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Success Story: ACE Tiverton Special School

Published On: 27 January 2024

How building behaviour and consequence systems with students improved understanding and engagement.

At a glance

  • Name: Hannah Smart
  • Role: Executive Headteacher
  • Organisation: ACE Tiverton secondary special school
  • Location: England, UK

About ACE Tiverton School

ACE Tiverton supports 11-16 year olds with a diagnosis of Autistic Spectrum Condition and related Social, Emotional and Mental Health (SEMH) needs. It is part of Transforming Futures Trust.

The school is located in a rural town in Devon and students are taught in small groups allowing for personalised, differentiated learning.

Why use Team Teach

ACE Tiverton’s approach to behaviour support is about relational practice. Hannah says, “We talk about the 95% of what we do – absolutely everything short of a physical intervention. It’s all of those things that you need to consider and be aware of when working in our environment. It’s the look on your face, the tone of your voice, even the perfume you’re wearing.”

Senior leaders at ACE Tiverton find that Team Teach training helps staff to remove any disconnect between how teachers, support staff and senior leaders, as well as young people and their families understand behaviour and how it should be supported. Hannah explains, “We work together as a staff team to script conversations so we’re consistent. Ultimately, we also work on a process of debrief, reducing the need for physical interventions and the number of incidents we have, but also creating strong relationships with our young people.”

The challenge

To help students understand, engage with, and feel involved in behaviour systems.

Background

ACE Tiverton received a highly complex year 7 cohort where the paperwork and transition plans just didn’t match up with what staff were seeing in the classroom. They realised that their current behaviour systems did not support the increased complexity of need they were supporting.

Aim

The staff at ACE Tiverton wanted to create a new behaviour and consequence structure that was co-created with the students to ensure they understood it, engaged with it, and had a sense of ownership over it.

Barriers

It was a challenge to manage the expectations of students, particularly around the level of personalisation that would be possible when creating new systems. As Hannah explains, “We had to think about what’s actually physically possible rather than just what we’d love to be able to offer.”

Solution

ACE Tiverton already had a successful student leadership structure consisting of senior students, deputy senior students, and class reps, and systems in place to survey students, families and staff about behaviour on a regular basis. They used this to bring the students together to build a new behaviour and consequences structure and system that all the students agree to follow. This system follows the relational approach ACE Tiverton advocates and considers cognitive demands.

The results

The new behaviour system has been shared with families and the wider school community and is now fully embedded within the school. They have also created visuals and other resources to ensure that every student understands and can engage with the process.

One of the challenges that the staff team faced was that students couldn’t see or understand the consequences of behaviour. The new system gave them security and an understanding of what would happen to repair and rebuild following an incident.

Importantly, the behaviour and consequence model is positive and relational, It tells students, “I see you, I connect with you, I attune with you, I like you, I want to work with you,” Hannah explains.

Next steps

Ace Tiverton are now developing how they work with families, building on their current approaches. The senior leaders feel it is easy for conversations to include the young person and the school, but without the family. As Hannah explains, “Families are very easy to work with, but it’s the time it takes.”

By working together to build stronger relationships with families they hope to attune to them, build a shared language and understanding of behaviour, and work together in the best interests of their students.