“What Causes Wellness?” ~ Sir Harry Burns

This an incredibly important question in todays society. “What causes wellness?”  Sir Harry Burns discusses this at the TEDx event in Glasgow.

This was actually an incredibly interesting video to watch and listen to, it has made me think about what we really think wellness is. For most of my life I have been told that keeping myself well is about maintaining a healthy diet, staying healthy, not smoking and not drinking excessively, and Burn explains that this is near enough the same view that is held by the majority of people in our society. Although our health is important to our wellness, Burn discusses that there are so many other factors that impact on our wellness.

Burn discusses that wellness and our well-being is not only about our health, but also about social factors, and how these impact on our way of thinking and our general outlook on life. Burn reflects on several theorists and draws together ideas that they have, discussing how wellness is linked to resilience, the ability to flourish, having a purpose in life, positive experiences in early childhood and positive connections. I feel that these are all really good points, and that there is slowly becoming an acceptance in society that being well is not only about being physically well, but also mentally well. We are slowly understanding that social factors also impact on our wellbeing.

Some of the research that Burn’s discussed was incredibly interesting. I was particularly interested by the fact that 70% of children who have suffered from child abuse, or grown up in a family with alcohol and drug users, will follow a similar path to their parents. While the other 30% of these children will come out of their childhood and be successful in later life. Burns discusses that the reason these children manage to get out of this cycle is because of their ability to develop resilience – these children are outgoing, positive, bright, have close relationships with others and get support from the community around them.  I feel that here the key point is that 30% of the children developed resilience, they were able to get out of the mindset of not being able to do something, and used the environment around them to try and be the best that they could be.

I feel as teachers it is incredibly important for us to understand the social factors that may be having an impact on the children in our classes. It is also important that we know how to help children that may have social factors that are negatively impacting them. We can help children talk about things that they may not normally be able to talk about,  build resilience, give them a purpose and help them develop relationships with others. For some of the children that come into school, this may be the only time that they get the opportunity to develop and work on these things, therefore, we need to seize the opportunity, and the best way to do this, is probably through health and well-being in the curriculum. Through health and well-being we can teach children how to manage feelings and emotions, we can encourage them to socialise with others, but, we can also encourage them to live a healthy lifestyle.

It is incredibly important for us as teachers to consider wellness and the wellbeing of children in our classroom, we need to remember that they are not just our students but they are also people. These little people that come into our classroom have so much potential and we need to help them in every way we can. We should be giving these children the essential skills they need for life through the core curriculum but we also need to teach them how to be the best they can be. Helping them understand that sometimes in life things will go wrong but it’s okay, and when things do go wrong that we can build ourselves back up from this.

After reflecting on this video and previous health and wellbeing lectures, I feel that health and wellbeing should be one of our core subjects in the curriculum. This subject can allow children to think of themselves in all aspects of their learning and their lives. It can encourage them to be the best they can be by building resilience and teaching them ways to manage emotions, and deal with factors that may impact on our lives. Wellness and wellbeing should be a core teaching point for teachers, and should be considered not just in the specific subject area but across the whole curriculum.

 

 

Looking Back – A Positive Learning Experience

At this point in my life I struggle to remember a lot about school, there’s the odd bits and bobs that I remember, like the time I built a roman chariot, or made a paper mache plane. But I feel like there wasn’t an awful lot of experiences that truly stand out for me. If anything there wasn’t any experiences in school that truly stood out for me. When I look back and reflect on my previous learning it was primarily focused on maths and language with other lessons tending to be focused on topic work or other areas of the curriculum. Maybe this reflects badly on the teachers that I had, suggesting that they never quite inspired me in a learning context. I feel like this will encourage me to try and create positive learning experiences for the children in my classes in the future.

Health and Wellbeing Learning Goals

For my Health and Wellbeing module this semester we have been set the task of setting ourselves learning goals of things we want to have a more in depth knowledge of.  I have chosen my learning goals because I feel that they can impact the classroom greatly, and as a teacher it is critical that I understand why children might feel the way they do, as well as why they might act in certain ways. These are my learning goals:

  1. To understand how to best manage and explore emotions in the classroom.
  2. To try and understand how outside factors can impact on a child’s wellbeing within the classroom, and how this can affect their learning.
  3. To understand how the different areas of health and wellbeing come together, and the effect that it can have on the learner.

I will be reflecting on these goals in my first week, sixth week and tenth week of the elective.

Week 1 reflections

  1. I feel that at this current point that I would know how to manage emotions in the classroom, but wouldn’t necessarily know the best way to start a discussion about emotions. If a child was upset, or angry, excited about something I feel that I would be able to help them explore this feeling. I would sit down with the child, use a calming, reassuring tone and talk them through how they are feeling, ask them simple questions and stay calm throughout it all. However, I wouldn’t know how to start talking about feelings with the pupils in my class, on placement in first year I did witness and deliver a bounceback lesson for the pupils, but this was all completely scripted, and without it, I wouldn’t have known where to start. I feel that it can be hard for children – and adults – to talk about their feelings and for this reason I don’t think that at the moment I know how best to start the discussion. I feel that this is a crucial skill that I need to develop for the children in my class as talking about our feelings and exploring our emotions can make a lot of things easier to deal with, and could in turn make the classroom a happier and healthier environment for the children to be in.
  2. I feel that we talk about how outside factors can impact on children a lot but we never sit down and think about how these factors affect the child’s learning and how it can affect their wellbeing whilst in class. Throughout the degree we have spoken about how family structure, poverty and several other factors can affect a child, but we never really get into the details about how it can really affect the child. I understand that because every child is going to be going through something different the way in which they react within the classroom, and their attitude towards learning will vary greatly. However, I feel it is incredibly important for us to talk about the things that may occur in certain scenarios. After watching the ‘Nurture Room’ documentary, I feel that I understand slightly better what sort of things these children may go through, such as anger and lashing out, or refusal to do work. But we never address this in our learning at the university. As trainee teachers I feel that this is incredibly important for us to understand and what we should do in the circumstances where a child may behave in this way. I would like to explore this in more depth than just a brief discussion on what we might see.
  3. The experiences and outcomes for health and wellbeing are rather broad and cover a range of different aspects of health and wellbeing, and as of yet I don’t understand how these different aspects can be brought together. A lot of health and wellbeing relates to emotional and social wellbeing, but there is also the part of health and wellbeing that looks at a child’s physical health. From personal experience I know that my physical health has a massive impact on my emotional health, but I don’t understand how we could tie these into one another within the classroom. I feel that it is extremely important that children understand the effect your physical wellbeing can have on your mental wellbeing. There is a lot of research saying that physical activity can impact on a child’s ability to learn and that it can help put them in the mindset to learn, things like the mile a day challenge. However, when I was on placement in first year the mile a day challenge seemed more like a reason to just get the children out of the class, it didn’t seem like the children understood why they were doing it, they just knew that they had to do it, same applies with P.E. in the classroom. Surely if we want the children in the class to be both emotionally and physically healthy then we should be taking the time to explain to them why we do things like P.E. and the mile a day challenges? I would like to further explore this throughout the module in order to better understand how we can tie these two parts of the curriculum together.

Professional Reflection

Trying to reflect back on the whole and individual parts of semester 1 is incredibly hard. September brought about change for me, I became a university student, and moved away from home, into a flat with 12 complete strangers, and began the course that I have always dreamed of doing. However, starting university came with challenges, like making friends, going to lectures and having to understand that at university, nothing is spelled out for you, and that you have to take the time to figure it out for yourself.

My biggest challenge last semester, was trying to understand the brief for the values essay, when I first saw it, I was mind boggled, I had absolutely no idea as to how to tackle it. But eventually it became clear, after it being explained. The essay made me think about my values and how I see the world. After spending my summer working with children with additional support needs, and then getting a job in Dundee with adults with additional support needs, I knew that I wanted to write my essay about: values and disability. I felt that with my personal knowledge and understanding of how these people go about their day to day lives, I could write about it, and how things are changing for them in the world, but how teachers need to be more accepting of the ranging disabilities, and how we need to make a classroom “equal”. I wrote my essay, sent it away and waited patiently for a month and a bit for the results to arrive. But when the time came and I got my results, it was not what I was expecting, I was heartbroken, and emailed the tutor who marked it straight away to arrange a meeting.

The meeting made things very clear for me. I was informed that my academic writing was not where it should be, and that I need to work on it. This made me think, my academic writing has never been the best, although I do know I have come a long way in the past few years. This essay has made me realise that I still have a while to go, before my essay writing skills will ever be close to “perfect”. However, I know that from the comments that have been made, and the services around me, I will eventually be able to write an essay worth a high grade. Whilst also learning that it’s not about treating those within a classroom equally, it’s about treating them equitably.

reflection

The process of reflection is becoming a key aspect of my future career. In order for me to follow the standards for registration I must show continuous development within my career, and therefore the process of reflection will allow me to continually further myself as a professional. Reflecting will allow me to build on anything and everything I’ve done within my life, at university, and when the time comes on placement, it will provide me with the chance to become the best person and teacher I can be.

OLA and NOMA

Throughout my time in further education I am encouraged to further my literacy and numeracy skills by participating in the Online Literacy Assessment and the National Online Maths Assessment. These two assessments are made accessible so that I can measure my capabilities, as well as show me where I need to make improvements in my knowledge.

I first did the NOMA. Like a lot of people, I struggle with maths greatly and have never overly enjoyed it , this could be down to teachers in the past, or just struggling with it in general. Once  I sat down to do the assessment however, I realised that I knew a lot more than I give myself credit for, although there is still time for me to make improvements, I was immensely satisfied with my result.

Secondly I did the OLA a few weeks later. I felt slightly more confident about doing this assessment, but at the same time still anxious. I know that these assessments are not necessarily important, but at the same time they are important to my development and ensuring that I will be an effective teacher when the time comes. The OLA assessment was easy regarding spelling, however I struggled more with the grammar side of it, but overall I feel that the assessment went well and showed me where to make improvements in my grammar.

Overall, I found the tests very helpful and will continue to further my knowledge in order for me to become a successful teacher in the future. I will publish my results on my blog for people to access if they wish to find out how I have done, and then see development in the future.

Why I chose teaching.

Teaching to me is not just a career, it’s a chance to work with children and change their future for the better; to provide them with the essential skills they need in life to become confident individuals, successful learners, responsible citizens and effective contributors.

From a young age I was surrounded by children of all different ages, due to the fact that I was sent to a childminder. This provided me with a sense of closeness with other children, and allowed me to build friendships with a variety of people. I feel that this allowed me to become more confident in socialising with people, and as I became older helped me to realise that working with children was where I belonged.

Throughout my time at school, both primary and secondary, I was involved in Guiding. Again, this helped me make friends with people of all different ages, but also welcomed me into a community. I was involved in Brownies and Guides, and soon realised in my second or third year of being in Guides, that I wanted to go back to my old Brownie unit and help as a young leader. My old unit welcomed me back with open arms, and allowed me to be a guide helper. I stayed with this unit until I moved to Dundee, and it was some of the best years of my life. Working with the girls in the unit, further expanded my desire to work with children in a primary school environment. I know that an hour and a half a night, for one night a week is completely different to 6/7 hours in a primary school, 5 days a week. However, due to the fact I was with the unit for so long I saw a great variation of girls go through, and was able to see how they developed from seven year olds, to ten year olds, and how the slightest thing I did, could make an impact on them and the way they behaved and grew as people.

However, in the lead up to University, Guiding was not the only work experience I participated in, and throughout my time at school I completed several placements in primary schools.

The experiences I had in my primary school placements reassured me that teaching was what I wanted to do in my future, and that there was nothing more I wanted to do. Throughout each of my four separate placements I could always see minor improvements in the children I worked with. When I did see a child improving their skills, knowledge or understanding, it provided me with a certain sense of joy – a type of joy that I have never come across in my day to day life -, a feeling that I believe you cannot achieve unless you work with children. That feeling for me, is what I believe to be another key driving reason as to why I wanted to become a teacher.

The last factor that contributes to why I want to be a teacher, relates to my education. I’ve just finished my 13 years of schooling, and I’ve seen a wide range of different teaching styles, as well as a variation of quality of teaching. But, I know that to make a positive change in a person, or even in myself, a good teacher is sometimes all thats necessary; a teacher that you will never forget, a teacher that changes your life forever. I want to be that teacher for future generations, I want to inspire and create a positive future for children, and encourage them to believe that they can do anything, no matter what background they come from. I want to be the caring adult that leads children to becoming success stories, and embracing who they are as people in society and in their personal lives.screen-shot-2016-09-14-at-21-49-11

12 Things Students Remember Most About Good Teachers