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Transforming Communities: A “Vision to Action” Self-Regulation Initiative. www.self-regulation.ca. and Education Meet;. Supporting Safe and Caring Schools and Community Mental Health. Values/Beliefs and our Leadership Work. There are no throw-away kids and no throw-away schools
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Transforming Communities: A “Vision to Action” Self-Regulation Initiative www.self-regulation.ca and Education Meet; Supporting Safe and Caring Schools and Community Mental Health
Values/Beliefs and our Leadership Work • There are no throw-away kids and no throw-away schools • The overwhelming majority of the adults in our system come to work wanting to do the best job they can do • We need to work smarter together rather than harder alone • “Skill and Will” are not fixed assets. They can be influenced and increased by strategic action • Each school is in a different place in its development, level of success and sense of efficacy. Leadership is about taking the school from where it is to where it needs to be.
Self Regulation: A Working Definition “Different groups talk about the importance of the concept of self-regulationas it relates to their field. So we encounter everything from ‘emotion-regulation’ to ‘self-control’ to ‘self-regulated learning’. But the underlying or core concept of self-regulation refers to “the manner in which the brain maintains physiological stability through complex feedback mechanisms.” Dr. Stuart Shanker
What is Self-Regulation? • How effectively and efficiently a child deals with a stressor and then recovers from the effort • Ever time a child has a stressor the brain responds with processes that consume energy • This is followed by restorative processes to recover from this energy expenditure
The Difference between Self-Control and Self-Regulation • Two distinct concepts, with different conceptual histories: self-control and self-regulation • Self-control: Plato’s view of resisting temptation • Develop self-control in the same way as any muscle • Child who lacks self-control is somehow weak • Self-regulation seeks to understand the causes of problematic behaviors, not suppress them!
Coping with Complexity: The Self-Regulation Wheel Back Problems
Stress-Response Systems • Three core systems for responding to stress: • Social Engagement • Fight-or-Flight • Freeze There is a fourth, very worrying stage, dissociation, which is a last-ditch mechanism for dealing with excessive stress
Self-Regulation and Trauma • Working on self-regulation is especially important for children that have been traumatized, or raised by caregivers that have been traumatized • Shift from the Learning Brain to the Survival Brain • Chronic state of fight-or-flight, freeze, or even dissociation • Chronic fight-or-flight is extremely energy expensive, reducing child’s ability to pay attention, inhibit impulses, regulate mood, co-regulate
The Self-Regulation Matrix Calm Focused Alert
Driving Analogy helpful for understanding the subtle adjustments in energy expenditure involved in regulating attention • To maintain a speed of 100 km/hr we are constantly pressing and easing up on the gas depending on the state of the road, incline, wind speed etc. • Learning how to drive involves learning how to smoothly adjust the amount of gas or braking required for the current conditions
HYPER-ALERT/SOCIAL • Withdrawn from other students during parts or all of the day: during class, recess, lunch • Silliness, argumentative, difficulty with personal space • difficulty co-regulating • highly impulsive • poor assessment of, risk, consequences
FLOODED/COGNITIVE • Incoherent thoughts and communication • difficulty processing what someone else is saying • impaired short-term memory • impaired perception
Signs of Excessive Stress • Chronic hyper-arousal • Chronic hypo-arousal • Heightened stress reactivity • Increased sensitivity to pain (physical and emotional) • Reduced ability to regulate negative emotions • negative bias • reduced ability to read affect cues, show emotions • Reduced ability to hear human voice • Blunted reward system • Increased immune system problems
The Effects of Excessive Stress • heightened stress means child has to work much harder to pay attention • negative effects caused by falling further behind, being yelled at, having greater social problems, etc., exacerbate the drain on nervous system • leads to a chronic state of heightened anxiety
The Three Stages of Self-Regulation • Identify and reduce Stressors • Develop Self-Awareness (interoception and exteroception) • Develop self-regulating techniques, learning what to do to mitigate a stress response and what to avoid
Self-Regulation and Adolescents • Why do increasing numbers of teens have low frustration tolerance or heightened impulsivity? • These kids are often withdrawn and apathetic, what we refer to as hypo-alert. What is at the root of that demonstrated disengagement? • What strategies can educators use with such students “beyond behaviourism”?
Self-Regulation and Adolescents • What is the basic difference between teaching kids coping strategies and helping them learn how to self-regulate? • What can we as teachers do to change these teens’ trajectories?
Self-Regulation and Adolescents • Adolescents and trauma: How do we understand trauma versus life’s other challenges? • Is there a difference between direct and intergenerational trauma? • What can a teacher’s understanding of Secondary Altriciality mean for our work with secondary-age students
A community of “learning detectives” (kids and adults) • Parent awareness and engagement • Influencing the shape of the day and the shape of the learning spaces • Progressive relationship with the medical profession and other agencies • Sharing the stories, celebrating the successes, one discovery and one self-regulating moment at a time Where to From Here? CSRI: Committing to a productive nexus between neuroscience and education
Join us on this learning journey via • The website: www.self-regulation.ca • The on-line book club coming this fall • A staff study/action research group • Recommending articles for colleagues via the website • Watching for the launch of the on-line “Matrix” tool Catch the Wave www.self-regulation.ca Again, and again I was amazed at students’ positive response to having input/control in their own learning/behaviour – this inquiry changed this dramatically for my students.