Worth Publishing
vydavateľstvo
The Handbook of Transitions Big and Small
The Handbook of Transitions brings together inone book some of the key passages on change and transitions from LouiseMichelle Bomber’s best loved writing, updated for today’s demands anduncertainties. So that when you are thinking about transitions a child or youngperson may be facing, or if you have recognised that a child or young personyou know is generally struggling with transitions at the moment, you’ll readilyfind thoughts and ideas to help you. Themes include the need for a deep sense of felt safety, through accessto consistent, reliable, empathic adults, and a safe base: structure, issuessuch as power, choice and control, timing, transitional objects and rituals,interruptions, moving school, handling exclusions, and much more. You’ll also find thoughts around what thesepupils need from the adults around them to support them to navigatetransitions. Andrea Perry’s introduction and additional annotationaround Louise’s writing highlights the significance of her often prescientthinking and suggestions in the light of social change over the last decade orso, which have created additional challenges for our already vulnerablechildren and young people. Indeed, current government policyfocuses strongly on the transition from primary to secondary schoolingemphasizing the need to manage that change empathetically and retain inclusionin mainstream education. For nearly 20 years, Louise Michelle Bomber hasconsistently provided informed, thoughtful and inspiring writing full ofinnovative, practice-evidenced and practical ideas for educators, parents andcarers who face challenges in schools. Inher many books she has written about transitions in school from many angles,drawing on biology, neuroscience, attachment aware, trauma responsiveapproaches and her extensive frontline experience of working with children andyoung people. The capacity we develop as children to cope with transitionslays the foundation for our ability to cope with change and transition in the future. Some children and young people in our schoolstoday find transitions extremely difficult, whether that involves coming intoschool each morning, or even coming into school at all. In school there are transitions throughoutthe day, different subjects, different people, different styles of learning,different kit needed - together with the huge transition from primary tosecondary. This transition may be ofparticular concern to families where a child needs specialist provision (SEND),and is not sure what support will be available to them at the next school. A number of childrenand young people struggle with shift from one focus to another: or with beingorganised, with managing uncertainty and unstructured time, with managing largegroups rather than small numbers - so many things to navigate. If children are already experiencingdifficulties because of relational trauma and losses, and/or because of themany intersectional challenges facing families today, transitions in school cancreate dysregulation and enormous stress. Louise encourages staff to be proactive in supporting them to managetransitions, enabling them to feel safe, empowered and able to make the most ofeverything school offers, as well as creating a healthy template for theirfutures. This book provides practical, evidence-based help, and hope.
Turnaround UK
Writing as an ‘an ordinary citizen’ as he describeshimself, Robert Tyler presents his ideas for how this Government could betterapproach growth for the purpose of creating greater equality amongst the UKpopulation. All his new policy ideas,and there are lots of them across a broad spectrum of Government departments inthis lateral and innovative contribution to political policy and commentary,reflect that strategy. He points out that the UK Government can only control andmanage four things; defence, tax, immigration andtheir own behaviour. Everything elsedepends on the attitude and behaviour of citizens here and elsewhere in theworld. That’s why he says mutual trustbetween citizens and government is crucial to success. That trust doesn’t exist at the moment, andthose with most needs suffer the most in consequence. Tyler suggests how to heal the rupture andrebuild national confidence. Tyler welcomes multiple views and varying personal interestsas a way of obtaining better policies: ‘Weneed both a left and a right wing for the UK to fly’. His proposals include an immediate switch to aProportional Representation voting system, claiming that would work for allpolitical parties right now and is anyway what repeated polls suggest thepublic want. This book is a must for those from every part of thepolitical spectrum interested in a host of new policy ideas and a pragmaticapproach to the reality of life today in the UK.
Restoring Education
‘As the adults in school, we have the chance to be the agents of genuine change. It’s essential we stop ‘doing school’ as we’ve always done, creating one-size-fits-all, trauma-inducing systems instead of intentionally increasing safety for all. Let’s not have pupils and teachers apprehensive about being in school; let’s have remaining steady and connected as our priorities ... Fundamentally, let’s honour the need for all our pupils to be educated in school together through attuned relationships and understanding.’ Louise Michelle BomberThis is the radical challenge from Louise Michelle Bomber, founder of the UK’s leading specialist trauma service in schools, TouchBase, in her timely new book, Restoring Education. Stories of the huge range of difficulties schools face are rarely positive, with increasing rates of pupil mental health problems, and children unable to settle to learn. Teachers’ stress has soared, many leaving the profession they love. The most vulnerable pupils, already struggling with relational trauma and loss, are communicating distress through challenging behaviour which can get them excluded if their relational needs are not recognised and responded to. Restoring Education introduces an alternative, and realistichope. Drawing on their work at TouchBase and knowledge of child development,attachment and trauma, Louise Michelle Bomber and members of her team, Jennie Fellows, Louise Kilshaw, Luke Palmer, Tamsin Lotter and Catherine Michell writewith passion and clarity about a radically different approach, one firmlygrounded in relationship first, before learning can start. They challenge Headsto model authentic leadership, enabling staff to feel safe, regulated andwell-resourced in our schools. On this basis, educators can enable pupils toexperience safety in school, be co-regulated, trust adults, and be supportedinto learning. Illustrated with practical examples, the authors discussdifferent aspects of relationship, which, woven together, offer a refreshingvision of how school can be, for pupils and staff, when safety through genuinerelationship is prioritised as the foundation of learning.
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35,49 €


