$699
Create an inclusive learning environment designed for the success of every student at our education event, Social and Emotional Development for Students with Disabilities in Austin, TX.
Systematic rewards and punishments often used by traditional school models are detrimental to students’ worldview, wellbeing, academic success, sense of safety, and quality of work. These impacts can be amplified for students with disabilities and diverse needs. Whether the students you come in contact with have IEPS or unclassified/undiagnosed needs, Conscious Discipline knows a better way.
Over the course of two days (Jan 31 – Feb 1, 2025), this education event will help you gain the knowledge, tools and strategies necessary to create the kind of inclusive learning environments where all students can thrive. Learn how to use play, emotional learning structures and connection to encourage the social/ emotional and executive function skill development needed to live the full and connected life everyone deserves.
Join us and our experts at Social and Emotional Development for Students with Disabilities and help your students develop the resiliency they need for a lifetime of connection, regulation and success!
Buy Tickets
$699
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Location:
- Austin, TX
More Information About This Education Event in Austin
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Education Events Schedule
Coming soon
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Location
Location
Supporting Students with Disabilities will be hosted at the:
Holiday Inn – Austin Midtown
6000 Middle Fiskville Rd.
Austin, TX 78752Special rate is available for a limited time – limited rooms are available so don’t delay booking!
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Scholarships
Scholarships
The Conscious Discipline Institute Scholarship covers tuition fees and course materials for one Institute. Travel, accommodations, meals and any special discount packages are not covered. If you have registered for the 2024 Institute and you are selected to receive a scholarship, your registration fees will be refunded. Scholarship recipients may be asked to write a brief article and/or record a video testimony about your experience to be used for informational and promotional purposes. Prior scholarship recipients are not eligible. Scholarships are not transferable.Helper Positions
Helpers are an essential part of our team. They contribute to the success of our workshops by sharing their wonderful gifts. To apply for a helper position, you must be a graduate of the Conscious Discipline Institute. Helpers are typically selected in the following order: Conscious Discipline Certified Instructors, Conscious Discipline Certified Instructors, Advanced Institute Graduates, Institute Graduates. Institutes often sell out before we select our helpers. If you would like to attend the institute at full tuition even if you are not selected as a helper, register separately before helpers are chosen by submitting the standard registration form and payment. If we select you as a helper, we will refund your tuition. -
Continuing Education Units (CEUs)
Continuing Education Units (CEUs) Attendees of the Conscious Discipline Institute are approved to earn four (4) CEUs through Concordia University Wisconsin (CUW) for full attendance and participation in all aspects of the Institute including small group work and breakout sessions. Attendees who wish to obtain CEUs must apply through CUW at https://continuinged.cuw.edu/conscious-discipline.html. The Institute course code is EDGP 5108.
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Supporting Every Student: Improving Outcomes and Experiences in Inclusion and Self-Contained Classrooms
By Jenny Shannon
Now, more than ever, schools recognize students’ unique and varied needs, and are seeking to meet them effectively. The sheer number of IEPs, inclusion classrooms, diagnosed and undiagnosed concerns, and specific modifications is rapidly increasing, often leaving teachers playing catch-up.
Diverse learners require flexible, responsive solutions, whether they are in self-contained or inclusion classrooms. Teachers who implement Conscious Discipline practices are uniquely empowered to reach and teach all students.
“The methodology of Conscious Discipline is already an inclusive approach. When applied in both self-contained and inclusion classrooms, Conscious Discipline provides best practices for all children. It might look different depending on the age or needs of the child, but they are the same principles,” said Elizabeth Montero Cefalo, a long-time Conscious Discipline Certified Instructor.
Professional Development Struggles to Keep Pace with Learners’ Needs
In a typical American classroom, you’ll find an amalgamation of diverse learners. Students with physical and emotional disabilities, neurotypical and neurodivergent students (some without formal diagnosis or accommodations), and students with different learning styles are often expected to socialize and learn together— and the teacher is expected to make that learning magic happen even when faced with understaffing, budget cuts and achievement gaps. Traditional practices have operated under the assumption that students with exceptionalities need to be “fixed” by withholding the very things we all need at a core level: safety and belonging. We know now that nothing could be further from the truth.
More than 60% of students with disabilities learn in general education classrooms, and a Diversity for Social Impact report reveals that these inclusive classrooms improve both graduation rates and standardized test scores. Exposure to students with unique needs and learning styles also opens new pathways for problem solving and critical thinking, and students in inclusive settings are 7% more likely to demonstrate empathy towards peers and report lower levels of anxiety and depression.
While inclusion classrooms may increase achievement and wellbeing for students, the ability to equip teachers to handle these differences varies greatly from school to school and district to district. General education teachers often lack the support of prior professional development on the differentiated instruction, strategies and devices required by some students. This may be contributing to the ongoing crises in teacher stress, burnout, and retention. Plus, the nationwide teacher shortage means fewer opportunities for the one-on-one instruction, co-teaching, and pull-outs that are helpful to student success.
Conscious Discipline seeks to overcome these challenges by providing evidence-based, trauma-responsive practices that enable adults and children alike to access higher centers of the brain where learning can happen for everyone. Essentially, the more regulated a teacher or a student becomes, the better the outcomes.
An Adult-First Approach to Addressing Every Student’s Needs
The first step to addressing the needs of diverse learners might not be what you think. It doesn’t start with the student; it starts with the adults in the room. When Elizabeth visits classrooms to provide support and insight into Conscious Discipline implementation, she often encounters educators who feel overworked and overwhelmed. Addressing that dynamic is the first priority.
“We lend our skills to children,” she says, “So we must first be regulated ourselves.”
Elizabeth has simple advice for educators who feel burdened by expectations: “Celebrate the successful practices you’ve already put in place. You are doing more than you think you are!”
Another important step is to expand our understanding of the root of common behaviors so we can begin to see all behavior as a form of communication. Conscious Discipline’s Brain State Model gives us a way to visualize the relationship between brain state and behavior. It helps us unhook from troublesome behaviors by viewing all behavior as a form of communication for us to decipher. This perspective enables us to remain or regain composure during difficult moments. Maintaining composure allows us to co-regulate with students and maintain access to our core problem-solving wisdom. Our regulated state invites students to respond with increased willingness, cooperation, and brain integration rather than opposition, withdrawal, or defiance.
Creating A Culture of Equity and Belonging: Methods that Reach Every Student
Conscious Discipline utilizes a wide variety of practices to support self-regulation and build connection because it’s impossible to learn from a survival or emotional state. The strategies may become more nuanced in a room full of students whose brains and bodies operate differently; however, the core principles remain the same regardless of the lens they’re practiced through.
Starting with self-regulation practices and then prioritizing deeper connections by creating opportunities for intentional social interactions, facilitating guided play, modeling, and instructing executive functioning skills, and other Conscious Discipline practices creates a healthy classroom culture that fosters equity and belonging. Students who feel seen and heard are more likely to choose cooperative, helpful behaviors. They are also less likely to engage in disruptive behaviors.
Additional smaller steps like including visuals in instruction, using social stories to assist with transitions, and introducing communication tools can assist in ensuring success for teachers and their students.
If you are an educator interested looking for support and greater understanding of the many ways Conscious Discipline can benefit both you and your students, consider joining us for our two-day event, Supporting Students with Disabilities: Conscious Discipline for Every Brain on March 6th-7th in Denton, TX.
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Related Resources:
Articles:
Seven Powers: The Power of Attention
Empowering Life-Long Regulation
A Solution for Chronic Absenteeism- Kids Want to Stay with Conscious Discipline!
Videos:
Reclaim Your Power of Assertiveness
Podcasts:
Four Steps to Writing to Writing Effective RTI Plans that Meet Differentiated Needs
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Here's What You'll Learn:
Big Idea
Serving students with disabilities and diverse needs by promoting social/emotional and executive function skills that lead to deeper learning.
Who Should Attend
This education event is designed for teachers, counselors, behavioral specialists (RBT) and administrators of children of all ages.
Your Facilitators
TBD
Education Workshop Materials
All attendees will receive access to training materials to print in advance of the event or download digitally to follow along on a tablet or e-reader.
Improve social/emotional and executive function skills to activate deeper learning.
Join our expert instructors at this two-day education event designed to help you:
- Understand the basics of the Conscious Discipline Brain States Model for students with disabilities and with diverse needs to foster connection and social skills and promote deeper learning.
- Gain knowledge of diverse disabilities and how they affect student learning, behavior, and engagement in the classroom setting.
- See behavior as a form of communication and purposefully design interventions to meet the needs of all children while maintaining composure.
- Identify the role structure and play has in the development of social and emotional skills in students with disabilities, positively impacting classroom management.
- Implement structures as a key mechanism for scaffolding for students with disabilities to develop and strengthen their inner resources and language skills.
- Foster peer interactions and increase opportunities for connection with the implementation of the Rupture-Repair Cycle.
- Develop intrinsic motivation and self-regulation to improve the inner and social worlds of students with disabilities.