Critical Information

The number of children ages 3 to 17 struggling with anxiety or depression rose by 1.5 million between 2016 and 2020. Educators trained in resilience will fortify their students and raise their potential for learning.

Resilience in Your Classroom

From a solid foundation in resilience, faculty will learn how to apply this learning to their work in students. Through curriculum, addressing behavioral issues, and goal setting, we can cultivate healthier learners.
  • SELF
    To effectively intervene with students, we explore our motivation, bias and intention. Faculty members who understand the basis for dis-ease and the core elements of growing resilience to help their students, will be rewarded.
  • STUDENT
    Developing skills for effective student intervention is grounded in psychosocial emotional learning (PSEL). Fifteen skills are designed to help student learn how to constructively meet their needs.
  • School
    Each class nurturing the well-being of students will collectively establish the norms for the school. Faculty who can embody resilience will more easily cultivate healthy classroom climates.

Two modes for promoting student resilience

Synchronous solutions…

include facilitated small group discussion, coaching, workshops, and more. Our unique web events include live group therapy, humor workshops to infuse fun into the classroom and even live events with comedians. Enjoy the video example.

Asynchronous solutions…

include on-demand video engagements on a range of topics from autism to dealing with difficult students. Faculty (and parents) can learn the rubric for developing greater resilience, will pass along this learning to students. Please enjoy this video montage on student engagement from our on-demand video library.

On-demand virtual engagements

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Class Climate & Student Behavior Part III

Dr. Jane Bluestein shares her years of successes and failures behind her win-win classroom philosophy. Learn to create an optimal class climate, through power tools such as choices and consequences.

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Class Climate & Student Behavior Part IV

Dr. Jane Bluestein continues her discussion on creating win-win authority relationships in a safe and positive school climate without depending on conditional approval, anger, rules, or threats.

Behavioral Health2

Cyberbullying Part I

Online, mobile, and social media technology related aggression is on the rise. Learn how to identify the impact of cyberbullying when it occurs outside the school.

Children bright

Dealing with Difficult Students Part I

The potential disruption of a single student can be massive. This set of courses is designed to turn around these types of students.

Children bright

Dealing with Difficult Students Part II

This course helps you explore underlying influences in problematic behavior while helping you realize what buttons get pushed within you.

Children bright

Dealing with Difficult Students Part III

Take this course to explore addressing problematic behavior in the moment or in private. Learn some important guidelines in addressing disruptive students.

Children bright

Dealing with Difficult Students Part IV

This course offers a series of progressive steps to help this student become more engaged and cooperative while minimizing the risk of further entrenchment.

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Decision Making at Work

Bias can be a strong but invisible force in decision making. Learn how to recognize biased decision making with Dr. Bell, who shares years of consulting with corporate America.

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Success Stories

Allen Pratt

"Whole School Health Through Psychosocial Emotional Learning highlights the importance of relationships, communication, and compassion for others. It presents a critical view in supporting, training, and retaining teachers through the lens of engaging and modeling behaviors that will help our rural students be better civic leaders and community members. My favorite quote from the book gives credit to the author's upbringing and modeling from his parents: 'We must experience the world through others so we can fully engage in educating all children. My father and mother modeled to me and my siblings how to experience the world through somebody else’s eyes, especially if their outer differences stirred up discomfort or displeasure, enriching all lives involved.' I recommend all leaders, teachers, and stakeholders secure their copy as they prepare for school."

Allen Pratt, Executive Director, National Rural Education Association (NREA)