About Team Teach
Information For Parents & Carers of Children & Young People
Who are Team Teach?
We know what a joy and privilege it is to work with children and young people in schools and other services. And we understand that, as parents and carers, you want to know that your child is happy, safe, and well looked after by everyone.
That’s why Team Teach are committed to transforming thinking around behaviour and helping staff create positive, supportive environments where every child and young person can thrive.
Team Teach train staff working in schools and health and social care settings to support children and young people with their behaviour. To date, we have trained over 300,000 people in more than 30 countries around the world.
Our approach to behaviour focuses on understanding how someone is feeling and why they may be behaving in a particular way. This helps staff build positive relationships with children and young people, find the best ways to support them, and reduce risk to keep everyone safe.
Meet Jonathan Newport
Global Director
Jonathan Newport is Global Director of Team Teach and leads the Learning and Development Team as Chief Learning Officer. He is a behaviour specialist with over 30 years’ experience working in a range of settings.
Jonathan started his career in mainstream primary schools, and it was here that he developed a passion for a puzzle-solving approach to behaviour. This journey led him to work across primary and secondary schools in the mainstream and independent sectors, including 17 years leading Barnardo’s largest residential special school. During this time, Jonathan created solutions within the curriculum design that promoted positive behaviour for learning, allowing children and young people to grow and thrive as individuals.
All About Team Teach
At Team Teach, we think about behaviour as a puzzle. We need to put the pieces together to work out why a child or young person is engaging in a particular behaviour, rather than focusing only on the behaviour itself. This allows us to decide on the best ways to support them.
We encourage staff to ask themselves these questions before making decisions about behaviour support. This can help to reduce risk and keep everyone safe:
- How is this in the best interests of the child or young person?
- If we didn’t take this action, is something worse likely to happen?
- Is it necessary to do this?
- If we wait, is it likely to get better or worse?
We help staff to think about the best ways to respond when someone is feeling distressed or dysregulated, encouraging them to look beyond the behaviour. Our training equips them with a toolkit of ideas they can use to support children and young people.
We can decide on the best de-escalation strategies by getting to know every child and young person as a unique individual. What works well for one person might not be effective for someone else. That’s why it’s important for staff to build strong professional relationships with every child and young person they support.
Over time, our goal is for a child or young person to realise when they are feeling dysregulated and take action before they reach a crisis point, to help themselves safely calm down. This is called ‘self-regulation’.
When children feel seen, heard, and valued by us, they feel safe and secure in their environment and are better able to regulate their emotions.
If an individual support plan is created for your child, you should be told about it and given a copy, along with anyone else involved in their care. We recommend that schools and organisations involve you and your child in creating the plan so you can share your ideas.
After something has happened, staff should:
- Give emotional and physical first aid: This should be the priority for everyone involved.
- Record and report: An incident report should be written after a significant event and be shared with you and others involved in supporting your child.
- Conversations: Everyone involved should have the opportunity to talk about how they feel.
- Telling people: If your child has a support plan, this should be shared with you and everyone involved in your child’s care.
- Risk assessment: Staff will decide what needs to happen now to reduce risk for everyone, including your child.
- Updating plans: It’s important that any support plans contain all the information needed to best support your child.
When something has gone wrong, you should have the opportunity to talk about it and be listened to. It’s important that you understand what has happened, when it happened, and why it may have happened. The school or organisation supporting your child should give you an honest and factual account. They should also tell you about what has been recorded about the incident and who has been told about it.
You should be involved in discussions about how to reduce the likelihood of this happening again and given the opportunity to share your views. Staff should explain what they are putting in place to support your child and share plans and strategies with you.
Our training includes having conversations with a child or young person after an incident to help understand what happened and why it happened. This helps staff understand where things went wrong and can help the child or young person to find different strategies that could help them in the future.
However, there may be occasions when your child’s behaviour is a serious risk to themselves or others around them. Staff may decide that they have to hold your child to keep everyone safe. We train staff in safe ways to do this to reduce the risk for everyone.
Physical interventions to hold your child should be used as a last resort, and staff should use the least restrictive intervention that is likely to be successful in supporting your child. Any physical intervention must be deemed reasonable, necessary, and proportionate to the risk it is trying to reduce.
If physical interventions are part of how your child is being supported, this should be recorded in their individual support plan and shared with you. It’s a good idea to ask questions if you are unsure about anything, to make sure you fully understand how your child is being supported.
Our physical interventions are medically risk-assessed and the staff we train to use them must attend regular refresher training. Our training helps to reduce the likelihood of physical interventions being used, because we help staff take positive action before a child or young person is in crisis.
We advocate a ‘whole organisation’ approach to training where possible so that every member of staff understands our ethos around behaviour support.
Through our training, we develop and promote teamwork, relationship-building, personal safety, communication, and verbal and non-verbal de-escalation techniques for supporting behaviour. Our staff training courses for organisations includes:
- Building respectful relationships
- Creating a toolbox of positive behaviour strategies
- Developing effective communication with individuals and within teams
- De-escalating situations
- Understanding legal frameworks
- Promoting safety and safeguarding
- Reducing unnecessary restrictive practices
- Recording and reporting systems
- Restoring and repairing relationships
- Building confidence in managing situations safely
How does Team Teach behaviour support impact your child in their school or setting?
The school or organisation your child attends should have a behaviour policy, although this may be known by a different name. This should explain how they will support everyone with behaviour.