Attendance Matters EBSA For Healthier Minds
Attendance Matters EBSA For Healthier Minds
Attendance Matters EBSA For Healthier Minds
Avoidance
Chris Atherton
Angela Merrylees
Monday 23rd August
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• In the next hour we hope to…
• Give an overview of Emotionally
Based School Avoidance and it’s
many other names
• Gather your views on what is
happening in your
establishment: what works and
what is challenging?
• Share strategies and support
approaches across the group
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Healthier Minds Data so far
76 (27%) referrals for YP who have school attendance issues/concerns.
• 38% main reason (code) is anxiety/stress, 17% for low mood (including
general, depression and suicide ideation)
School Avoidant Behaviours
• School avoidant behaviours are very common in children and young people
• Diverse in their presentation
• Visible and familiar:
• demonstrative behaviours – e.g. separation anxiety
• persistent late-coming
• leaving the school building
• patterns of absence around trigger points (e.g. transitions, specific classes)
• Subtle:
• regular periods of self-certified absence
• any others?
School Avoidant Behaviours
In some cases, these behaviours can develop into severe and prolonged
periods of non-attendance that become deeply problematic.
• Anxiety Based School Avoidance
• Chronic School Absence
• Persistent School Absence
• School Disengagement
• School Refusal
• School Refusal Behaviour
• School Phobia
• School Attendance Problems
• Truancy
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If the list is endless, how
do you decide?
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ESBA: Also known as…
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Attendance Matters: A Practitioner’s Guide for Responding to School
Avoidant Behaviours in East Renfrewshire (in Draft)
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Risks
• Where sustained over a long period of time, EBSA can have a significant and
detrimental impact on the child or young person’s:
• Learning
• Social development
• Emotional regulation
• EBSA is closely associated with poorer short and long term outcomes, including:
• Relationship difficulty
• Difficulty mastering emotions in challenging situations
• Difficulty sustaining positive destinations such as further education, employment or
training
• Increased likelihood of poor mental wellbeing
(Kearney and Albano, 2018)
Contributing Factors/Motivating Conditions
Child-
specific
factors
Factors
Factors
at
school
ESBA at home
Systemic
Factors
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What is currently working well in your establishment to
support children and young people with EBSA?
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Break out room discussion points
• What are the motivating conditions in your school/setting/context?
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Motivating Conditions
There are some patterns which are worth considering where children and young
people may be more vulnerable. These include children and young people who have:
• anxiety
• low mood
• emotional lability
• neurodevelopmental differences such as an autistic spectrum condition, dyslexia, or significant learning
needs
• experienced significant trauma
• responsibilities as young carers
However, each case of school avoidance needs to be assessed in order to identify and
address the unique factors that are contributing to the behaviour
An inclusive, welcoming environment that nurtures
and which celebrates diversity
Proactive
Whole School Commitment to understanding, supporting and
addressing the developmental, learning,
Characteristics environmental and psychological factors that
contribute to emotionally based school avoidance
Universally high level of staff knowledge, skill and ownership in supporting children and young
people with additional support needs
Emotional literacy, resilience and mental wellbeing featuring strongly within curricular
experiences.
• Ensuring that every child and young person has
at least one key adult in their school life who
demonstrates unconditional positive regard for
them even when they are struggling.
Proactive • High expectations and standards of behaviour,
with measured and respectful approaches to
Whole School supporting those with behaviours that challenge
Characteristics and those who have experienced trauma
• Disciplinary management that is relationship
driven and characterised by restorative
approaches and natural consequences, avoiding
punishment and shaming, such as making public
examples of young people and egregious
demonstration of power and control
Proactive Whole School Characteristics
• Ages 12-17
• Young people will tend to refuse school to escape social or evaluative
situations and or obtain tangible rewards outside of school
Intervention If the young person can link with their peers too easily when they
are avoiding school, where is the motivation to attend? (In some
– Guiding circumstances this can lead to isolation if ESBA continues over a
longer period of time and needs to be carefully considered e.g.
Principles
social phobia cases that aren’t necessarily school specific).
Relational – examining relationships the child / young person has with peers and adults at home
and in the school, and also the relationship between parents /carers and key members of school
staff
Effective
Assessment and Interactional – acknowledging that factors which can be considered within-child (e.g. anxiety, low
mood, social communication differences) only become problematic as a result of the individuals
Intervention experience of their environment and their interactions within that – e.g. through people, subjects
places and rules / expectations.
Targeted – Holistic wellbeing assessment that is ecological and contextual – taking account of
home, school and community factors (a robust GIRFEC approach) – that leads to clearly identified
plans that minimise risks and maximise opportunities to change the course of the child / young
person’s journey.
Contextual Factors
Contextual information guides the scope, pace and length of the
intervention
• Child-related
• Parent-related
• Family-related
• Peer-related
• School-related
• Community-related
Kearney and Albano (2018)
Functional Analysis
• What is the problematic behaviour?
• What is maintaining the behaviour?
• What is the behaviour trying to achieve?
Academic self concept (e.g. Reading self concept scale, Motivation for Reading
Questionnaire)
Any other
achievements
Week 2: 14th – 18th June Continue to get up and ready for school by 9am each morning.
Week 3: 21st - 25th June Continue to get up and ready for school by 9am each morning.
Encourage school
Maintain daily records of
attendance at every point
success and challenge
of vulnerability – for
within the school day when
example, if the young
the young person makes it
Agree clear, natural person is experiencing mild
in. Involve them in this as a
consequences for illness or headaches – these
way to talk over what they
attendance and non can be assessed in school
have achieved as well as
attendance, making use of (coming in and being sent
what they need more
the young person’s home by school staff is
support or adaptation with.
interests as motivational better than potentially
(This level of maintenance
tools reinforcing this as a strategy
is crucial and often
for avoidance). Be
overlooked when a child
transparent with parents
comes in as that is ‘what’s
about why this should be a
expected’).
collaborative target.
Intervention – Guiding Principles
Help the parent to identify their own
network of support from family
members and friends who may be able
to help in different ways (e.g. multiple
children getting to school, job related
factors that make certain points more
difficult, positive role models that the
young person admires).
Prolonged non attendance at school, where a young person has been absent for over 1 year, is extremely difficult to unpick and change.
Underlying emotional needs are more difficult to address and support in context
Often very low willingness or capacity to change the dynamics of critical relationship at home
Again, this doesn’t mean we don’t try to support change in these areas
However, by this stage more emphasis needs to be placed on supporting the young person to access their education to achieve and attain
as best they can so that they are as ready, as is possible in the circumstances, to access further education, training or employment.
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In Summary
• Early Intervention
• Planning – with the child/young person, their family, school staff and
partners
• Individualised assessment and intervention
• Smart Outcomes: Universal, Targeted or Individual
• Connectedness and Relationships
• Small Steps (sometimes tiny) E.g. Gradual Exposure: treat each
success as a win to be developed and progressed.
• Flexibility
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• Chris.Atherton@eastrenfrewshire.gov.uk
• Angela.Merrylees@eastrenfrewshire.gov.uk
• https://blogs.glowscotland.org.uk/er/PsychologicalService/school-staf
f/building-resilience/healthier-minds/
• https://youtu.be/1s8UxUxga78