New Student Workshop Announcement for Catholic Schools

NEW STUDENT WORKSHOP – In the Spirit of St. Carlo: Play, Pray and Stay Unplugged

Empower your students to take control of their digital lives! This engaging workshop for elementary and middle school students helps them understand the importance of setting healthy boundaries around screen time and social media use. Through interactive discussions and real-life testimonials from kids their own age, students will learn how to make mindful choices to protect their well-being in a tech-driven world.

What will they learn during this training?

  1. How social media and technology use impact the brain
  2. How social media and technology use impact social-emotional and mental health
  3. How to set boundaries and limitations around screen usage at home
  4. Tips for balancing online and offline activities
  5. Strategies for building habits that foster focus, self-control and prayerfulness

What else will you get from this training?

  1. Access to a Google folder full of aligned resources
  2. Ongoing support from me

Our children are growing up in a world that values technology and instant gratification over most everything else. This has resulted in less praying and playing and more staying on screens for many of our kids. If you’re looking to empower students to walk boldly and faithfully in St. Carlo’s footsteps, this workshop will do just that!

New Student Workshop Announcement!

NEW STUDENT WORKSHOP – Offline & Thriving: Living Unplugged in a Screen-Driven World

Empower your students to take control of their digital lives! This engaging workshop for elementary and middle school students helps them understand the importance of setting healthy boundaries around screen time and social media use. Through interactive discussions and real-life testimonials from kids their own age, students will learn how to make mindful choices to protect their well-being in a tech-driven world.

What will they learn during this training?

  1. How social media and technology use impact the brain
  2. How social media and technology use impact social-emotional and mental health
  3. How to set boundaries and limitations around screen usage at home
  4. Tips for balancing online and offline activities
  5. Strategies for building habits that foster focus and self-control

What else will you get from this training?

  1. Access to a Google folder full of aligned resources
  2. Ongoing support from me

Our children are growing up in a world that values technology and instant gratification over most everything else. This has resulted in less playing and more staying on screens for many of our kids. If you’re looking to empower students to have a healthy relationship with technology, this workshop will do just that!

New parent workshop announcement!

I’m thrilled to announce a brand new parent workshop that focuses on the impact of social media and technology on kids and families! There are two versions of this workshop – one geared toward Catholic schools and includes content related to Blessed Carlo Acutis and one geared toward public and other private schools that does not.

Are your families expressing concerns over their children’s use of technology and social media? Are they wondering how to encourage a more unplugged childhood? Do they want to build a community of other like-minded parents? If so, my newest parent workshop will address all this and more AND in an engaging, hands-on way!

What will you learn during this training?

  1. How social media and technology use impact the brain, learning and behavior
  2. How social media and technology use impact social-emotional and mental health
  3. How to set boundaries and limitations around screens at home
  4. Strategies for encouraging a more unplugged childhood
  5. Ways to build community and support with like-minded families

What else will you get from this training?

  1. Access to a Google folder full of aligned resources
  2. Ongoing support from me

Our children are growing up in a society that values technology and instant gratification over most everything else. This has resulted in less praying and playing and more staying on screens for many of our kids. If your families are looking to empower themselves and their children to take back their childhoods, this workshop will do just that!

This training is designed for parents and caregivers. It can be done as a stand-alone 1-3 hour workshop.

If you’re ready to join the thousands of educators (and parents!) who have benefited from my trainings and expertise, send me an email at alisa@akeducationalconsulting.com. Let me help you build a happier and healthier school community!

Hello Summer Parent Workshops

I’m excited to bring back my popular parent workshop, “Hello Summer: Going from Surviving to Thriving with Your Kids,” for 3 virtual events this May and June.

If you’re already dreading this summer and worrying about how you’ll survive having your kids home for weeks on end, join me for an hour of learning about how we can move from just surviving the summer to actually thriving at home with our kids.

We will discuss some of the struggles our kids have during the summer that contribute to their behavior and attitude challenges, and most importantly, I’ll share lots of tips and strategies for dealing with those behaviors.

Let’s fill your toolbox with practical ways to create a more peaceful and productive home environment that allows you and your kids to connect and have fun this summer!

Head over to my Eventbrite page to see dates and times and get registered!

New training announcement! – Building Educators’ self-awareness to achieve wellness and transform classrooms

I’m thrilled to announce a brand new training that focuses on educator well-being!

If your school is looking for ways to better support the wellness of staff members, address and increase teacher satisfaction and retention or transform the culture of the building so that students and staff are happier, my newest training may be perfect for you!

A few things you will learn during this training include:

  1. What self-awareness is and why it’s so important for educators
  2. How self-awareness relates to wellness and classroom culture building
  3. The ways in which our students and our classroom management is impacted by self-awareness
  4. What collective care is and how we can use it to leverage teacher wellness and retention
  5. Dozens of strategies for building self-awareness, both individually and collectively

This training is designed for teachers and other school staff. It can be done as a stand-alone 2, 4 or 6 hour professional development.

If you’re ready to join the thousands of educators (and parents!) who have benefited from my trainings and expertise, send me an email at alisa@akeducationalconsulting.com. Let me help you build a happier and healthier school!

Back to School 2024!

Well, it’s early August in Indiana which means…back to school. I know, I know…it feels WAY too early to go back to school. I agree! I don’t make the rules, though, so back they all go.

If you are one of the lucky ones who still have a lot of summering left to do, enjoy it! Your time is coming!

As we prepare for a fantastic 2024-2025 school year, though, let’s take some time to consider the culture we are building in our classrooms and schools. Is it one of safety, love and belonging or is it one of fear, submission and alienation?

I am passionate about building schools where children feel safe and loved, where behavior management is logical, intentional and appropriate, where communication and interactions are respectful and thoughtful and where feelings and emotions are welcomed and embraced.

If this is your wish for your school, let’s work together to make it happen! I believe we can change the landscape of education in this country, one school at a time.

MAY 2024 SEL THEME – RESILIENCE & PERSEVERANCE – Picture book list

Looking for picture books to support a lesson or discussion on resilience or perseverance? Check out one of these great titles!

What other books about resilience and perseverance do you love?

Relationship mapping tool

This week, I talked all about the importance of connecting, and building relationships, with kids over on YouTube. One of the strategies I discussed was relationship mapping. I found this excellent tool for use by any teacher/school looking to do a more formal relationship mapping of their students.

I realize that this might be a difficult task to undertake for educators working in larger schools, but if you’re in a smaller school or up to the challenge, this tool really is fantastic and well worth the time it would take to complete.

I’d love to hear from you, if your school has done any kind of relationship mapping! How did you do it? What were the take-aways?

New virtual parent workshop coming june 3!

I’m hosting a virtual event, and I’d love to see you there or have you share with your network. Join me for Hello Summer: Going from Surviving to Thriving with Your Kids, June 3, 2024 at 7:00 PM.

Register soon because space is limited. Purchasing a ticket will also get you access to a recording of the workshop, if you’re unable to make it to the live event.

I hope you’re able to join me!

MAY 2024 SEL THEME – RESILIENCE & PERSEVERANCE – How connection and community build resilience

***Trigger Warning: This blog post contains references to gun violence.***

Today, I’m going to digress from my typical content and tell a more personal story that highlights the importance of connection and community in building resilience in kids.

Allow me to begin by laying the foundation. My family lives in the city, in a fairly gentrified neighborhood that is surrounded by both up-and-coming areas and not-so-great areas. The police station, fire station, library and my kid’s school are all within a half mile of our house. It’s a front porch community, a walking neighborhood and, despite the violence that Indianapolis regularly experiences (and that we can often hear from our house in the form of gunshots), we feel very safe.

Our block, in particular, is a cozy, insulated city block with 20+ houses and 20+ kids. While the kids range in age from toddler to high school age, they all get along well and are outside constantly. They play soccer, race RC cars, ride bikes, draw with chalk, make up games, play with dolls, hang out on porches and just generally act like kids. I like to say that the kids on our block are living their best 1980’s childhoods.

Most of the older kids have free range of the block. Our families are all close, and we all watch out for one another. I know that if I don’t have eyes on my kids, another adult does. We all feel comfortable redirecting and correcting each others’ kids, and the kids feel comfortable talking to, and engaging with, all the grown-ups.

I realize how fortunate we are to live this life. I am grateful everyday for our neighbors, my kids’ friends and the community we’ve built on this block. I know that even just a street or two over from where we live, this is not the reality. I know that many people who live in the city don’t feel comfortable allowing their kids to run freely because they don’t know their neighbors or it just doesn’t feel safe.

That said, two weeks ago, we had a random incident of gun violence on our block, less than an hour before the kids would begin arriving home from school. Thanks to several quick calls to 911, police arrived quickly and fatally shot the gunman. However, because it was an officer-involved shooting, our block was shut down and crawling with police officers, detectives, forensics and others well into the evening hours.

In our family, my husband and I are very transparent with our kids and aren’t afraid to have tough conversations and answer hard questions, in an age-appropriate manner. Our kids feel very comfortable talking to us about just about anything (and they do, much to our chagrin sometimes!).

That day, we picked them up from school so that we could discuss what happened with them and allow them to ask questions, prior to them seeing all the action on the block where they live. As we walked and talked, we reinforced that the neighbors on our block are part of our community and that it’s our job to always look out for one another and do all that we can to keep everyone safe.

Later that evening, several parents from our block had a conversation via our block’s text thread about how to truthfully and appropriately communicate what happened to our kids to avoid them becoming fearful. In discussing how different families had approached, or were planning to approach, the subject with their children, something became so clear to me. Our kids were going to be ok.

Why was I so certain about this? Because the kids on our block are resilient, and that is because the adults around them have thoughtfully built a community of individuals who intentionally connect with one another, cultivate a sense of belonging and believe in empowering kids by allowing them to problem-solve, resolve conflict, build upon friendship and social skills and so much more, all in a safe environment.

It was entirely coincidental that all of this happened just as I had introduced the May social-emotional learning theme of resilience and perseverance. I knew right away, though, that I wanted to share this story during the month to highlight just how important connection and community are to building resilience.

When I speak in schools or at conferences about resilience (or SEL or trauma-informed care, for that matter), the one point that I always stress is this – connection matters. More than anything, in fact.

According to a study done at Harvard University’s Center on the Developing Child, “the single most common factor for children who develop resilience is at least one stable and committed relationship with a supportive parent, caregiver, or other adult.”

Many of us are fortunate enough that our kids have this many times over, in the form of parents, family members, neighbors, teachers, coaches, youth group leaders, etc.

What about the kids who don’t, though?

As a mom who also does double (quintuple???) duty as a teacher, coach, mentor, volunteer, etc., I always walk around with this question in the back of my mind.

When I’m serving as the dugout coach for my 7 year old’s baseball team or when I’m going on a field trip with my 10 year old’s class, I think about ways that I can intentionally connect with the kids around me so that maybe, just maybe, one day they will view me as one of their “people.”

It’s such a simple thing, but it’s so important. Although I truly hope not, perhaps one day, your student or child will be in a situation where resilience is the difference between them living in fear vs. processing through an event, choosing a healthy coping mechanism vs. an unhealthy one or talking to a trusted adult vs. keeping a dangerous or harmful secret.

Let’s work now to set them up for success later. It truly begins with a simple connection to build a beautiful community like the one in which I am so fortunate to live.

Do me a favor – I want you to think about how you can intentionally and meaningfully connect with another person whose path you cross today. And then, do it again tomorrow and the next day and the day after that.