1 / 10

The Role of Mental Health in Learning

The Role of Mental Health in Learning. Subjective well-being of young people, an OECD overview. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. average rank for the six dimensions of child well-being assessed. Secure attachment. Instinctive urge to attach, rooted in evolution

thuong
Download Presentation

The Role of Mental Health in Learning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Role ofMental Healthin Learning

  2. Subjective well-being of young people, an OECD overview Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

  3. average rank for the six dimensions of child well-being assessed

  4. Secure attachment • Instinctive urge to attach, rooted in evolution • Deep, long lasting emotional attachment • Affects: • Mind, body, emotions, relationships, values • Positive affect on: • Self-esteem, independence, enduring relationships, empathy, compassion and resilience

  5. Insecure attachment • An aversion to touch and physical affection. • Rather than producing positive feelings, touch and affection are perceived as a threat. • Control issues. • Often go to great lengths to remain in control and avoid feeling helpless. • Disobedient, defiant, and argumentative. • Anger problems. • Anger may be expressed directly, in tantrums or acting out, or through manipulative, passive-aggressive behavior. • May hide their anger in socially acceptable actions, like giving a high five that hurts or hugging someone too hard. • Difficulty showing genuine care and affection. • May act inappropriately affectionate with strangers while displaying little or no affection towards their parents. • An underdeveloped conscience. • Might act like they don’t have a conscience and fail to show guilt, regret, or remorse after behaving badly.

  6. Types of insecure attachment • Ambivalent – clings, withdraws in unfamiliar environment, separation anxiety, rejects efforts to comfort, soothe • Avoidant – pseudo independence and self-sufficiency, rejects or avoids comforting, unaffected by close, intimate contacts • Disorganized – no consistent strategy for comfort-seeking, depression, motor-freezing, disassociation (most serious form)

  7. Common causes • Abuse • Neglect • Addiction • Disrupted parental relationships • Parent death/loss

  8. Characteristics • Behavioural • Emotional • Cognitive/thinking • Relationships • Physical • Moral/spiritual

  9. Strategies • Reciprocal behavioursbetween child and adult • Respectful eye contact, body language • Respectful verbal language • Calming, soothing, nurturing responses • Physical proximity and touching • Careful, deliberate listening • Accepting limits - boundaries

  10. Strategies • Classroom Environment/Structure • Rationality • Realism • Intuitiveness • Creativity • Admit and correct mistakes • Benevolence and cooperativeness

More Related