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Nip in the Bud with Professor Barry Carpenter: How can we support Mental Health in Education?

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Manage episode 447727473 series 3611950
Content provided by Nip in the Bud Children's Mental Charity. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Nip in the Bud Children's Mental Charity or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode I speak with Barry Carpenter on important themes in education such as school curriculum, the impact of covid on mental health, absenteeism, complex needs and how we as parents and education professionals can support the children we care for in an ever changing environment.

Barry Carpenter is the UK’s first Professor in Mental Health in Education, a Chair created for him at Oxford Brookes University. He is Honorary Professor at universities in the UK, Ireland, Germany and Australia. He has been a Fellow of the University of Oxford. In July 2020 he was awarded the Distinguished Fellowship of the Chartered College of Teaching , for his leadership of the Education field during the pandemic. He has been awarded an OBE and CBE by the late Queen for services to children with Special Needs. In 2017 he was entered into "Who’s Who" in acknowledgement of his national and international contribution to the field of Education In 2022 , he was made Doctor of Letters ( D.Litt.) in recognition of his lifetime achievements in Education.

In a career spanning more than 40 years, Barry has held the leadership positions of Headteacher, Principal, Academic Director, Chief Executive, and Director of the Centre for Special Education at Westminster College, Oxford. In 2009, he was appointed by the Secretary of State for Education as Director of the Children with Complex Learning Difficulties and Disabilities Research Project.
He is the author of over 200 articles and many texts on a range of learning disability/special needs topics.) He co-authored two books on children with FASD, building on his post doctoral research in this area. . Additionally , his book , "Engaging Learners with Complex Needs" (Routledge), which outlined his research around Engagement as Pedagogy , has been further developed by the Rochford Review as the model for statutory summative assessment, with legislation to enshrine this enacted in 2021.

Barry lectures nationally and internationally. In recent years this has included China, Japan, Dubai, Australia , New Zealand , USA, and Germany. He is the co-founder of the National Forum for Neuroscience in Education. For the Mental Health Foundation, he Chaired the National Inquiry into the Mental Health of Young People with Learning Disabilities. He Chaired the National Forum on Girls and Autism ,which led to the publication in 2019 of his new, critically acclaimed ,co -authored book on this subject. He serves on the Board of the Association of Child and Adolescent Mental Health, and several other Boards related to Education and Healthcare. He is Patron of the ADHD Foundation .

Barry has 3 children – one a School Principal, one a Senior Occupational Therapist and a daughter with Down’s Syndrome, who now has a home of her own, and published her first book in 2017. Free knowledge rich webinars that support our conversation today:
Webinars:
Bullying and loneliness
Bereavement
Sleep and screen time
Anxiety
Trauma
Eating disorders
Self harm

Nip in the Bud - Where to get help

https://nipinthebud.org/where-to-get-help/

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Nip in the Bud with Professor Barry Carpenter: How can we support Mental Health in Education? (00:00:00)

2. Barry Carpenter's background and experiences of being a teacher (00:03:51)

3. Holding the child at the heart, even of policy making (00:07:02)

4. keeping the main thing the main thing (00:07:59)

5. Engaging learners with complex needs (00:13:17)

6. How can complex needs be defined? (00:15:50)

7. Pedagogical tension (00:19:02)

8. In what way do children learn differently? (00:20:44)

9. Engagement as the liberation of intrinsic motivaiton (00:21:13)

10. We need a lens of engagement (00:23:45)

11. Observation is key (00:25:08)

12. Curriculum first or maximising relationships with children? (00:26:55)

13. How can our curriculum engage able children and offer challenge? (00:27:38)

14. Engagement profile (00:29:41)

15. Post pandemic and dis - engagement in subject specific learning (00:34:00)

16. Girls and Autism (00:36:30)

17. Why do girls with Autism respond differently to boys? (00:40:01)

18. Some indicators of primary aged girls with autism (00:45:20)

19. Masking and camouflaging in girls (00:46:46)

20. Impact of rigidity and OFSTED fear (00:48:50)

21. British teaching ... some of the best in the world (00:52:00)

22. Mental health and wellbeing in school curricula (00:52:30)

23. 1 in 4 children with mental health concerns in 2024 in the UK (00:55:15)

24. Persistent absence from school (00:59:30)

25. Teachers have a powerful humanity (01:02:45)

26. How to help an anxious child in class (01:03:35)

27. Happiness boxes (01:04:45)

28. Mental wellbeing curriculum (01:08:07)

29. Sleep for mental wellbeing (01:09:37)

30. How can we teach sleep and why is this important? (01:12:25)

31. Impact of the pandemic on teachers (01:15:00)

32. Living in hope through parenting and teaching (01:17:30)

27 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 447727473 series 3611950
Content provided by Nip in the Bud Children's Mental Charity. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Nip in the Bud Children's Mental Charity or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this episode I speak with Barry Carpenter on important themes in education such as school curriculum, the impact of covid on mental health, absenteeism, complex needs and how we as parents and education professionals can support the children we care for in an ever changing environment.

Barry Carpenter is the UK’s first Professor in Mental Health in Education, a Chair created for him at Oxford Brookes University. He is Honorary Professor at universities in the UK, Ireland, Germany and Australia. He has been a Fellow of the University of Oxford. In July 2020 he was awarded the Distinguished Fellowship of the Chartered College of Teaching , for his leadership of the Education field during the pandemic. He has been awarded an OBE and CBE by the late Queen for services to children with Special Needs. In 2017 he was entered into "Who’s Who" in acknowledgement of his national and international contribution to the field of Education In 2022 , he was made Doctor of Letters ( D.Litt.) in recognition of his lifetime achievements in Education.

In a career spanning more than 40 years, Barry has held the leadership positions of Headteacher, Principal, Academic Director, Chief Executive, and Director of the Centre for Special Education at Westminster College, Oxford. In 2009, he was appointed by the Secretary of State for Education as Director of the Children with Complex Learning Difficulties and Disabilities Research Project.
He is the author of over 200 articles and many texts on a range of learning disability/special needs topics.) He co-authored two books on children with FASD, building on his post doctoral research in this area. . Additionally , his book , "Engaging Learners with Complex Needs" (Routledge), which outlined his research around Engagement as Pedagogy , has been further developed by the Rochford Review as the model for statutory summative assessment, with legislation to enshrine this enacted in 2021.

Barry lectures nationally and internationally. In recent years this has included China, Japan, Dubai, Australia , New Zealand , USA, and Germany. He is the co-founder of the National Forum for Neuroscience in Education. For the Mental Health Foundation, he Chaired the National Inquiry into the Mental Health of Young People with Learning Disabilities. He Chaired the National Forum on Girls and Autism ,which led to the publication in 2019 of his new, critically acclaimed ,co -authored book on this subject. He serves on the Board of the Association of Child and Adolescent Mental Health, and several other Boards related to Education and Healthcare. He is Patron of the ADHD Foundation .

Barry has 3 children – one a School Principal, one a Senior Occupational Therapist and a daughter with Down’s Syndrome, who now has a home of her own, and published her first book in 2017. Free knowledge rich webinars that support our conversation today:
Webinars:
Bullying and loneliness
Bereavement
Sleep and screen time
Anxiety
Trauma
Eating disorders
Self harm

Nip in the Bud - Where to get help

https://nipinthebud.org/where-to-get-help/

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Nip in the Bud with Professor Barry Carpenter: How can we support Mental Health in Education? (00:00:00)

2. Barry Carpenter's background and experiences of being a teacher (00:03:51)

3. Holding the child at the heart, even of policy making (00:07:02)

4. keeping the main thing the main thing (00:07:59)

5. Engaging learners with complex needs (00:13:17)

6. How can complex needs be defined? (00:15:50)

7. Pedagogical tension (00:19:02)

8. In what way do children learn differently? (00:20:44)

9. Engagement as the liberation of intrinsic motivaiton (00:21:13)

10. We need a lens of engagement (00:23:45)

11. Observation is key (00:25:08)

12. Curriculum first or maximising relationships with children? (00:26:55)

13. How can our curriculum engage able children and offer challenge? (00:27:38)

14. Engagement profile (00:29:41)

15. Post pandemic and dis - engagement in subject specific learning (00:34:00)

16. Girls and Autism (00:36:30)

17. Why do girls with Autism respond differently to boys? (00:40:01)

18. Some indicators of primary aged girls with autism (00:45:20)

19. Masking and camouflaging in girls (00:46:46)

20. Impact of rigidity and OFSTED fear (00:48:50)

21. British teaching ... some of the best in the world (00:52:00)

22. Mental health and wellbeing in school curricula (00:52:30)

23. 1 in 4 children with mental health concerns in 2024 in the UK (00:55:15)

24. Persistent absence from school (00:59:30)

25. Teachers have a powerful humanity (01:02:45)

26. How to help an anxious child in class (01:03:35)

27. Happiness boxes (01:04:45)

28. Mental wellbeing curriculum (01:08:07)

29. Sleep for mental wellbeing (01:09:37)

30. How can we teach sleep and why is this important? (01:12:25)

31. Impact of the pandemic on teachers (01:15:00)

32. Living in hope through parenting and teaching (01:17:30)

27 episodes

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