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E-grāmata: Piper Model: Personalised Interventions Promoting Emotional Resilience in children with Social, Emotional and Mental Health Needs [Taylor & Francis e-book]

  • Formāts: 282 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-Apr-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Speechmark Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-13: 9781315175034
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Cena: 142,30 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standarta cena: 203,28 €
  • Ietaupiet 30%
  • Formāts: 282 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-Apr-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Speechmark Publishing Ltd
  • ISBN-13: 9781315175034
Intends to be both a practical evidence-based tool and 'awareness-raising' resource for teachers, teaching assistants, mentors and all adults who work with children and young people who present as 'extremely challenging' in the school context.

This book is intended to be both a practical evidence-based tool and 'awareness-raising' resource for teachers, teaching assistants, mentors and all adults who work with children and young people who present as 'extremely challenging' in the school context. In every school there are a small number of pupils, less than five percent, who take up more than fifty percent of the staff's time. This book provides school staff with a different way of thinking and, in doing so can enable those children or young people "to turn themselves around" - building life-long resilience skills and providing the staff themselves with ways of drawing on their own personal strengths; this combined with a new way of working that enables them to avoid "burn-out" when working with this particularly vulnerable group of children and young people.
List of figures
12(4)
Forewords 16(3)
Preface 19(2)
Acknowledgements 21(2)
Chapter 1 Preparing for the Journey
23(12)
Section 1
25(1)
1 Introduction and overview
25(1)
Section 2
26(1)
1 The PIPER model and the assess, plan, do, review process
26(1)
Section 3
27(1)
1 The impact of the teacher
27(1)
Section 4
28(1)
1 The conversation
28(1)
Section 5
29(1)
1 The emotional well-being journey - from practice to three-step intervention
29(1)
Section 6
30(5)
1 An overview of the three-step PIPER model - an intervention
30(1)
Step 1 Risk and resilience profiling
30(1)
Step 2 Creating a reducing anxiety management plan
31(1)
Step 3 Creating a personalised three-wave provision map
32(3)
Chapter 2 What is behaviour? - behaviour as communication
35(36)
Section 1
37(6)
1 Research and behaviour
37(1)
2 Cultural differences and behaviour
37(1)
3 Biological differences and behaviour, including ASD, ADD and ADHD
38(5)
Section 2
43(4)
1 Anxiety and behaviour
43(1)
2 Observing and responding to anxiety-driven behaviour
44(2)
3 How emotions impact on our anxiety levels (fight, flight and freeze)
46(1)
4 The stress curve
47(1)
Section 3
47(11)
1 Anxiety and communication
47(1)
2 The quiet child ... in fact too quiet
48(2)
3 Selective mutism
50(6)
4 Josh - a case in point
56(2)
Section 4
58(5)
1 Risk factors for children developing anxiety disorders
58(1)
2 Significance of childhood anxiety disorders
58(1)
3 Trauma; PTSD; separation anxiety disorder; generalised anxiety disorder
59(3)
4 Other sources of stress and anxiety in children
62(1)
Section 5
63(1)
1 Preventive approaches to reducing anxiety
63(1)
Section 6
64(7)
1 Empathy - origins and definitions
64(2)
2 The role of teachers' emotional well-being in promoting empathy and positive mental health (PMH)
66(1)
3 The role of empathy in leadership when promoting teachers' PMH
66(5)
Chapter 3 Moving from BESD to SEMH
71(46)
Part 1
72(21)
1 Mental health in the school context
72(1)
2 The beginning of a new era in defining special needs, entitlement, planning and provision
73(1)
3 Legislation - creating a `difference' and `division'?
74(1)
4 Moving from `difficulty' to `need' - differences and commonalities
75(2)
5 What are behavioural emotional and social difficulties?
77(1)
6 How does the new SEND code of practice define SEMH?
78(3)
7a SEMH: the tip of an iceberg - looking beneath the surface
81(4)
7b Us and the tip of the iceberg - what lies beneath the surface?
85(5)
8 From definition to rationale
90(3)
Part 2
93(24)
1 Who are the vulnerable?
93(1)
2 Changes in the prevalence of mental health
94(1)
3 Abuse and neglect
95(3)
4 Looking at the vulnerable through a risk and resilience framework
98(9)
5 The impact of neuroscience on our understanding of risk and resilience in early childhood
107(1)
6 Early years - the building blocks of empathy
108(9)
Chapter 4 Factors to consider in preparation for the three-step PIPER model emotional well-being intervention
117(10)
Teacher well-being: its impact on children's mental health and emotional well-being
118(1)
Forming an `in-school' social (S), emotional well-being (E) and mental health (M) team around the child: from TAC to SEMTAC
119(3)
The three-step emotional well-being intervention: a checklist for all three steps
122(5)
Chapter 5 PIPER model step 1 - completing a risk and resilience profile
127(26)
Part 1 The mental health framework - origins and rationale
128(3)
Part 2 How to proceed with and successfully complete step 1 of the risk and resilience profile
131(6)
Risk and resilience profiling
137(9)
Introducing Andrew - a `mini profile'
146(7)
Chapter 6 PIPER model step 2 - completing a reducing anxiety management plan
153(20)
Understanding what `drives' behaviour - making sense of words or `labels' in relation to anxiety
154(2)
Interpreting a worked `tension model' and how this will help you to create a personalised reducing anxiety management plan
156(5)
Creating a reducing anxiety management plan in partnership with the child or young person
161(3)
Andrew's reducing anxiety management plan
164(9)
Chapter 7 PIPER model step 3 - completing a personalised three-wave provision map
173(16)
A generic model for promoting all children's positive mental health and emotional well-being (diagram)
177(1)
How to create a personalised social, emotional, mental health provision map
178(6)
Creating three waves of provision mapping for Andrew (Year A)
184(2)
Andrew's postscript
186(3)
Chapter 8 The PIPER model in practice: two case studies
189(48)
Introduction
190(1)
Worked models - validated at masters level, NASENCo
190(1)
Case study 1 Anna (Reception)
190(22)
Case study 2 Amy (Year 2)
212(25)
Chapter 9 Epilogue: Where do we go from here?
237(9)
Latest developments and using the model in alternative settings - including homes
238(8)
References 246(15)
Useful addresses and contacts 261(10)
Useful websites 271(4)
Glossary of terms 275(2)
Index 277
Dennis Piper is a former head teacher who now offers specialist consultancy around Special Educational Needs and Social, Emotional and Mental Health, work which has won international recognition for innovation. Dennis also works as an Associate Lecturer and Academic Tutor at Manchester Metropolitan University.