Wednesday, May 31, 2023

Finish Strong


Don't we all feel this way, this time of year? Our ducks are not in a row. Hack one is a pigeon! 
And that is OK. 

We can help our students---and ourselves---finish strong, the mindful way. We just need some help and encouragement. 

You can do it!!! You will do it!!!! You are doing it!!!! 

The website Schola for Schools shared a list of 5 ways to help students finish strong. I am taking those steps and adapting them to a mindful way to finish strong.

1. Morning Mindfulness.... and for all you Hobbits out there second breakfast can be second mindfulness, elevenses, and in fact have 7 mindfulness. If Biblo can have 7 meals, we can have 7 mindfulness. 

Morning Mindfulness can be the perfect way to start your day. Help your students find a calm focus. Start the day with a positive outlook and equip your students to do their best.

2. Motivational Moments. Every morning put a motivational post-it on each student's desk. During your day share a motivational quote. Share with your students what motivates you. Meditate on a motivational phrase. Take a mindful motivation walk. 

This week I have taking motivational walks with a student. We walk and repeat phrases such as "I can be my best. I am my best. I can do it. I will do it. I am doing it"

3. Model Self-Care. Tell the students you are taking a mindful moment. Let them see you take in a deep breath. Engage in mindful self-care with your students.

Encouraging healthy snacks and eating them with your students. Make sure to encourage and take fruit and vegetables on your picnic. 

Incorporate mindful movement time. Class yoga. Stretching and breathing.

4. Encourage Balance. Let your students know how you ground and balance your life. Encourage them to find their balance.

Practice together. Set timers and work hard on a subject then take a two minute mindfulness break. 

5. Celebrate with Students. Celebrate the small wins. Let the class know when a student is doing well. Have a 10 second party. Dance it out and then get back at it. 

Reward all students for one student's success. Make every moment one to remember.

We can help our students and ourselves finish strong the mindful way.
We will help our students and ourselves finish strong the mindful way.
We are helping our students and ourselves finish strong the mindful way. 

Wednesday, May 24, 2023

What's on Your Bucket List

This time of year our students are ready to be done with school. Let's be honest, so are we. It can be hard to remain focused and on task. The weather is nice and sitting inside is the last thing most of us want to do. 

Let's take some time this week to create an End of the Year Mindfulness Bucket List

Think about the mindfulness activities you've tired and love, those you want to try and haven't, and even those that were challenging and a deserve a second chance. What is making it on your bucket list?

I'll start a list and you jump in and share more. Let's Fill a Bucket List with Mindfulness!

1. Kindness Day: Have students do one kind thing for someone. Journal about it.

2. Take a mindful clean up walk. The playground needs some care from time to time.

3. Sit outside and notice the colors, sounds, and smells.

4. Set a water drinking goal for you class. Have a challenge.

5. Set a healthy food only day. Make it fun!

6. Take Inner Explorer outside. Grab your computer and hit the courtyard.

7. #5 can also be used as a mindful eating time. Talk about how to eat mindfully. There was a blog on mindful eat a couple of years ago.

8. Review old mindfulness blogs. Read one you missed. Reread one you liked. Remind yourself of something that you needed to hear and helped.

9.Mindful movement. Try yoga. Alo Gives is a great site with yoga mindfulness for kids. I used this for mindfulness session when we were virtual and the kids enjoyed it.

10. Feelings day. Review the mood meter. Check in on current mood and feelings regarding summer break. 

11. Set summer goals (wishes). Mindfulness goals. Learning goals. Personal goals.

12. Gratitude lists. Start and/or end your days with some gratitude.

13. Mindful silence. You can do it. Set a time for a minute or two of reflective silence. 

14. Journal. Write a prompt on the board. Make it fun. Make it meaningful. 

15. Read a fun book to your class. 

Remember mindfulness is about paying attention on purpose to the current moment/feeling without judgement. Get creative with how you help yourself and your students be in the moment.




 

Thursday, May 18, 2023

Tech Free Time is Mindfully Developing Students

 Technology is great. I used it to research my information for this, and every blog I write. There is nothing wrong with using a screen. Social media can help us stay connected with friends and family who do not live near us. People share tips, tricks, and helpful hints all over various platforms. We have benefited from the growth of technology. However, science teaches us that for every force there is an equal and opposite force. The same is true when it comes to screen, technology, and social media.

A quick google search, "Technology and Children's Brains" and you will find information from; Harvard, Ohio State, Pepperdine, and more. These peer reviewed scholarly articles will inform that some technology use is good, but too much use is dangerous. 

Our brains and the brains of our students need tech free time.

Think about all of the screen time there is involved in testing, Lexia, Dreambox, and Technology class. When we are rewarding students, giving students a break, and not doing active work, we must encourage tech free times. Instead of an electronics day, have a; mindfulness day, a kindness day, a board game day, a friendship building day, a favorite book day, or an outdoor clean up day. 

Pepperdine.edu shares a list of 5 negative aspects of too much screen time.

1. It changes the structure of the brain. It alters and reduces attention span.               

2. Reduces physical activity. 

3. Technology triggers the use of the pleasure center of the brain. Too much technology wears out the pleasure center and creates a need for bigger stimuli.

4. Reduces memory.

5. Reduces sleep.

Ohio State University also shared their list of reasons we should reduce the time our students spend on a screen.

1. Harms attention. (seems to be a theme....screens reduce attention span)

2. Reduces the ability to self-sooth and self-regulate (and we wonder why our students explode so often...they do not have the ability to calm themselves down)

3. Increases aggression (anger up and ability to calm down is down)

4. Stagnates physical activity

5. Hurts school performance

6. Limits interpersonal skills 

7. Affects emotional development

If you notice the lists have similarities. This tells us to pay attention and start working toward fixing this problem. 

Harvard medical school has also shared their finding regarding children and technology. 

Harvard reports that children need boredom and the opportunity to let their minds wander. This creates the space and time for creativity. Harvard uses the word "Impoverished" when they talk about the brain and development as it relates to screen time. Screens create impoverished brains as it relates to the development. 

This week we had representatives from Inner Explorer come to our school. One of the things that they shared out stuck with me. I love learning about the brain and being reminded of things I have previously learned about and made not have thought about lately. One such thing I was reminded of this week was synaptic pruning and how our children are literally having important parts of their brains pruned away from lack of use. Due to the over use of the amygdala our students are slowly having parts of their prefrontal cortex pruned away. (Mindfulness can help change this!!) 

In my research this past week I also stumbled across a video regarding ADD/ADHD. In the video a doctor shared all of the things he would not do if he had ADD/ADHD. One of the things he mentioned was spending too much time on a screen.

The doctor went on to share that screens heighten ADD/ADHD symptoms. He also shared that screens addict you and steal dopamine. This reflects nicely on what we previously learned from Pepperdine and OSU. Dopamine is our happy brain chemical. Screens create a need for more and more because we have worn out the pleasure center. Using a screen uses up our dopamine. 

The doctor then called ADD/ADHD basically a Dopamine Deficit Disorder. Those with ADD and ADHD already are low on dopamine. A screen takes what little they have left. These friends are then going to need more stimuli to create more dopamine. (This is when we see them ramping up behaviors) 

Our brains do not fully develop until about age 25. Due to this our students lack the development of the control center and thus they struggle and cannot shut off the obsessive behaviors created when screens trigger the reward center of the brain.

Knowing that the majority of our students will head home and sit on a screen the rest of the night we should take great effort to create a space to help them develop the logic center of their brains.

Mindfulness is a great way to strength the brain. It also calms the body. It will help our students in a great tech free space. Even using Inner Explorer can be done without the screen on and just listening to the sounds.

Get creative in class and create a space to grow and learn.

One last thought to leave you with this week. A great many of our students have smart phones. This is harming mental health. Another great reason to have tech free days in class. 







Tuesday, May 9, 2023

Sustainably Optimistic and Grateful

 "With gratitude optimism is sustainable." -Michael J Fox

                                          


Have you been lacking optimism lately? The end of the school year can drag. Testing can be challenging. You can lose your positive outlook on school, students, or even life. 

Thankfully we have a great way to help us reorganize our thinking. Gratitude Mindfulness.

In case reading his words didn't hit you with profound introspection, listen here - Find Something To Be Grateful For

This is a lesson we all need to learn and then pass along to our students. We have the ability to dig deep into gratitude and embody it daily. All it takes is a gratitude mindfulness practice.

I have shared about this mindfulness in the past, but it is always worth revisiting to remind us to reframe and refocus our thinking.

In a 2003 article Psychology Today shared information regarding our brains, the negative bias, and what it takes to create space for the positive.

The article started by sharing a study conducted by John Cacioppo, PhD. While Cacioppo was at Ohio State he conducted a study in which participants were shown positive pictures and negative pictures. The brain was watched during this time to see neurological reactions. 

This study concluded that our brains show a greater surge of electrical activity and a stronger response toward what is perceived as negative. From this information it was also observed that the negative more heavily influenced attitudes of participants. 

Let's take a moment to think about what this means in a school setting. 

When something negative occurs brains are more readily attentive and reactive. Our students see others acting out, hear adults yelling, and thus their brains are on the negative path....and so is their attitude.

The Psychology Today article goes on to talk about multiple studies replicating the findings of Cacioppo. It has been discovered that what we need is to find that atmosphere needed between the negative and positive to help rewire the brain toward the positive. We need to find the balance. Our brains were hardwired toward the negative for survival purposes. We cannot undo this, but we can help change some wiring to see more positive.

In a study on marriage and sustainability, researchers found what they now call the magic ratio. If the magic ratio is utilized in a relationship, the relationship has a higher survival rate. The magic ratio is 5-1. 

We need 5 positive interactions for every 1 negative interaction. 

Other studies looked at the magic ratio outside of a romantic relationship and found that the 5-1 continues to be what our brains need to find the right atmosphere between negative and positive.

Think about what this might mean with your classes. What about that one student who is always in trouble? What about that one student you do not connect well with and struggle to see the positive?

What might it look like if you made sure you followed up with 5 positive interactions for every 1 negative interaction with this student?

We can use a Gratitude Mindfulness to help us with rewiring our own brains to see the positive. We can then use the magic ratio to create the atmosphere needed to help positivity thrive. 

A basic gratitude mindfulness practice asks us to notice at least 3 good things each day. Once we notice them, affirm them. Say them out loud or write them down. Finally, savor at least one. Pick one and think about all the senses involved in this gratitude. Think about what made this your gratitude. Savor the moment, place, or person.

Many gratitude practices will tell you to end each night with your gratitude. I personally start each morning with mine. I write out my gratitude as I sit alone in my dinning room sipping my morning coffee. Before anyone else is awake I savor the positives from the previous day and I think about the good that is to come. I like to rewire my brain for the positive before I enter school. I prepare my brain to be ready to see the good in our students. 

Can you practice a gratitude mindfulness today?
Can you practice the magic ratio?

Will your gratitude grow your optimism?


Thursday, May 4, 2023

Grow in the Peace of Silence


People writing songs that voices never shareNo one daredDisturb the sound of silence - Simon and Garfunkel 

 There is something mysterious about silence. It can be uncomfortable but it can also be an escape. We are bombarded with so many sounds all day long. The copy machine (maybe), students, cars, videos, phones, feet (running), etc. It can become a sound sensory overload. 

The picture above really connected with me and my mindfulness. Growth is silent. Destruction is noisy. 

If we think about this in relation to our students we can begin to ask ourselves if our classroom is filled with growth or destruction.

More than 2,500 years ago Buddhist monks began a practice called, unguided meditation, which essentially was what today we call silent mindfulness.

When we practice intentional silence we began to gain the ability to cultivate awareness of our bodies and where our minds wonder and lead us.

According to Healthline.com a practice of silent mindfulness can foster calm, clarity, and acceptance. We can learn to take ownership of our thoughts and where our thoughts lead us.

As we already know, but has been presented again to us in a 2017 research review, we know that mindfulness like silent meditation can:
*lower anxiety, depress, and stress
*increase empath
*boost attention and focus
*improve sleep and overall mood

Also in another 2012 review it was presented, sitting in silence can help us learn to better regulate our emotions.

Growth is silent.
Emotional regulation comes from silence.
Our health overall is better from silence.

Inner Explorer has mindful meditations to help us and our students build the ability to sit with and in silence. I have had the pleasure of watching a kindergarten class fully engage in three minutes of silence.

Embracing a  practice of silence can help us prepare whatever task we have next. Silence can help you evaluate your thoughts. Not all thoughts are true. We often are caught in deep rumination. Our minds can misremember. Our brains are programed in emotional default mode. Sitting with silence can help us reprogram our brains to utilize logic.

Try an Inner Explorer silence mindfulness. Prepare your students for the discomfort and encourage them to explore their minds and accept the moment without judgement. Allow thoughts to come and go. Sit with them. Notice them. Maybe even journal them. 

Silence can bring clarity and understanding. Give it a try.