Wednesday, February 20, 2019
Wednesday, January 23, 2019
Dear JA Families,
I would like to thank all of the staff and parents who joined us on our two ski trips to Heights of Horseshoe Resort. The weather cooperated on both occasions and everyone had a marvelous time.
Re-Registration Packages
Packages were sent home last week. If you have not received yours, please check your child’s bag. In order to forecast our needs as accurately as possible, it is necessary to know how many students to plan for. As demand for our specialty programs has grown in the past year, we ask you to respond promptly in order to secure your spot. We ask that you please return the signed forms no later than February 8th. If there are any matters you would like to discuss regarding re-registration, please contact me.
Kiss and Ride
Generally, our Kiss and Ride program has operated quite smoothly. From time to time cars do get backed-up and your patience is appreciated as we try to manage pick–up and drop-off as efficiently as possible. Below, are a few reminders in order to ensure the safety of all of our students.
Have your child prepared for a quick exit (backpack ready inside the care and not in the truck as the vehicle approaches its stop). On a typical drop off, parents should not need to exit the vehicle; however, if you do you are required to park your car in a designated parking spot.
Placing your vehicle in park while your child exits or enters (a staff member will be available to open and close the vehicle door should assistance be needed)
Saying goodbye to your child and exiting the drop-off area quickly, stopping only long enough for your child to exit your vehicle
Please, do not leave your car parked in the que and exit your vehicle to come into the school. If you are coming into the school, please park in one of the parking spaces.
Author Visit
On Wednesday, January 30th, Canadian author and illustrator Sean Cassidy will be visiting Junior Academy. He will be conducting three presentations wherein he will share his stories, answer questions about being an author and he will teach an illustrating lesson.
Chinese New Year
We would like to celebrate Chinese New Year at Junior Academy on Tuesday, February 5th. If this is something you are able to assist with organizing (decorating, providing food, or if you have other ideas), please contact Nick Johnson, njohnson@junioracademy.com . We will proceed with this celebration pending sufficient volunteers.
This Friday, the girls in grades 3-8 will have an opportunity to participate in a Chinese dance lesson. Kindergarten girls will be visiting the end of the lesson to see what the older girls have learned.
Comfy Cozy Day – Thursday, February 7, 2019
The Grade 8’s first fundraiser last term was selling hot chocolate and it was a huge success. We thank you all for participating! We are very pleased to announce that we have already raised $500 to go towards the grade eight grad gift at the end of the year
It’s that time of the year when it’s freezing cold and you just want to stay in your comfy cozy clothes all day long. On Thursday, February 7, 2019 the Grade 8’s are organizing Comfy Cozy Day! Students will get the chance to come to school in their comfy cozy clothes and get a treat for only $5. Comfy Cozy Clothing include onesies, pj’s, sweatpants and sweatshirts, leggings, slippers, robes, etc. We hope to see everyone participate!!
Valentines Bake Sale – February 14th
As is tradition at Junior Academy, there will be a Bake Sale on February 14th. We are looking for parents to help sell baked goods on the day of the event and we will be asking for donations of baked goods to sell. Each class also decorates a cake which is raffled off on the day of the bake sale. If you are able to help with this event, or if you can send in some baked goods or a plain, baked cake for classes to decorate, please email Ms. Stark to let her know. (zstark@junioracademy.com)
Would you like to receive 10% off next year’s tuition?
From now until June, 2019, we will offer 10% off your child’s tuition (one per family) when a new student enrolls at Junior Academy as a direct result of your personal referral. If you refer a second family who also enroll, an additional 5% will be deducted.
Reminders:
Friday, Jan. 25: Pizza Lunch and Free Dress
Tuesday, Jan. 29: JA Swim team at U of T for swim meet.
Wednesday, Jan. 30: Author Visit, Sean Cassidy
Looking at ADHD With a Self-Regulation Lens
Jan 16, 2019 4:30:44 PM / by Stuart Shanker, Ph.D.
There is a widespread tendency to see self-regulation as a normative skill, akin to walking and talking— a milestone that children need to master if they are going to succeed in school. By this way of thinking, self-regulation rests on self-monitoring, self‐management, and self-control. If a child has trouble inhibiting impulses, paying attention, and regulating emotions, this can only mean that he has not yet mastered self-regulation.
Such a view can have – in far too many cases, has had – highly negative consequences. It leads us to add to the stress load of a child who is already over-stressed. This is one of the reasons why Self-Reg places so much emphasis on the original, psychophysiological definition of self-regulation: to avoid harming a child because we failed to distinguish between misbehavior and stress-behavior.
When Walter Bradford Cannon introduced the concept of self-regulation, he was referring to the manner in which we respond to stress.
According to Cannon’s definition, a “stress” is anything that requires us to expend energy in order to keep a homeostatic system operating within its functional range. In Cannon’s famous example, cold weather is a stress that triggers physiological responses to maintain a core body temperature of 37 degrees (Cannon 1932). The hypothalamus triggers metabolic processes that burn energy in order to thermoregulate (shivering, which produces heat as a by-product); and we reduce the amount of energy that needs to be spent – i.e., we self-regulate – by wearing warm clothes and a hat.
We self-regulate in all sorts of ways, maladaptive as well as mindful.
Amongst these maladaptive habits are those that provide short-term relief but lead to greater stress down the road. For example, we may turn to foods that have been engineered to maximize the “bliss point” when feeling highly stressed, which can have a deleterious effect on health if carried to excess (Kessler 2010). Children are at especially high risk of acquiring maladaptive modes of self-regulation unless the interbrains in their lives recognize the stresses they are under and guide them into mindful practices.
This distinction between maladaptive and mindful modes of self-regulation is of the utmost importance when working with children with neurodevelopmental challenges. For example, an infant who is overly stressed by social interaction may self-regulate by gaze-aversion or by shutting down. But then, this behavior impedes language and social development, ultimately resulting in far greater stress. Clinicians, therefore, study how to reduce the stress of social interactions so that the child does not just tolerate, but positively enjoys social experiences and seeks them out for that reason (Casenhiser et al. 2011).
The Self-Reg View of ADHD leads to a very simple question: Are we responding to a child’s neurodevelopmental deficits in a way that ultimately promotes his wellbeing or the opposite? More complex is the follow-up question: If the opposite, why?
The data on students with ADHD is, unfortunately, all too clear regarding to the first question. An alarmingly high number of children with ADHD are developing internalizing, externalizing, and physical health problems, which has been tied at least in part to the manner in which they are treated at school. That is, instead of their stress-behaviors being understood as such and their stress-load attended to, they are regarded as “lazy, unmotivated, slow, oppositional, disrespectful, undisciplined” (Smith 2017).
Heightened threat-reactivity is seen as a matter of lacking the strength to ignore distractions; sensory-seeking is seen as being intentionally disruptive; defensive reactions are seen as non-compliance.
Such misperceptions lead to the routine use of punishment, and exclusion from group activities that are essential for social and prosocial development and recovery from the energy expended in class. As Mel Levine long ago pointed out (2004), students with ADHD expend more, not less energy than neurotypical peers who find ordinary classroom demands far less taxing. And yet they are regularly chastised for “not trying hard enough.”
Teachers clearly need to learn the neurodevelopmental facts about ADHD and their impact on learning and classroom behavior (Tannock 2007), but there is still a deeper issue that needs to be addressed: the influence of a pervasive Victorian bias that, whatever neurodevelopmental deficits these children might have been born with, it is up to them and not their teachers to inhibit their impulses and regulate their emotions.
One of the most influential expressions of this Victorian attitude can be found in Samuel Smiles’ wildly popular Self Help (1859) and Lives of the Engineers (1862). These books present a series of biographical vignettes intended to convey how anyone can succeed in any endeavor, regardless of their personal handicap, “by dint of sheer industry and perseverance.” The lesson is that: “With WILL one can do anything.”
"The maxim that 'Labour conquers all things' holds especially true in the case of the conquest of knowledge. The road into learning is alike free to all who will give the labour and the study requisite to gather it. … In study, as in business, energy is the great thing. … It is astonishing how much may be accomplished in self-culture by the energetic and the persevering."
We don’t, of course, think this way when it comes to hearing or vision problems, but to this day far too many educators still believe that when it comes to ADHD, children must choose how they act. The implicit assumption is that, for their own wellbeing, children with ADHD must be taught that if they choose to give in to their impulses they must live with the consequences. But the most important lesson that Self-Reg teaches us is that the behaviors in question have nothing whatsoever to do with choice or lack of effort. They are a consequence of the child’s biological deficits, stress-behaviors, triggered by excessive stress and geared to reduce that stress.
It is not enough for teachers to respond empathetically to the needs of students with ADHD, which, at the very least, means not adding to their burden by reprimanding that which needs to be understood. More important, they have a unique opportunity to help students with ADHD develop mindful modes of self-regulation, which, because of their neurodevelopmental deficits, may require considerably longer scaffolding than might be expected for neurotypical children.
Educators can play a pivotal role in helping children with ADHD learn how to identify and reduce those negative stresses that they can, so as to have more resources to cope with the positive stresses that educationaffords. To help them learn – in an embodied sense – the true meaning of calmness.
This experiential knowledge will help them to identify and avoid maladaptive modes of self-regulation, such as immersing themselves in video games as a means of escaping from troubling thoughts, and discover what is truly calming for them, which by definition means restorative.
Students – all students — will only be able to master these fundamentals of Self-Reg if they feel safe and secure. In a Self-Reg Haven, all students – not just those with a diagnosed disorder – feel this way, because all receive the support they need to manage their stress-load.
That is the essence of a Self-Reg Haven: an inclusive environment in which all students receive the help they require to work on their self-regulation, in the original psychophysiological meaning of the term.
In such an environment, the child with ADHD who struggles with inhibition and attention will nonetheless thrive.
Hard-Hitting Nature Valley Ad Shows The Terrifying Side Of Kids Addicted To Technology
Dec 4, 2018 2:06:42 PM / by Junior Academy
Nature Valley Canada recently sat down three generations of families and asked them one simple question, “What did you like to do for fun as a kid?” Take a moment to see how they responded, then grab your kids and go rediscover the joy of nature.
Wednesday, November 28th, 2018
12 Growth Mindset Concepts That Young People Need To Know & Implement
Nov 29, 2018 10:45:43 AM / by Lisa Phillips
I’d like to start by saying that most of these concepts are not new. I am quite certain you’ve heard many of them before. So why I am giving you information about things you already know? Because I want to emphasize the importance of actually DOING these things in order to achieve success and happiness.