the Arts, will work directly alongside dozens of early educators to guide and mentor them on how to use arts-based tools for calm, connection, and resilience. Wolf Trap’s evidence-based model is recognized nationally as a gold standard for arts integration in early childhood settings. In addition, the Foundation’s teaching artists bring specialized training in both early learning standards and trauma-informed care. Early educators will also participate in professional development workshops focused on their own wellbeing, because a regulated adult is the single most powerful predictor of a regulated child.

“We’re proud to partner with the ELC to bring Mindful Recovery to our region,” said Tania Castroverde Moskalenko, CEO of the Sarasota Performing Arts Foundation. “This program will expand our impact by equipping educators with research-based arts tools that support both their own well-being and the emotional development of the children they serve.”

Why the Arts? Because Research Shows It Works

Young children are far more vulnerable to the effects of a disaster than most people realize. The science is clear: the first five years of life are a period of explosive neurological growth. Stress, fear, and chronic uncertainty during this critical window don’t just spark temporary emotions. They physically alter how the brain develops.

Infants and toddlers can’t name their fear or ask for help. Yet they absorb the emotional world around them with extraordinary precision. When caregivers are overwhelmed, children’s stress hormone cortisol surges, sleep disrupts, and the developing brain shifts from learning mode into survival mode. Just because they are young does not mean they don’t feel it. It means they feel it without the words to say so.

Research shows that just 45 minutes of art-making significantly reduces cortisol (Kaimal et al., 2016). Music activates the brain’s dopamine system, which is the same pathway involved in emotional bonding and motivation (Salimpoor et al., 2011). Movement and imaginative play are not simply enrichment. In the aftermath of trauma, they are intervention.

“The message from our educators has been clear: more behavioral challenges in the classrooms and more urgent requests for self-care and resilience support. Mindful Recovery is one powerful way we are answering that call,” says Alison Fraga, ELC CEO. “The Hurricane Ian Impact Disaster Grant made it possible to bring this program to classrooms where access to this type of support would otherwise be out of reach. This unique initiative provides tailored arts integration, with tools that are joyful, research-based, and genuinely healing. This is not a luxury program. It’s exactly what this moment calls for.”

Mindful Recovery runs through June 2028.

For photos and a short video of Sarasota Performing Arts Foundation Teaching Artists in action, Click HERE

About the Early Learning Coalition of Sarasota County

The Early Learning Coalition of Sarasota County (ELC) prepares children for lifelong success through quality early learning. The state-funded nonprofit directly serves more than 3,000 children annually, helping families find and afford high-quality childcare, including Florida’s Voluntary Prekindergarten program, and serving as the county’s premier hub for early educator professional development. The ELC offers training, coaching and quality classroom support for educators, and houses Florida’s only fully in-house Registered Apprenticeship Program for Early Education.  Working to remove barriers, the agency’s mission is to ensure every child has a chance to experience intentional teaching, nurturing relationships, and a safe environment so they can enter kindergarten with confidence. Learn more at elcsarasota.org

About the Sarasota Performing Arts Foundation

Sarasota Performing Arts Foundation’s mission is to create and sustain a vibrant performing arts center, advance education, and enrich communities by inspiring minds through the power of the arts. Since 1987, the Foundation has partnered with the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall to bring arts education to more than 40,000 students and families annually across five counties. Today, the Foundation continues this commitment while leading the vision for a new Sarasota Performing Arts Center in partnership with the City of Sarasota, the Bay Park Conservancy, and the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall. PerformingArtsFoundation.org

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