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The Three P's of Education Awareness training that builds T.R.U.S.T Inset Day Training Workshop Good or Bad, What Teachers Expect from Students They Generally Get!
During this introspective session teachers will learn about the three P's and its importance in education. This workshop will also help teachers and educators to process their experiences of the cultural dynamics in their classrooms and thus learn to build better relationships with all their students. The need for intercultural awareness training is being felt ever more acutely due to the opening up of new borders in Europe and is likely to grow. When people go through intercultural awareness training, they experience a mindset change and their attitude to their students and become more flexible and tolerant. “The session with NQTs went very well and this was confirmed by the verbal feedback I received subsequently. I think your input was thought-provoking and sensitively handled. Key messages were communicated clearly and effectively” Dan Dickens, Deputy Head Sedgehill School The session offer tools to understand cultural differences and communication styles, so these are no longer experienced as threatening. Challenging stereotypes and inaccurate and oppressive ideas that groups sometimes hold about one another. When teachers understand that unconscious stereotypes oppress and separate students from one another, they can take steps towards creating an environment where all students feel supported equally. This workshop explores how stereotypes lead to differential expectations, examining how expectations are formed and communicated to the students and how this affects student performance. The aim of the session is to build T.R.U.S.T. which stands for "Trustworthy Relationships Uniting Students and Teachers." Our goal is to change the school climate, especially in schools where trust and respect has broken down between some students and staff. Call 0208 820 0809 or contact us for more information "A really useful and inspirational talk. It engaged staff in some useful and necessary self-reflection. - Thank you" Anne, Headteacher - Eastlea Community School. |