Send us a text Welcome back to Confessions of a PYP Teacher and the ninth episode in our well-being series. So far, we’ve looked at fear, worry, panic, and anxiety. These are internal experiences of threat; the ways our mind and body respond when we anticipate danger, whether real or imagined. They’re signals that the nervous system is on high alert, scanning for what could go wrong. But there’s another side to mental health and well-being. Instead of being driven by inner threat...
All content for Confessions of a PYP Teacher is the property of Lu Gerlach and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Send us a text Welcome back to Confessions of a PYP Teacher and the ninth episode in our well-being series. So far, we’ve looked at fear, worry, panic, and anxiety. These are internal experiences of threat; the ways our mind and body respond when we anticipate danger, whether real or imagined. They’re signals that the nervous system is on high alert, scanning for what could go wrong. But there’s another side to mental health and well-being. Instead of being driven by inner threat...
C148: Specialist and Supporting Teachers: International Mindedness 2.0
Confessions of a PYP Teacher
18 minutes
9 months ago
C148: Specialist and Supporting Teachers: International Mindedness 2.0
Send us a text Welcome to the eleventh episode of our specialist and supporting teachers series. Today, we are focusing on how we can further explore international mindedness in our practice. This requires some deeper thinking and collaboration to make it happen. In the last episode, we explored how to unpack international mindedness through local and global contexts and projecting across time. I am hoping that this episode will equally excite you to move forward with maki...
Confessions of a PYP Teacher
Send us a text Welcome back to Confessions of a PYP Teacher and the ninth episode in our well-being series. So far, we’ve looked at fear, worry, panic, and anxiety. These are internal experiences of threat; the ways our mind and body respond when we anticipate danger, whether real or imagined. They’re signals that the nervous system is on high alert, scanning for what could go wrong. But there’s another side to mental health and well-being. Instead of being driven by inner threat...