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EDUCATORS SEE THE LIGHTWe all know that exposure to the sun’s ultraviolet rays can be harmful, but scientists also know that a lack of light can be just as harmful. Most children must experience a proper balance of light exposure for healthy physical and emotional growth. A lack of light can exacerbate a child’s behavior issues. Add cold weather to the shorter days of winter, and kids are bound to be spending less time outdoors in January and February than at other times of the year. Without the release valve that outdoor time can provide, any child might be prone to a little BADness. Have you ever noticed that kids (and adults too) seem to be in better spirits and more productive on cold but sunny winter days than on gray, chilly winter days? Many teachers and principals see that. They also know that a bright, cheerful classroom is more conducive to learning than a drab, dreary classroom. During the winter months, many teachers open the window blinds to flood their classrooms with light because, as light therapists will tell you, light tends to brighten moods. PRINCIPALS EMPLOY “LIGHT” THERAPYSome students seem to suffer from BAD even during the brightest spring or summer weather. That’s because most children who act badly lack hope. They hurt. Their sense of worth has been diminished to the point that any attention they might receive, even negative attention, is a good thing. Effective principals, however, know that BAD kids are just kids who are in need of a little light of another kind in their lives. Those students are starved for exposure to the light that radiates from a warm, caring adult. And we structure our schools so that all students can soak up plenty of that light. We also know that the light in the principal’s office must be among the brightest lights in the school. Effective principals radiate acceptance and hope for all their students. A principal’s special look, a compliment, an act of kindness, or an expression of personal interest can be a powerful force in a troubled student’s life as well as a model for other adults in the school.
And we know that children are smart: they know when the light is fake, forced, cold, or excessive. But they soak up all they can when the light is genuine, glowing, and warm. There might not be an abundance of scientific research on the benefits of a principal’s light, but principals everyday, everywhere, prove that lighting the way for students is one of the best cures for BAD.
Article by Paul Young 08/01/2007
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