Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Support v Enabling

                      How do you support your students? Are you really enabling?

At times it is difficult to tell whether or not we are supporting verses enabling our student's behaviors. As we explore the differences we can learn to build a supportive classroom and ensure we are not enabling negative behaviors.

The goal of support is to build resilience and develop coping strategies.  

Support should always empower a student to move forward toward greater stability and independence.

When we support a student we acknowledge difficulties yet not eliminate them. We should not be removing obstacles for children but rather teach them how to navigate and work through them.

Supporting a student means working with a child to overcome obstacles, manage fears, and build confidence for the future.

It is important to acknowledge feelings and validate them. This does not mean that we encourage the negative or allow them to be presented in a negative way. We can allow difficult emotions as long as we teach students to express them in a healthy way.

We can support students by providing clear, simple, and practical assistance. We can model healthy coping skills.

Ensure that you are providing structure that is appropriate for a child's age and ability. 

Remember to notice the small steps forward and praise the effort even if the outcome isn't to your desired goal yet. Keep coaching through the problems and help them get to where you want them to be.

While setting up structure ensure that you are not enabling negative behaviors by giving in to complaints or demands. It is easy to create peace in the short term but it will cause harm to your structure in the long term.

Address what is going on instead of allowing children to avoid uncomfortable situations. When we do not show them how to address a challenge we inadvertently teach them to cover up what they did or cover up what they forgot to do. Talk through the challenges and address them in real time.

Do not wait. Address things as they happen. Teach students to express feelings in a healthy way. Do not speak up for them when they have the ability to speak for themselves. Allow them the time and space to state and express their own feelings. This will help them take ownership and create a better understanding.

Remember: If you get upset WITH them instead of staying calm, YOU create emotional fireworks. Avoid the fireworks and stay calm. Show them how to be calm in difficult times and work through the feelings instead of exploding them.

Allow students to experience disappointment. Do not protect your students from natural consequences. They need to learn how to accept failure, disappointment, and the consequences for their actions. 

Tuesday, October 18, 2022

A Space for Calm

How well do you calm down when your emotions are running high?

Do you always take the time to process your emotions? If no, how well do you function if you allow the emotions to continue to control your mind and body?

As adult we do not always address our emotions in the healthiest way, if we address them at all. Adults often compartmentalize, hide, deny, or pretend their emotions are not overwhelming. Not all emotions are easily handled. 

When emotions become overwhelming our focus is diminished and so is learning.

If you haven't already, consider making a calming space for you class. 

Below is a link to a really great example of a calm down corner. This example would be best used for 3rd grade on up.

Calm Down Space

I really like the idea of the check in sheet. Have students sign in with name and time they use the space. This will help you keep track and notice patterns. You can use this data to talk with parents regarding; classroom behavior, self-regulation ability, and emotional needs. I also like the idea of taking time to explain how to use the space and then practicing the procedure. 

Think about how your class runs now. Do you have what we call "high flyers"? The students who are walking out, always wanting a break, or simply being disruptive? Perhaps they have some unchecked-in on emotions. Perhaps they brought home emotions to school and do not know how to separate home and school and they do not know how to process the feelings.

All classes can benefit from a calming and peaceful space. Below is another example of why and how to set up a structured space.

Peace Corner 

A peace corner should have a set of agreed upon limits. Five minutes is a great amount of time to get a student in a better spot. We have previously reviewed that chemically, our body only experience an emotion for about a minute and half. After that time it is our brain ruminating. Five minutes allows for feeling, processing, and calming. In the beginning a student may need a few more minutes until they begin to learn self-regulation and the ability to utilize the needed materials or manipulatives to help with a specific emotion.

When you set up and explain your calming space don't be afraid to share about the brain, the science, and the why behind the space. Normalize the need and encourage students to give each other understanding and privacy. Talk about not watching students. Talk about not asking why the space was used. Encourage the understanding that we all need to process emotions in a healthy way.

Set limitations and post them. Make it known that it is one person at a time, to help with challenging and distracting feelings. Ensure the students know that the space is not an escape from learning and should not be used to play or sleep.

The time you give to explaining and demonstrating the use of the calm space will be given back to you the more students learn to utilize the space and calm their emotions.  

If you need help setting up a space please reach out. I have resources and can help you take time to explain the space to your students.



Tuesday, October 11, 2022

Mindful Inclusion to Reduce Bullying

 Mindfulness creates an Inclusive Culture where everyone can say " I Count".

October is Bullying Awareness and Prevention Month. 

As a school we need to do more than be anti-bullying, we need to take meaningful action to empower victims, heal bullies, and create an inclusive culture.

Studies have shown that schools with only an anti-bullying program do not have a reduction in bullying, but rather see the same level or an increase. Anti-bullying program can inadvertently teach bullies new ways to hide behavior, provide new ideas for behavior, and empower them to continue. Anti-bullying programs also keep the victim as a victim and do not empower them, leaving them vulnerable to more incidents of bullying.

Schools need to do more. They need to get to the root of the problem. Culture. Values. Expectations. 

Mindfulness is a great way to create a positive and inclusive culture. Mindfulness will empower the victim and help encourage the bully to become a better person.

Bullies often have low self-esteem and are bullied themselves. Bullies also often display a lack of impulse control. Mindfulness has been shown to improve mental health, reduce anxiety, increase self-esteem, and help promote impulse control.

Mindfulness could be the key (or a key) to reducing and ending bullying in schools. 

Mindfulness empowers victims allowing them to understand that bullying while targeted at them is not about them. Understanding this helps them to reduce reactivity to the bullying events. When reactions are diminished bullies are more likely to reduce and give up behavior. When a bully does not see the response they are looking for they move on or give up all together. 

In 2014, three years after Inner Explorer was launched a study showed that those who implemented the program at their school saw a 50% reduction in reactive behaviors of children. Mindfulness programs, such as Inner Explorer, help teach students to think through their actions before taking action.

In 2015 the National Education Association shared that 1 in 3 students report being bullied and 7 in 10 report they are cyber bullied. (This are pre-pandemic numbers, with the pandemic cyberbullying has seen an increase). It was also reported that 50% of the bullying stops when peers intervene. 

The need to empower and equip our students with the ability and bravery to stand up and stop bullying is great. Mindfulness helps bring awareness to the "here" and the "now" which helps students stop and think about their actions. Mindfulness increases focus, attention, and calm. These are tools to help the bully and the bullied reduce negative behaviors and empower standing up for what is right.

Janice Houlihan, co-founder of Inner Explorer and an author has been quoted saying, "Mindfulness practices help the bully, victim, and any witness involved develop a deeper awareness of themselves, resilience, compassion, and a greater ability to regulate their emotional responses."  

Take some time this week and all through the month of October to begin (or continue) a mindfulness practice in your class. Ten minutes of mindfulness a day can reduce reactivity and increase empathy. 10 minutes of mindfulness a day can help improve behavior, self-esteem, and students grades.

Try Inner Explorer today. Connect with me if you need assistance. Let's work together to get to the root of bullying and create a school where ever student and adult can say "I Count".



Tuesday, October 4, 2022

The Sounds of Mindfulness

Simon and Garfunkel once sang to us about The Sound of Silence. In this song they stated "no one dared disturb the sound of silence." Can you say the same for your class?

Mindful listening can help us with mindful silence. It isn't simply to gain a calm and quiet class for the mere sake of quiet, but for the science behind why we need peace and calm in learning.

Over the years, dating as far back as 1972 , studies have explored the idea that sound has an effect on learning, memory, and cognition. 

Some of the original studies focused on children who lived near airports and children who were living on the main floor of apartment buildings. These studies found that the increase in sound, decreased reading skills and comprehension at school. With theses studies as the foundation more studies were conducted with similar results.

A 2006 study focusing on 3rd grade students found that when there was babble present in the learning environment students test scores decreased. 

In 2010 a study of 1st graders found that both verbal and non-verbal (ex: talking and slamming doors) had a negative impact on memory of material.

Children are less able to separate and ignore irrelevant sounds and are more susceptible to sound-induced disruptions. 

These studies have also found that children with attention concerns, such as ADHD and children who are non-native speakers, such as ELL, are even more at risk for educational deficits due to sound disruption. 

Is the volume in your class inhibiting learning and memory? Would you like to see higher test scores and better readers?

Have you taken time to include mindfulness in your day? Have you found a mindful way to reduce the sound without sound?

Shouting for your students to be quiet is not working. 



Mindfulness encourages us to take a moment and become silent. To slow down and observe. How can you utilize mindfulness to calm the babbles, the chatter, and the non-verbal sounds that disrupt learning?

Try a sound mindfulness practice. Studies show that nature sounds are calming, white noise is calming, and soothing music is calming.

Take your students on a mindful sound walk. Have them explore the school and investigate the sounds around them. Take a mindful sound walk for yourself. Explore the halls and listen to classes. Are there any in which you would thrive? The sounds studies show that while children are more greatly affected, sound does have a negative impact on adults as well. Are there any rooms in the school which might promote learning and increase attention? What can you learn from your mindful sound walk?

Using mindfulness and specifically sound mindfulness can be a good way to help students learn to focus attention. 

Some small studies with adults have also taught us that adults are easily distracted by simple sounds such as a ping of text message. Participants in a study of sound found that if they heard a text message ping during a message they enjoyed the experience less. Even as adults sounds can turn us from calm and joyful to irritated and unfocused. 

Try utilizing the sound practices on Inner Explorer. These are 1-2 minutes of sounds to help calm and focus the mind.