The brain behaves differently depending on its emotional state. Bruce Perry references this as "state dependent functioning." This seems like an obvious truth to most on an individual level when we consider our personal experiences. We have all made better or worse decisions depending on how we were feeling in a given moment. However, how much of our educational system, procedures, protocols, practices, school cultures, instructional design are built to support and incorporate this understanding? This presentation contends the answer to this question historically is, "very little." This session is designed to explore how we have, or more importantly, how we can factor state dependent functioning into our work as educators. Why is this important? Critical? As our emotional states shift as adults or students, the amount and type of access we have to our cognitive abilities changes. Our IQ is impacted. If student learning, safety and well-being are priorities, we not only need to understand state dependent functioning, but how we can use this understanding in our various roles.This session is designed to explore how we have, or more importantly, how we can factor state dependent functioning into our work as educators. Why this is important... Critical.
Take a journey with me as we experientially feel the emotions and dysregulation a special education student may feel in any classroom. Then we'll see and feel the difference when trauma responsive and restorative justice practices are implemented.