High School Anti-Behaviourism Behaviour Management Policy

Open Society
The Reason Comic Sans Is a Public Good
It’s legible to more people.
BITE Voices | In defence of Comic Sans on Global Accessibility Awareness Day | Creativebrief
Comic Sans MS gets a bad rap. It’s not formal enough. Too ‘cartoony’. There have even been campaigns to ban it. Whether these criticisms are light-hearted or serious - and if they are serious, that says more about the critic than the typeface - doesn’t matter because, however you slice it, Comic Sans isn’t given the time of day.
Does Comic Sans Benefit People with Dyslexia?
Many web designers hate Comic Sans, but the font may improve experiences for some readers with dyslexia and other disabilities.
godesulloh on TikTok
#stitch with @gia 🪐🪐 #philosophy #africanphilosophy #philosophytiktok #logic #empathy #emotions #online
Emerging Perspectives From the Hearing Voices Movement: Implications for Research and Practice | Schizophrenia Bulletin | Oxford Academic
Abstract. The international Hearing Voices Movement (HVM) is a prominent mental health service-user/survivor movement that promotes the needs and perspectives o
Recognising the demands of transitions and finding ways to reduce the pressure
#ItsOkayToNotBeOkay didn’t go far enough: So what will? - Emergent Divergence
Since the mid to late 2010's, the hashtag #ItsOkayToNotBeOkay has been circulating the Internet a lot. With it came the normalisation of talking about our mental health concerns and the entry of things like depression and anxiety into the everyday lexicon. The issue, however, is that as a campaign it didn't go far enough. While
Butler positive obsession
“We Just Take Care of Each Other”: Navigating ‘Chosen Family’ in the Context of Health, Illness, and the Mutual Provision of Care amongst Queer and Transgender Young Adults
“Chosen family”—families formed outside of biological or legal (bio-legal) bonds—is a signature of the queer experience. Therefore, we address the stakes of “chosen family” for queer and transgender (Q/T) ...
Monotropism - Shared Attention and Speech in Autism
Dinah KC Murray, BA AM PhDLondon,UK. The primary theme of this short piece is that an immediate aim of much or most therapy in autism is the softening or relaxation of the super-aroused attention-tunnels which are central to the condition. Why is that a good idea? does it do more than alleviate the immediate symptoms […]
(8) Introducing Decentering Neuronormativity | LinkedIn
I'm Sonny and I'm multiply neurodivergent which means I diverge in many, many ways. It isn't just my Autism and ADHD that diverges from neuronormativity but my plurality, my eating differences, my learning differences, my mania, my perception of time, my sleep, my empathy and my trauma adaptations.
Fighting back against the age of manufactured ignorance: Resistance is still possible
Republican attacks on "critical race theory" are part of a larger right-wing strategy. Resistance is crucial
“Whatever You Want to Call It”: Science of Reading Mythologies in the Education Reform Movement | Harvard Educational Review
In recent years, a wave of science of reading (SOR) reforms have swept across the nation. Although advocates argue that these are based on science-based research, SOR remains a contested and ambiguous notion. In this essay, Elena Aydarova uses an anthropology of policy approach to analyze advocacy efforts that promoted SOR reforms and legislative deliberations in Tennessee. Drawing on Barthes’s theory of mythology, this analysis sheds light on the semiotic chains that link SOR with tradition, knowledge-build ingcurricula, and the scaling down of social safety nets. This deciphering of SOR mythologies under scores how the focus on “science” distorts the intentions of these myths to naturalize socioeconomic inequality and depoliticize social conditions of precarity. This study problematizes the claims made by SOR advocates and sheds light on the ways these reforms are likely to reproduce, rather than disrupt, inequities and injustices.
Revisiting the effects of project-based learning on students’ academic achievement: A meta-analysis investigating moderators
Project-based learning is generally considered an alternative to traditional, teacher-led instruction. However, there is a noticeable lack of meta-ana…
Revisiting the effects of project-based learning on students’ academic achievement: A meta-analysis investigating moderators - Consensus
Key takeaway: 'Project-based learning has a medium to large positive effect on students' academic achievement compared to traditional instruction, with subject area, school location, hours of instruction, and information technology support as key moderators.'
Your Autistic Employees Need to Be Allowed to Ask Clarifying Questions | Specialisterne USA
Color Taste Texture by Matthew Broberg-Moffitt: 9780593538593 | PenguinRandomHouse.com: Books
An accessible family cookbook that offers solutions rather than tricks to empower the food-averse, autistic, and picky eater, with 46 recipes. This much-needed cookbook combines tips and techniques...
QAnon, Blood Libel, and the Satanic Panic
How the ancient, antisemitic nocturnal ritual fantasy expresses itself through the ages—and explains the right’s fascination with fringe conspiracy theories
Opinion: Calling for ‘genocide’ is never OK. But the real college challenge is about something very different | CNN
The House hearing with college presidents from Harvard, MIT and Penn about campus antisemitism, particularly an exchange over genocide and academic freedom, has roused public outcry, doing exactly the thing that I feared, writes historian David M. Perry.
ROGD Proponents Now Wish Littman Had "Spared Us the Headache" of Claiming a Rapid-Onset — Assigned
Ordinary adolescent-onset gender dysphoria has completely eclipsed a previous theory of gender dysphoria that emerged rapidly due to social factors among proponents of the ROGD idea.
(PDF) Autistic phenomenology: past, present, and potential future
PDF | We are now at a transition point in autism conceptualisation, science, and clinical practise, where phenomenology could play a key role. This... | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ResearchGate
(2) Post | LinkedIn
five months ago I decided to reframe the criteria for ADHD because the DSM criteria ignores our internal experiences of ADHD and it views our ADHD with a… | 31 comments on LinkedIn
Short report: Evaluation of wider community support for a neurodiversity teaching programme designed using participatory methods - Reesha Zahir, Alyssa M. Alcorn, Sarah McGeown, Will Mandy, Dinah Aitken, Fergus Murray, Sue Fletcher-Watson, 2023
Children with neurodevelopmental diagnoses often experience discrimination from their peers at school. This may result from a lack of understanding, and intoler...
Providing $7500 each to 50 homeless people resulted in a savings of $8100 per person according to new unconditional cash grant experiment
A Vancouver-based research project gave homeless individuals cash and found that this helped these recipients in expected and unexpected ways
Thanks to $500 a month of basic income for six months, homelessness reduced by two-thirds
Studies show that just $3,000 over six months was enough to fundamentally reshape people’s lives. Important evidence proves UBI works.
No-strings cash provided to homeless people through pilot program has saved lives, participants say
Researchers tracking the impacts of the Denver Basic Income Project have looked at all the indicators of life success one might expect in a study of providing no-strings-attached cash directly to h…
$750 a month, no questions asked, improved the lives of homeless people
A study by USC and a San Francisco-based nonprofit has found that a $750 monthly stipend improves the lives of homeless people.
Those who got the stipend were less likely to be unsheltered after six months and able to meet more of their basic needs than a control group that got no money, and half as likely as the control group to have an episode of being unsheltered.
“It may not be earth-shattering that providing money is going to help meet basic needs, but I do think it dispels this myth that people will use money for illicit purposes,” Henwood said. “We weren’t finding that in the study.”
The cash recipients also said they were better able to meet their basic needs. On a scale of 1 (completely) to 5 (not at all), they dropped from about 3.75 on average to just over 3.25. The control group did not budge from 3.75.
Non-autistic observers both detect and demonstrate the double empathy problem when evaluating interactions between autistic and non-autistic adults - Desiree R Jones, Monique Botha, Robert A Ackerman, Kathryn King, Noah J Sasson, 2023
Consistent with a “double empathy” framework, autistic adults often experience better interaction with autistic compared with non-autistic partners. Here, we ex...
Making sense of reading’s forever wars - kappanonline.org
Adopting a new, “science-based” teaching methodology is not enough to address students’ difficulties with reading.