Prioritising strong relationships with pupils creates happy and eager learners, argues Mel Greenwood. She explains how to build and nurture connections with pupils.
One of my favourite things to do is share a book with a class of eager listeners. Great literature really does provide an ‘in' for talking about a whole number of things.
One of the most impactful books I have used with a class of children recently is Have you filled a bucket today by Carol McCloud. This book generated so much conversation and action about how to support others in their pursuit of happiness. Watching a year group of 60 running around school with notes of gratitude for admin staff, teachers, and other students is truly exhilarating. The joy that can be observed when our young people have space to invest time in forming and nurturing strong relationships with their peers and the adults around them is second to none.
This is a commitment to building strong, empathetic, nurturing relationships before we begin putting pen to paper or think about facilitating a lesson. Beyond that, it is ensuring that we are inclusive, that we focus on modelling and nurturing virtues and that we treat all our learners with equality first and equity second.
Does everyone have equal access to learning and do they have what they need to learn? Building strong relationships with every young person you interact with will help you answer that question. We must ensure that EVERYONE feels safe and welcome and wanted so that they are able to learn.
A relationships-first approach means that when we challenge poor behavioural choices, we have a strong relationship base to back us up.
I have had the privilege and pleasure of working with several incredible practitioners that exude what it means to focus on relationships first.
Below is what I see when I am with them.
We must ensure that everyone feels safe and welcome and wanted so that they are able to learn.
I want to pick up on a point from above and elaborate on this: openness. We are not perfect. We are not machines and we cannot exude positivity at all times.
That is why one of the most important things to consider in nurturing a relationship-first approach is openness and honesty. Openness and honesty with ourselves and with others, including those that we teach.
A simple ‘I am sorry, I raised my voice because I was frustrated’, or ‘I’m sorry I didn’t say hello when I saw you yesterday but I was late for my meeting’ can go a long way to not only rebuilding relationships but nurturing them also.
Building great relationships means that it is easier and more effective when we provide challenges to our children and young people. Boundaries are important and integral to building a community based on respect for one another, for ourselves and for our environment.
A relationships-first approach means that when we challenge poor behavioural choices, we have a strong relationship base to back us up. Repairing fractured or strained relationships then becomes easier because we have shared experiences and developed relationships already.
We are endlessly busy in this profession and sometimes the narrative that we hear is based solely around progress and attainment but, in my experience, gathered over the years, a real, intentional, genuine focus on building strong relationships first means that our learners are ready and eager to learn.