The Use of Transactional Analysis in Secondary Education: a Case Study

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The Use of Transactional Analysis in Secondary Education: a Case Study Stuart, Kaz (Karen) and Algar, Ali (2011) The use of Transactional Analysis in secondary education: a case study. Teacher Education Advancement Network Journal (TEAN), 3 (1). Downloaded from: http://insight.cumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/1368/ Usage of any items from the University of Cumbria’s institutional repository ‘Insight’ must conform to the following fair usage guidelines. Any item and its associated metadata held in the University of Cumbria’s institutional repository Insight (unless stated otherwise on the metadata record) may be copied, displayed or performed, and stored in line with the JISC fair dealing guidelines (available here) for educational and not-for-profit activities provided that • the authors, title and full bibliographic details of the item are cited clearly when any part of the work is referred to verbally or in the written form • a hyperlink/URL to the original Insight record of that item is included in any citations of the work • the content is not changed in any way • all files required for usage of the item are kept together with the main item file. You may not • sell any part of an item • refer to any part of an item without citation • amend any item or contextualise it in a way that will impugn the creator’s reputation • remove or alter the copyright statement on an item. The full policy can be found here. Alternatively contact the University of Cumbria Repository Editor by emailing [email protected]. The use of Transactional Analysis in Secondary Education: A Case Study Authors: Karen Stuart, Ali Agar Contact Details: Karen Stuart Karen Stuart (Research Practice Lead) Brathay Trust Knowledge Transfer Partnership Clappersgate Ambleside Cumbria LA22 0HP [email protected] Ali Alger Partnership Development Manager Brathay Trust Clappersgate Ambleside Cumbria LA22 0HP [email protected] Citation: Stuart, K. and Alger, A. (2011) ‘The use of Transactional Analysis in Secondary Education: A Case Study’ Tean Journal 3 (1) September [Online]. Available at: http://bit.ly/xMlqKB (Accessed 01 September 2011). The use of Transactional Analysis in Secondary Education: A Case Study Authors: Karen Stuart, Ali Agar Abstract This paper presents the findings of a case study on the use of Transactional Analysis (TA) in schools in England. The paper gives a brief overview of TA and its relevance to secondary education – for pupils, teachers and school improvement. TA is a field of psychology that looks at the ‘transactions’ that go on between people when they communicate. Self-awareness and understanding of others enables individuals and groups to develop effective and powerful communication and a better climate in the workplace. This paper goes on to present the findings of the case study on teaching TA to children and young people from 11 – 25 and their teachers. We have found that children, young people and teachers with TA skills have better self-awareness, increased understanding of others and as a consequence better relationships and can demonstrate impact on attendance, attainment, personal and professional lives and school climate overall. We conclude with recommendations for practice. Keywords Self-awareness; communication; emotional; attendance; attainment. Citation: 2 Stuart, K. and Alger, A. (2011) ‘The use of Transactional Analysis in Secondary Education: A Case Study’ Tean Journal 3 (1) September [Online]. Available at: http://bit.ly/xMlqKB (Accessed 01 September 2011). Introduction Context The Education Secretary of the Coalition government in England, Michael Gove (2011) announced that ‘bad’ behaviour in schools had reached ‘critical levels’ as figures showed that 250 children are excluded daily from London schools for disruptive behaviour. Schools have tried a range of methods – hard line tactics including isolation areas, sanctions and exclusions and softer tactics including nurture groups, pastoral support and personalised learning. The figures would indicate that these are not altogether successful. The Government approach is to increase the powers that schools have to tackle ‘bad’ behaviour as outlined in the 2011 Education Act (DfES, 2011) which includes measures to tackle bad behaviour by giving teachers and schools power to: search for any item banned by the school rules; expel violent pupils; impose detentions; and protect teachers from pupils telling lies. Where schools fail to address behaviour, the Bill has: increased the Secretary of State’s powers to intervene; has introduced smarter school inspections focusing only on four core elements of schools; and now measures our education system against the best in the world. The previous government, New Labour (1997-2010), developed Social and Emotional Aspects of Learning (SEAL)1 as an explicit strategy to improve attendance and behaviour through explicit teaching of emotional literacy. Citation: 3 Stuart, K. and Alger, A. (2011) ‘The use of Transactional Analysis in Secondary Education: A Case Study’ Tean Journal 3 (1) September [Online]. Available at: http://bit.ly/xMlqKB (Accessed 01 September 2011). However, the Coalition government has introduced measures which speak of a rejection of ‘softer’ approaches which develop intrinsic motivation for school attendance and attainment. Examples of this would be a reversal of the Every Child Matters (ECM) agenda which put the child at the centre, the enhancement of teachers’ powers to exclude pupils, and increased rights to detain pupils without first notifying parents (DfES, 2004). These actions speak of a rejection of ‘softer’ approaches, despite an evidence base that showed SEAL effective (Hallam, Rhamie and Shaw, 2006; Collaborative for Academic, Social and Emotional Learning, 2011; Weare, 2003). This context is problematic. The authors posit that behaviour is not ‘bad’, it all has a function for the individual enacting it – disturbing lessons may for example be a way of gaining attention for a neglected child, violence may be an expression of trauma that the child is experiencing out of school, bullying may empower an otherwise helpless and powerless child with self-esteem. These behaviours over time become patterns that provide some certainty and stability for the individual and great frustration for those around them. Whilst there are negative consequences to the behaviour, it is unhelpful to label the behaviour or the child as ‘bad’. More punitive approaches will not necessarily reduce this disruptive behaviour as it does not tackle the root causes of the problem. This does not mean that we endorse, or ignore disruptive, or negative behaviour, it means that we have a humanistic and holistic rather than ‘zero tolerance’ approach where the policy or practice of not tolerating undesirable behaviour in any way is advocated. Sanctioning schools for failing to punish ‘bad’ kids adds 1 SEAL available online at: http://www.lancsngfl.ac.uk/nationalstrategy/ks3/behaveattend/index.php?category_id=37&s=!B12 1cf29d70ec8a3d54a33343010cc2 (Accessed 27 July 2011). Citation: 4 Stuart, K. and Alger, A. (2011) ‘The use of Transactional Analysis in Secondary Education: A Case Study’ Tean Journal 3 (1) September [Online]. Available at: http://bit.ly/xMlqKB (Accessed 01 September 2011). fuel to the flames. So what will work? This is the problem space that we chose to address in a positive way. Claxton (2010:184) is clear that; ‘Schools must change. The case is overwhelming. It is education’s core responsibility to prepare young people for the future, and it is failing in that duty’. He claims that children leave school ‘with a smattering of certificates and a strong feeling of not having been adequately prepared for the rigours and complexities of life’. Whilst some studies position the acquisition of social and emotional skills of equal or greater important than cognitive skills, Margo and Sodha (2007) argue persuasively that cognitive skills, to some extent, go hand in hand with social skills – as each area of ‘self awareness’ and ‘understanding’ requires some cognitive processing. The Institute of Public Policy Research (IPPR, 2008) compared longitudinal studies from 1958 and 1970 and found that ‘in just over a decade, personal and social skills became 33 times more important in determining relative life chances’. .The same study reported that an ability for application at the age of 10 has a bigger impact on earnings by the age of 30 than ability in maths. By studying the same data, Margo and Sodha (2008:6) concluded that in 1970 future wellbeing was four and a half times more dependent on emotional well-being than in 1958. More recently, the DCSF (2010:13) found that ‘if young people from the poorest families had the attitudes and behaviours of their peers form the richest families that would narrow the GCSE attainment gap by 5 percentage points’. IPPR (2008:38) linked poor psychological well-being at age 10 to poor outcomes at age 16. Fenstein (2010) and Carneiro et al (2007) went on to show that academic improvement benefitted the most able, but personal and social development benefitted the least able from the lowest social class backgrounds. Social and Citation: 5 Stuart, K. and Alger, A. (2011) ‘The use of Transactional Analysis in Secondary Education: A Case Study’ Tean Journal 3 (1) September [Online]. Available at: http://bit.ly/xMlqKB (Accessed 01 September 2011). emotional skill development can thus be seen as one approach to ‘narrowing the gap’ in outcomes and creating social equality. .There is a wealth of evidence to suggest that social and emotional skill are more open to development than academic skills during adolescent years (Blackmore et al., 2006) giving weight to the argument for their value in secondary schooling. The findings from our small scale study support the view that emotional development is very useful for young people and professionals working with them. There are powerful critics of developing emotional literacy in schools. Furedi (2009:166) and Ecclestone and Hayes (2009:155) point out that the neo-liberal policy context was encouraging everyday feelings of uncertainty and vulnerability, and creating the sense that such conditions are treatable by schools.
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