Cookies
Cookies are required for this website to present certain basic features. Click to CONSENT or DECLINE their use.
Send Deletion Request
As a matter of policy, we do not share your information with anybody, and we will not send you marketing emails unless you give us consent. However, we do retain personal information, both to identify users and fulfill orders.
This form will submit a request to delete your personal information from your customer data, including name, address, phone, fax, email address and IP address. We will then anonymize your account, retaining only your order history. We also welcome your feedback if you would like to tell us more. Feel free to contact us with questions at info@chpus.com
Author/Title/ISBN Search Advanced Search
Making Every MFL Lesson Count: Six principles to support great foreign language teaching
more details...
Sign up here to receive our current and future catalogs
Independent Thinking on Loss: A little book about bereavement for schools By Ian Gilbert
Written from the personal experience of a parent and his three children, Independent Thinking on Loss: A little book about bereavement for schools details the ways in which schools can help their pupils come to terms with the death of a parent.
A child loses a parent every twenty-two minutes in the UK. Childhood bereavement brings with it a whole series of challenges for the children involved challenges they will deal with all their lives. The research shows teachers want to help, but don't know what to do.
This book is a start.
Written by Independent Thinking founder Ian Gilbert together with his three children, Independent Thinking on Loss is a personal account of the way educational institutions tried and succeeded, tried and failed and sometimes didn't try at all to help William, Olivia and Phoebe come to terms with the death of their mother.
Several months after their mother's death, BBC's Newsround aired a brave and still controversial programme in which four children talked about their losses. This prompted Ian and his children to sit down and think about their own experiences and draw up a fifteen -strong list of dos and don'ts that could help steer schools towards a better understanding of what is needed from them at such a difficult time.
The warmth of reception of this handout led the family to expand their advice and suggestions into what has now become Independent Thinking on Loss, the proceeds of which will go to Winston's Wish, one of the UK's leading children's bereavement charities.
Ian, William, Olivia and Phoebe encourage educators to view death and bereavement as something that can be acknowledged and talked about in school, and offer clear guidelines that will make a difference as to how a school can support a bereaved child in their midst. They also explore how conversations and actions little ones, whole-school ones, genuine ones, professional ones, personal ones in the school setting can make an awful scenario just that little bit easier for children to deal with.
Suitable for anyone working with children and young people in an educational setting.
?Independent Thinking on Loss is an updated edition of The Little Book of Bereavement for Schools (ISBN 9781845904647) and is one of a number of books in the Independent Thinking On series from the award-winning Independent Thinking Press.