Title: Loss and grief
1Loss and grief
- Safety, control and trust
2Key messages
- loss is a constant part of life
- more than bereavement
- grief responses are individual
- grief can be communal
- culturally determined
- schools can provide safety and control
3Activity
- People feel less confidence following a
significant loss - It is best to leave grieving people alone
- You never laugh if you're really grieving
- Most people get over the loss of a close relative
or friend in a few weeks - Mourners feel better after the funeral
- Men and women grieve differently
- Children and teenagers don't show their grief
like adults - The unexpectedness of a loss is not the main
factor which affects the severity of a person's
grief - If you have had a significant loss you will
understand exactly how another grieving person
feels - To get help from a bereavement support group, you
can just talk to them over the phone - NALAG GriefLink quiz
4Definitions
- Loss
- being parted from someone who or something that a
person values - Grief
- complex emotional response to loss including
sadness, anger, helplessness, guilt, despair - Raphael, B. (1984) The Anatomy of Bereavement A
Handbook for the Caring Professions. London
Hutchinson
5Adolescent loss Activity
- Brainstorm some possibilities of loss for the
adolescents with whom you work - real
- symbolic
6Adolescent losses
- Chance (more or less)
- death
- separation, divorce
- moving house
- illness/accident -self/others
- natural disaster
- victim of crime
- financial change
- loss of pet
- birth of sibling
- Developmental
- weaning
- separation
- school changes
- friends move
- growing older
- Private
- trust
- missing out on team
- victim of bullying
- school failure
- realising youre different
- failure to live up to expectations
- ugly' teenager
- betrayed by friend
- Deprivation/neglect
- child abuse, poverty
- unresponsive parenting
- lack of stability
- Homelessness
Hockley, R (1985) The precipitants of grief. The
Family and Grief. Proceedings of the 4th National
Conference of the National Association of Loss
and Grief, Sydney
7Diversity, loss and grief
- result of trauma
- historical and social factors can result in
multiple losses and a constant cycle - extensive family connections means more frequent
grieving - cultural and community connections are sources of
strength and obligation - difficulties imagining a future
- individual, family and community grief
- feelings of difference and non-acceptance by
family, friends, community and society - being caught between cultures
- loss of former or potential competencies,
relationships, opportunities
8Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander issues
- constant cycle
- multiple losses
- more frequent grieving for relatives
- historical and social reasons
- feelings of difference
- Not only have indigenous peoples suffered major
losses, but they have also suffered the loss of
the practices and rituals which enable them to
deal with these losses. - GriefLink website www.grieflink.asn.au/indigenous
.html
9Change and loss Activity
10Curriculum ideas for inclusivity
- Similarities and Differences in Fears (p 40)
- In pairs or small groups
- Brainstorm own examples to create worksheet
- Holmes-Rahe Survey of Loss Experiences (p 49)
- In pairs, brainstorm examples of loss
- Allot up to 100 points for each event
- Create class survey
- Individual students add up own scores
- Discuss help seeking strategies for high scores
11Staff scenarios what helps? Activity
- problems at home
- verbal harassment by students
- staff tyres slashed in carpark
- menacing phone calls at home
- being stalked by student
- run out of teacher release time
- new push in curriculum
- subject is being marginalised
- fall off in enrolments
- major issue between two staff members
- teacher family illness
- personal burn out
- teaching outside expertise
- financial worries at home
- staff member has depression
- racism in staff room
- being bullied by staff member
- homophobia
- role has been redescribed
- sections of staff not socialising
- staff member has a chronic mental disorder
12Four tasks of mourning
- Acceptance of reality of the loss
- Work through the pain
- Adjust to the environment when someone or
something is no longer there - Emotionally relocate what is lost
- Worden J.W. Grief Counselling and Grief Therapy.
2nd Ed. Routledge London
13Principles around grieving
- grieving is normal
- dealing with loss is an individual, mostly
private, possibly lonely process - losses rarely exist alone
- young people are limited by experience and
options - it is a privilege to be invited into the
experience of loss of an adolescent - loss threatens our sense of safety and trust
14Safety, control and trust what can we do?
Activity
- If loss threatens our sense of safety and
control.what do you do in your workplace/
classroom to help people - feel safe?
- feel they have some control over their life?
15Commemoration Activity
- What things have people done in the past to
commemorate a loss?
16Policy check
- How does our school commemorate a loss in the
school community in a sensitive way - immediately?
- in 12 months time?
17Loss and learning
- At each stage of learning we must give up
something, even if it is a way of life that we
have always known - Source unknown
18Life without lossActivity
- What would life be like in a world without loss?
- What would life be like in a world without grief?
19Personal reflections Activity
- Me
- use curriculum activities
- listen
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- My workplace
- review policy
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