Combining Neuroscience, Compassion and Common Sense
Challenging behavior is the canary in the coal mine when it comes to mental health challenges, and traditional school discipline, which relies on rewards and consequences to change student behavior, doesn’t work for the students to whom it is most applied and often makes matters worse. This is because a lack of motivation isn’t the cause of challenging behavior in the classroom. Dr. Stuart Ablon explains how student success is determined by skill, not will. This paradigm shift is at the heart of Dr. Ablon’s work and why Malcolm Gladwell, Adam Grant, Dan Pink and Susan Cain hand-picked his latest book, Changeable, for their Next Big Idea Club. Dr. Ablon’s evidence-based approach, Collaborative Problem Solving (CPS), combines this shift in thinking with concrete strategies that make trauma-sensitive teaching actionable. CPS has been shown to improve behavior, decrease the need for punitive discipline, build skills, decrease stress and improve relationships between educators and students.
Dr Stuart AblonPhDAssociate Professor at Harvard Medical School & Founder and Director of Think:KidsMassachusetts General Hospital
Academic Coordinator Panel
The Nuances of Academic Case Management for Secondary Academic Coordinators
Creating Plans That Work
Skill-Building Strategies for Helping Anxious, Depressed, and Disconnected Students Re-enter School Successfully
Understanding the Massachusetts Community Mental Health Landscape
Using Data to Monitor Student Progress and Design and Inform Counseling Interventions
Available for Learning
Early Psychosis: Symptoms, Identification, and Treatment
Empathic Attunement and Compassionate Interventions with Caregivers of Secondary bryt students
Supporting Students and Families Involved with CPS in bryt
Sustaining bryt
Programmatic, Communications, and Financial Considerations
The School Discipline Fix
The Collaborative Problem Solving Approach
Students Do Well if They Can
Combining Neuroscience, Compassion and Common Sense
Introduction to the bryt Model Intervention
Planning & Implementation
Supporting Refugee and Immigrant Students and Families
Adapting the bryt Model for Different School and Community Contexts
Best Practices for Supporting LGBTQIA* Youth in Your bryt Intervention