What can you do next lesson, next week, long term to help our young people with behavioural needs?
William Goldsmith
Head of Packwood, Shropshire (part of the Shrewsbury Family of Schools). FCCT FRSA . Fellow of the Institute of Boarding. Mental Health First Aid Instructor and L7 Executive Coach. Advocate for Character Education.
12 days of Christmas [educational] inspiration - from 2023
Having now heard at least five keynote addresses (including two at my own school) from Adele Bates , it is always wonderful to see the delegates' reaction when the author of Miss, I Don't Give A Sh*t, launches in and immediately takes everyone slightly out of their comfort zone. This was certainly the case in April at a conference hosted by the brilliant Claire Robinson FCCT at Holme Grange School .
What is so relevant about Adele is that her research and expertise comes from a place of being a teacher herself - in a range of settings:
"I've had juice poured on my head, been whacked by a skateboard - and have taught a Year 7 pupil who has experienced severe trauma how to read their first ever word..."
The practical advice she imparts to teachers, at a time when we all need to reflect on how we support students which a range of needs and behavioural tendencies (perhaps even more exacerbated and pronounced in our classrooms post-covid), is both down-to-earth and achievable.
Her book consists of ten chapters, all of which touch upon real-life examples of behaviour in classrooms that so many teachers will have come up against. She provides context to the behaviours alongside some really useful practices that we, as teachers, can try to implement. All are written through lived experience, and so, with consistency of approach, they have every chance of working to the benefit of the student, the rest of the class and to the teacher. Teacher training only scratches the surface in terms of behaviour strategies, supporting neurodivergent children (another article on this will follow) and managing a range of horrific contexts that some of our children come to school amidst, and so it is beholden on teachers and schools to use experts like Adele to guide us through an area that is so much more nuanced than an overarching school behaviour policy could ever provide.
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Herewith six strategies from Adele which I believe to be particularly helpful. These come within the guiding framework that we should never give up on any child; learning opportunities for everyone in the class is important; teachers need the space and time to 'teach' and constant behavioural concerns should not undermine this.
Adele ends her excellent book with a powerful question:
"What can you do next lesson, next week, long term to help our young people with behavioural needs?"
Tomorrow's inspiration (coming later today): Takeaways from the IAPS annual conference.
Helping school leaders & staff to improve behaviour, so that ALL of our pupils thrive | International Keynote Speaker, Trainer & Author | Online & in-person Behaviour CPD |School Improvement| Edu-business support
11 个月Oh William, just saw this! What a gorgeous 24th Dec surprise!? Thank you for taking the time, and I can’t believe you’ve seen me keynote 5times! You can be my understudy! ?? Big love and joy to you and ur adventures in 2024