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Behaviour Management: An Essential Guide for Student and Newly
Qualified Teachers explores the current issues and theories in
behaviour management. It encourages readers to think and reflect on
their own experiences and offers practical advice for developing
confidence in the classroom and quickly adapting to the changing
needs of different students and settings. Each chapter of the book
focuses on a different aspect of behaviour management, addressing
issues such as building routines, health and safety, mental health
and using technology to support behaviour management. It includes:
Tasks designed to encourage analytical, reflective and original
thinking. Resources and guidance to develop practice and collate
evidence to add to portfolios or other files required by tutors,
mentors and assessors. Case studies from personal experience that
provide tips and tools for effectively managing behaviour. This
book is an essential resource for student teachers, newly or
recently qualified teachers and anyone with an interest in
developing an understanding of behaviour within schools.
Forest School continues to grow and develop, both in the UK and
internationally. Literature and research in the field tend to
document this growth, while this book takes a novel approach to the
Forest school conversation, taking a critical look at the various
tensions and difficulties that surround Forest School practice. The
editors, together with chapter authors drawn from the fields of
academia and practice, form an experienced voice, encouraging the
reader to reflect upon, question and explore complex areas of
Forest School practice.
Forest School continues to grow and develop, both in the UK and
internationally. Literature and research in the field tend to
document this growth, while this book takes a novel approach to the
Forest school conversation, taking a critical look at the various
tensions and difficulties that surround Forest School practice. The
editors, together with chapter authors drawn from the fields of
academia and practice, form an experienced voice, encouraging the
reader to reflect upon, question and explore complex areas of
Forest School practice.
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