Today, during the remembrance service, there was
silence.
It was a joy to behold.
Having worked as the Head of School for 18 months
with the starting point of 'Special Measures', silence was a rarity. In
between staff managing low level behaviour (the whispering, the clicking, the
rocking, the silly noises, the calling out, and so on) and the teachers
filling the air with constant (and relentless) positive praise, it had
become a wall of sound. A place in which silence meant something was wrong. The
sharp intake of breath that meant something awful had happened, the split
second of fearful calm, before the inevitable storm.
Our team have worked incredibly hard to
consistently and calmly implement a robust and simple behaviour plan. The drip,
drip, drip of the same routines, the same structure, the same outcomes. Boring?
Yes. Repetitive? Yes. Effective? Yes. Our aim is to make every child feel
like an equal, based on mutual respect and fairness. Children that struggled?
We provided them the tools and strategies to meet our expectations.
Today, the silence wasn't just a school that was participating
in an order of service to remember and respect our soldiers, both past and
present. It was a school full of pupils that could finally give respect to
themselves and others, willingly. Pupils that could finally understand
that silence isn't just about conformity, but an opportunity to reflect,
embrace, consolidate and give space to their own thoughts.
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