ABSTRACT

The role of therapy in schools is a topic that has been significantly under-researched and often overlooked. Considering the number of students in full-time education with serious emotional and behavioural difficulties, the skills and tricks used by therapists can be usefully passed on to teachers in the classroom.

This book traces a substantial four-year project that applied the principles of therapeutic education in one school setting and exposed how current educational contexts actually contribute to disaffection and disruption of young people's learning.

The authors propose a practical model of school and curricular experience, based on therapeutic relationships, that has led to outstanding positive results in school development. With suugestions throughout for tried-and-tested strategies that really work, this book will help professionals turn troubled young people's experience of education from the nightmare it often is, into an adventure with positive results for lifelong learning.

chapter Chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

The ‘Human Face’ Of Education

chapter Chapter 2|19 pages

Behavioural Graffiti

Ignoring The Writing On The Wall

chapter Chapter 3|16 pages

Education

Adventure Or Nightmare?

chapter Chapter 4|17 pages

Who Am I?

Identity, Agency And Resilience

chapter Chapter 5|19 pages

A Curriculum For Life?

chapter Chapter 6|17 pages

The Case Study And Grounded Research

chapter Chapter 9|16 pages

Achievement And Lifelong Learning

A ‘principled’ approach

chapter Chapter 10|15 pages

Putting It All Together, Together