Title: Staff Matters - MindMatters
1Staff Matters - MindMatters
- Tracy Zilm
- MindMatters National Coordinator
- School Community Development
- Gateway to the Future
- ASPA 2004 National Conference
- ANTSEL Biennial Conference
- Darwin 27 Sept 2004
2Outline of todays session
- Background to Staff Matters
- Components of the resource
- Models and concepts
- Strategies from training
- Where leadership fits
- Reflection/input
3Why Staff Matters?
- Reactions from staff at conferences
- resilience, loss and grief, safety and trust,
mental health literacy - Discussions with individual schools
- resilient staff leads to resilient students
- MindMatters evaluation
- schools with a training development commitment
among those who develop MM quickly and across the
whole school - MindMatters Plus research
- Supporting students with high needs in the area
of mental health and wellbeing
4Impact of MM PDObservations from the evaluation
case study
I got a lot out of the training as far as how
I relate to kids. It opened my eyes as to
awareness of what some kids are kids going
through and I think the more staff that are aware
of it and do go through the training, I think the
overall wellbeing of the school could only
benefit from it.
5One of the reasons given for implementing
MindMatters
- Concern about wellbeing and behaviour management
- number of students with mental health risks or
disorders including low self-esteem, family
problems, lower socio-economic background,
depression, anxiety, eating disorders, self-harm
or suicidal behaviour - high or increasing levels of disruptive
behaviour, bullying or substance use - truancy and disengagement from school
- impact of social change or social problems on the
wellbeing of students and staff
6Staff Matters a series of resources
7Mental health a holistic sense of wellbeing
- Emotional and spiritual resilience which
enables us to enjoy life and survive pain,
disappointment and sadness. It is a positive
sense of well-being and an underlying belief in
our own and others dignity and worth. - Health Education Authority, 1998 England
- Improves other health areas
J
8Mental Health Promotion
9Towards defining health promotion
- Health and well being
- Holistic
- Starting from strengths
- Aspects of health literacy involved
- Applicable to everyone
- Dynamic concept
- Skills need to be practiced
- A Positive concept rather than a neutral concept
or the absence of ill health -
- Important to think through our concepts and
attitudes to health
10The role of health promotion in the workplace
- Occupational health and safety
- The nature of many staff roles is high demand and
low control - Individual staff are critical to learning
connection - Student well being and staff well being are
connected
11Teachers
- Teachers cannot create and sustain the conditions
for the productive development of children if
those conditions do not exist for teachers - (Bishop Mulford, 1999 Blase Blase, 2000
Louis, 1998 Sarason, 1990 Silins Mulford,
2002)
12The diverse professional aspects of working in a
school
- As a group each person take one of the following
roles (and others) - Principal
- School Nurse
- Teacher
- Grounds Person
- School administration officer
- Canteen manager
- School counsellor
- After a moment to think or write down your
thoughts, tell the group about the role,
responsibilities, stressors, strengths and gains
of this role
13Individual well being
- Protective factors for teachers?
- (Based on those for students)
- Handling the demands of the workplace
- Belief in ability to cope (efficacy)
- Sense of control
- Individual disposition
- Family/personal circumstances
- Support and belonging and role models
14How can the worksite support these protective
factors?
- Your group selects one protective factor
- Is it reasonable?
- How should/could a school support this?
- Share our views
15Congruence and dimensions of health promotion
Community Organisational Collegial Professional Pe
rsonal
Need congruence between all levels
16Outstanding workplaces- 15 key factors
- Quality of working relationships
- Workplace leadership
- Having a say
- Clear values
- Being safe
- Built environment
- Recruitment
- Pay and conditions
- Getting feedback
- Autonomy uniqueness
- Sense of ownership identity
- Learning
- Passion
- Having fun
- Community connections
Simply The Best Workplaces in Australia Working
paper 88 Dr Daryll Hull Vivienne Read Dec
2003 Uni of Sydney www.acirrt.com
17The school as a dynamic system
18The school as a system of reciprocal relationships
19Starting point Reflecting on collegiality
- Think about when you commenced in your best job
or working location. - What role did your colleagues play?
- Talk to the person next to you about this.
- Collegiality is proposed as one of the key areas
for health and well being in education (and
health) and one rarely acknowledged or
consciously activated by staff management.
20What is collegiality?
- Collegiality has dimensions of moral,
professional structural support or enabling. - Each of these dimensions is able to make a
difference to self efficacy, connectedness help
seeking for staff. - This in turn enables performance to improve which
often feeds back into the self efficacy loop. - For health promotion this also means congruence
between the systems or levels or dimensions of
work.
21Foundations for authentic collegiality
- Staff room communications need to have some
aspects of emotional literacy to enable them to
contribute to a sense of collegiate and
individual wellbeing - Real conversations exercise
22Real conversations
- Where would you rather be?
- If you overheard a conversation about your
personal qualities what 2 qualities would you
want the speaker to mention? - When was the last time your job was magic?
- If you were able to ask for support from your
colleagues what sorts of actions by them would
make a positive difference for you?
23Leadership and staff health and well being
- Health and well being for the leader as a person
and as a professional - Leadership is a critical factor for schools,
important to walk the talk - The leader enabling health and well being for the
staff as a whole
24Learn Lead Succeed A metaphor for leadership
and wellbeing
Talk to the person next to you about one action
you do in each aspect
25Metaphors
- Think of the role of school leader in enabling
health promotion - Describe how you would see yourself
- Magician
- Fitter and turner
- Grease monkey
- Artist
26Summary Health promotion for staff
- A leadership model that includes Health Promotion
- Staff Health Promotion as an end in itself
stress reduction, affiliation belonging, self
esteem, coping, help seeking - Congruence with what we offer students ie
protective factors - Opportunity to socialise, discuss, exchange work,
spend time together, air opinions safely, develop
shared understandings, work in teams, celebrate,
mentor and feedback - Individual acknowledgement, development
27Your ideas and input
- Models
- Frameworks
- Themes
- Design
- Delivery
- PD approaches
28Reflection
Community Organisational Collegial Professional Pe
rsonal
Need congruence between all levels
Think about one aspect of health promotion at
each level
29Leading Changesteering, not rowing
- Make time for your own personal and professional
development - See yourselves as designers of learning
experiences and communities - Develop the capacity of others
- Find morally compelling purposes for doing your
work - Be ruthless about your time, direction and
energies - Shaw, 2002