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Books > Social sciences > Education > Teaching of specific groups > Teaching of those with special educational needs > Teaching of children with emotional & behavioural difficulties
This invaluable resource comprises a set of six 'Pip and Bunny'
picture books with accompanying professional guide and downloadable
online content; all carefully written and illustrated to support
language and emotional development through reading. By inspiring
conversation and fueling the young reader's imagination the books
promote emotional and social literacy. Designed for use within the
Early Years setting or at home, each story explores different areas
of social and emotional development. The full set includes: Six
beautifully illustrated picture books with text and vocabulary for
each A handbook designed to guide the parent or practitioner in
using the books effectively 'Talking points' relating to the
child's own world 'What's the word?' picture pages to be
photocopied, downloaded or printed Detailed suggestions as to how
to link with other EYFS areas of learning The set is designed to be
used in both individual and group settings, and at various stages
of a child's development. It will be a valuable resource for
teachers, SENCOs, Early Years workers, EOTAs, Educational
Psychologists, counsellors and therapists.
Discipline is of profound educational importance, both inside
educational institutions and outside of them in personal and social
life. Reclaiming Discipline for Education revisits neglected
philosophical ideas about discipline in education and uses these
ideas to re-think practices and discourses of discipline in
education today. Chapters in this book trace the evolution of
thought regarding discipline in education all the way from Kant
through to Durkheim, Foucault, Peters, Dewey and Macmurray.
MacAllister also critically examines the strengths and weaknesses
of contemporary school discipline practices in the UK, the US and
Australia, including behaviour management, zero tolerance and
restorative approaches. The educational credentials of
psychological constructs of grit and self-discipline are also
questioned. This book concludes by considering the current and
future state of discipline in education on the basis of the
different philosophical, practical and policy perspectives
discussed. In particular, MacAllister examines why it is
problematic to consider practices of discipline in isolation from
the wider purposes of education. This book is suitable for an
international audience and should be read by anyone who is
interested in education and educational leadership, as well as
those interested in the philosophy of education.
For professionals who work with students on the autism spectrum in
inclusive classroom settings, supporting emotional regulation is
key. This practical guide outlines cognitive and language
strategies that support emotional regulation, which the authors
have found successful with their students with autism, supported by
research that shows why they work. The focus in this book is on the
emotional state of the child as opposed to controlling behaviours.
The guidelines and strategies provided help students with
prediction and make the expectations of them clear, empowering
children by giving them choices. Examples of how to use each
strategy are given, alongside tips for application. The book also
includes sample goals for regulation, information on therapy
techniques that work and a 'cheat sheet' overview of the
strategies, creating a clear and concise guide to engaging and
enhancing learning in the classroom.
This highly practical resource introduces the concept of
'Gymtherapy'; a pioneering approach to working with children that
uses movement as a means of promoting emotional wellbeing.
Gymtherapy brings together the physical and emotional benefits of
activity alongside the importance of safeguarding and supporting
children, particularly those who are socio-economically deprived or
emotionally vulnerable. Written in an accessible and vibrant style,
Gymtherapy provides a full programme of lesson plans, structured
across five key areas: Identity and Self Esteem, Mindfulness, Anger
Expression, Protective Behaviour and Gender Stereotypes. Each
lesson plan is based on accessible, tried and tested strategies,
and outlines learning objectives, equipment needed and step-by-step
instructions for facilitating practical activities. The chapters
are illustrated with engaging real-life examples, case studies,
survivor stories and tips, while at the same time linking practice
to the underpinning social theory. Gymtherapy is an invaluable
guide for teachers, social workers, school leaders and anyone with
an interest in providing for the welfare and wellbeing of the
children they work with.
This guide has been written to accompany the book The Silent
Selkie, a children's story about trauma and offers gentle, creative
ways for adults to work with children and young people who have
faced adverse childhood experiences. This guidebook: explores the
themes of the story and offers guidance to the adult as they use
expressive arts to give the child or young person a way to process
their emotional experiences. supports trusted adults around the
child or young person to understand trauma, its impact and how to
respond appropriately and sensitively to the child. provides
techniques, exercises, and activities to encourage healthy creative
expression and to help the child or young person to understand
trauma, its impact and what can help. Using this guide may be a
first step on a young person's journey towards healing, making this
an ideal tool for adults working with children who have experienced
trauma, such as SENDCos, teachers, teaching assistants and family
support workers. For effective use, this book should be purchased
alongside the storybook. Both books can be purchased together as a
set, Supporting Children and Young People Who Have Experienced
Trauma, 978-0-367-63944-0
A cornucopia of ideas, strategies, and concepts that will apply to
virtually any situation! The authors address sensory,
communication, and physical and social-emotional issues by
increasing desired behaviors and decreasing unwanted behaviors. You
will also learn how to build sensory diets into everyday
activities; use antecedent control; teach students to
self-regulate; deal with self-injurious behaviors, physical or
verbal aggression, toilet training, obsessive-compulsive behavior,
and fixations; deal with crisis/stress/data management, data
management, and much more. Whatever problems you face, you'll find
helpful solutions to them in this book. This book should be on
every teacher's and parent's bookshelf. Great reference source!
Helpful sections include: Impact of Autism Characteristics What
Does Communication Have to do With Behavior? Sensory Issues and
Behavior Social Skills and Social/Emotional Issues Structuring the
Environment for Success Increasing Desired Behaviors Decreasing
Unwanted Behaviors Crisis Management and Other Special Problems
Discipline Procedures and Behavior Intervention Plans Stress
Management
To understand the ways people with autism think, Peter Vermeulen
argues, we need to try to get inside their world. The latest
scientific thinking is clearly explained, and illustrated by
numerous personal accounts. This introductory book offers the
reader a real window into the autistic mind and the very individual
way in which it processes information. Honest and accessible, this
book will be invaluable to anyone involved in the care of an
autistic child.
Emotional difficulties in children aged 5-11 can display themselves
in a range of different behaviours, and it is important for staff
in schools to be able to identify and address these problems, and
to provide appropriate help. This easy-to-use tool provides an
observation checklist which enables staff to identify behavioural
patterns in children with social and emotional difficulties,
analyse the emotional difficulties underlying these behaviours and
establish what kind of help and support the children need.
Behavioural responses are categorised within clearly outlined
topics, including behaviour, play and relationship with peers,
attachment behaviours, emotional state in the classroom and
attitude to attendance. Checklists and diagrams identify different
'styles' of relating (secure, avoidant, ambivalent), to help school
staff who work with children and their families to respond
appropriately to the individual needs of each child. A range of
handouts include activities designed to provide emotional support,
to focus and regulate behaviour and enable the child to develop
important social and emotional skills. Suitable for use with
children aged 5-11, this tool will be an invaluable resource for
teachers, teaching assistants, learning support staff, school
counsellors and educational psychologists.
This colourful deck of playing cards is an easy-to-use resource
designed to support building the resilience of children and young
people in school settings. The cards offer a playful,
child-friendly way to assess a young person's resilience and are
particularly useful for schools wanting to offer early
interventions in order to support the resilience of students who
are vulnerable because of their exposure to adverse childhood
experiences. The resource includes: 52 'School Resilience' cards 15
'Child Resilience' cards Nurturing Emotional Resilience mini guide
The Roots of Resilience Tool (a downloadable, printable resource)
The cards have been designed for use in groups or on a 1:1 basis by
teachers, professionals and parents. They can be used independently
or alongside the book Nurturing Emotional Resilience in Vulnerable
Children and Young People (Ttofa, 2018), which elaborates on the
research supporting the cards in more depth. An indispensable
resource, the cards place a strong emphasis on the healing power of
relationships, particularly the role of a nurturing trusted adult
in building resilience in children and young people. Intended for
use in educational settings and/or therapy contexts under the
supervision of an adult. This is not a toy.
Sharing insights of various theoretical perspectives to help
understand the complex root causes of children's behaviour,
Supporting Positive Behaviour in Early Childhood Settings and
Primary Schools highlights key responses that can encourage
positive mental health, resilience and behaviour. Drawing on a
range of theoretical frameworks, this book: Translates theoretical
insights into adaptable and practical responses Considers
children's strengths and needs with regards to resilience and
mental health Includes case studies, tasks and questions for
reflection Identifies innovative practical strategies for
supporting positive behaviour in educational settings Combining
theoretical perspectives on supporting positive behaviour,
Supporting Positive Behaviour in Early Childhood Settings and
Primary Schools is user-friendly and conceptually unified. It gives
early childhood and primary students and teachers a clear
understanding of what to do to facilitate positive behaviour and
why to do it, encouraging true professionalism in education, and
ensuring children learn and develop to their highest potential.
It is important that stakeholders are aware of practices supported
as effective for students with learning and behavioral disabilities
in order to provide instruction that results in improved learner
outcomes. Perhaps equally important, stakeholders should also know
which practices have been shown by research to be ineffective
(e.g., have no, small, or inconsistent effects on learner
outcomes). Special education has a long history of using practices
that, though appealing in some ways, have little or no positive
impact on learner outcomes. In order to bridge the gap between
research and practice, educators must be aware of which practices
work (and prioritize their use) and which do not (and avoid their
use). In this volume, each chapter describes two practices one
supported as effective by research and one shown by research to be
ineffective in critical areas of education for students with
learning and behavioral disabilities. Chapter authors will provide
readers guidance in how to do this for each effective practices and
provide concrete reasons to not do this for each ineffective
practice.
Trauma can have a significant impact on the stability of a child's
development and can put additional pressures on the education staff
working with them. Showing you how you can best support children
who have experienced adverse childhood experiences, this guide is
full of practical guidance on how you can adapt your teaching with
this group. Covering a range of issues a child may have, such as
foetal alcohol spectrum disorder, pathological demand avoidance,
attachment difficulties and many more, this book provides the
trauma-informed tools you need to care for these children and to
give the best possible opportunities from their education. It also
addresses the difference children may experience in learning, how
they behave, how teachers can ensure home--school cooperation, and
how teachers can act in a trauma-informed manner.
Following on from The Big Book of Therapeutic Activity Ideas for
Children and Teens, this book provides EVEN MORE imaginative and
fun activity ideas, lessons, and projects for use with difficult
and challenging children and teens aged 5+. From ice breakers and
group starters to bibliotherapy and monthly character education
activities, there are over 90 ideas designed to unleash the
creativity of children and teens, and teach social skills,
strategies to control anger and anxiety, conflict resolution,
positive thinking skills, and more. They make use of art,
scientific experiments, expressive arts and books, and many come
with photocopiable handouts. The activities can be used in a
variety of settings, and they are adaptable for use with both
individuals and groups. This is a practical resource bursting with
ideas, and it will be invaluable for anyone working with children
and teens, including school counselors, teachers, social workers,
youth workers, arts therapists, and psychologists.
Everyone has different needs when it comes to coping with life's
stressors, and children are no different. Some need quiet and
soothing activities to calm them down, whereas others require more
physical activity or intense sensory input to relax their minds and
bodies. This resource comprises a collection of fun, flexible,
tried-and-tested activities and make-it-yourself workbooks for
parents and professionals to help a child in need of extra
emotional support find the coping skills that fit them best. Each
activity lists the materials required and includes clear directions
for how to do it. There is something for every child: whether they
are dynamic and creative or more cerebral and literal. Projects
include making wish fairies, dream catchers, and mandalas; managing
unstructured time with activities such as creating comics, dioramas
and tongue twisters; and simple ideas for instant soothing, such as
taking deep breaths, blowing bubbles, making silly faces, and
playing music. Creative Coping Skills for Children also includes
specific interventions for anxious or grieving children such as
making worry dolls and memory shrines. This book is full of fun,
easy, creative project ideas for parents of children aged 3-12,
teachers, counselors, play therapists, social workers, and all
professionals working with children.
This highly accessible and much-needed resource sets out practical
advice on positive behaviour management in primary schools,
exploring how to support children effectively with their personal,
social and emotional development. With an emphasis on implementable
strategies, this book will give primary school teachers and staff
an understanding as to why children may behave as they do, and what
steps can be taken by the school to support a child's development.
Considering a variety of factors that influence positive behaviour,
such as environment, mental health, parents, and the importance of
planning, this book is full of ideas that can be dipped in and out
of for support in the classroom. Bite-sized and practical, this is
a perfect book for busy teachers.
For teachers and SENCOs in all settings, this invaluable resource
will guide you through a simple, systematic process of
understanding why challenging behaviour is happening and give you
some very practical, easily implemented strategies that all staff
can use to help make things easier for the young people in your
group. Key features include: a wide selection of different
strategies for coping with challenging behaviour so that you can
meet the needs of each individual pupil; a flexible framework with
templates and tools to help you proactively plan approaches to
challenging behaviour so that you and your colleagues can respond
consistently and effectively; written by an experienced Educational
Psychologist and based on proven strategies developed through years
of practice in Special Schools as well as Primary and Secondary
mainstream schools. Unlike other books addressing challenging
behaviour, this resource offers a psychologically-based framework
that can easily be implemented by mainstream teachers and SENCOs.
It works!
Mind Mechanics is a comprehensive resource to support schools in
teaching pupils about mental health. Drawing on a wide range of
therapeutic interventions, including CBT, Behavioural Activation
and Compassion-Focussed Therapy, it provides activities and lesson
plans to empower children with the skills they need to manage their
mental health throughout life. The book contains lesson plans,
games and activities, assessment tools and information on risk
factors and specific issues that might impact children. It also
features photocopiable and downloadable worksheets, making the
provision of mental health teaching simple. Mind Mechanics can be
used flexibly as a full programme as part of the school's Personal,
Social, Health and Citizenship curriculum, as a targeted
intervention for a group or individual, or as a resource bank of
individual activities to use as and when needed.
Make your lessons interesting, interactive, and engaging Successful
lessons are explicit, yet also inspire active learning and
opportunities to respond. As the one shaping lessons, can you do
better? Probably, and you're not alone. Research shows teachers
consistently offer students far fewer than the recommended
opportunities to respond, leaving all students-including those with
special needs and behavior challenges-less than engaged and falling
short of their best chance for success. With this book, you'll
discover 14 strategies you can translate directly to your
classroom, complete with descriptions, advantages and disadvantages
of each, and how and when best to use them. Divided into three
parts, you will be guided through Verbal engagement strategies,
such as whip around, choral responding, quick polls, and individual
questioning Non-verbal engagement strategies, such as stop and jot,
guided notes, response cards, and hand signals Partner and teaming
strategies, such as turn & talk, cued retell, four corners, and
classroom mingle Dive into these strategies and transform your
classroom into a rich and interactive environment-no matter the
subject, context, or age of your students.
Die Rander der Gesellschaft sind diffus und bewohnt.
Randstandigkeit umschreibt dabei den Zustand des oft vulnerablen
und exkludierten Lebens, abseits burgerlicher Milieus, losgeloest
von monetarer Sicherheit und weitgehend entkoppelt von
gesellschaftlichen Institutionen. Die verschiedenen Areale der
Rander sind gekennzeichnet durch Deprivationen, gesellschaftliche
Stigmatisierung, Diskriminierung und Ausgrenzung, die alle die
Padagogik herausfordern. Die in diesem Buch versammelten Beitrage
explorieren und analysieren die Vielfalt der Lebenslagen der
Bewohner*innen und der verschiedenen Areale. Sie behandeln Fragen
zur Konstitution dieser Areale, zur Annaherung an diese und
unterbreiten eine Vielzahl an Vorschlagen unterschiedlichen
Ausmasses, wie die Padagogik damit umgehen kann.
'Gives general educators the precise information needed to work
with children on the autistic spectrum. The range of topics covered
makes this book a great resource for professionals looking for an
overview of autism spectrum disorders and how to work effectively
with this population. I particularly like the chapter on
collaborating with parents-a much needed, but often neglected area'
- G. Richmond Mancil, Assistant Professor, University of Central
Florida 'Most comprehensive. Teachers in today's classrooms are
faced with the challenge of educating all children, and this book
provides an easy-to-understand reference for a traditionally
misunderstood disability' - Vicki McFarland, Special Education
Director, Learning Matters Educational Group A user-friendly,
comprehensive look at teaching students with Autism Spectrum
Disorders. Written by experts in special education, this resource
presents a complete overview of Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD).
The authors discuss ways to create an appropriate learning
environment and essential strategies for implementing effective
educational programs. The book also explains the use of: Assistive
technology options for children with ASD Behavioural, skill-based,
and physiologically-based intervention models Ways to evaluate
interventions Effective assessments for student behaviour, skills,
and deficits A comprehensive team approach that includes parents as
part of a quality educational program Specific instructional
approaches for students with ASD
This program is an evidence-based intervention for behavioral in
pre-adolescent children (grades 5 and 6). Continuing the work of
the Fast Track Program, currently under contract, this intervention
targets children who are beginning to show signs of severe
aggression and social dysfunction at school. Children who begin to
exhibit aggression as pre-adolescents are much more likely to have
histories of substance abuse, interpersonal violence, and criminal
behavior in their adolescence. By targeting these children before
their behavior has become extremely dangerous or unmanageable, this
program has been proven to reduce the occurence of these programs,
and to improve functioning in school.
Studies have shown that children who demonstrate aggressive
behaviors have maladaptive coping skills and misperceptions of
conflict or threat. This program teaches positive strategies for
coping with perceived conflict or threat, as well as an
understanding of the participant's feelings and motivations behind
inappropriate behaviors. The Coping Power program involves an
intervention with aggressive children and a simultaneous program
for their parents, to increase positive motivations at home as well
as at school. The facilitator's guide includes step-by-step
instructions for accurately implementing this evidence-based
program. This is the corresponding workbook for children which
includes worksheets and monitoring forms to track progress and
reinforce the skills learned in the group sessions.
What's the Buzz? is an internationally renowned series of
programmes designed to help children and young people develop
social and emotional awareness. Now available in a revised second
edition, What's the Buzz for Primary Students is a sixteen-lesson
programme targeting everyday social challenges faced by primary
aged children, such as peer pressure and bullying style behaviours;
competition and handling disappointment; feelings and wellbeing and
self-awareness. Each lesson is designed around the SAFE criteria
(Sequenced; Active; Focused; Explicit) and includes: A new and
beautifully illustrated 'Archie' story, in which the popular
character faces a new and relatable social challenge A series of
lively and exciting games and activity suggestions Role-plays and
discussion points so that children can put their skills into
practice in a supportive environment Having already proven to
appeal to teachers and support staff, counsellors and psychologists
worldwide, this resource is suitable for anybody looking to enrich
the social lives of children. Resources and training modules to
support this book can be found on the website
www.whatsthebuzz.net.au.
This collection of fun and adaptable activities, games, stories and
handouts is a complete resource for supporting children coping with
stress and difficult emotions. From engaging arts and crafts, to
interactive stories and relaxing meditations, all the interventions
and activities are thematically structured so that each chapter
contains the means for building specific skills or overcoming
behavioral issues. Each chapter contains suggested goals, positive
affirmations and photocopiable handouts to enable a child to
continue practising and learning new life skills outside of
sessions with parents or professionals. The activities in this book
are ideal for use with children aged 3-12 to help them rebalance
and gain a strong grasp on their emotions.
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