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InclusiveEd

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Weston-super-mare, Somerset, United Kingdom
About the store
Emotionally safe, meaningful and reflective learning resources for schools, families and young people. InclusiveEd was created from a simple belief: human beings learn most deeply when learning feels emotionally safe, meaningful, engaging and connected to real life. I create evidence-informed resources that support children and young people in understanding themselves, other people and the world around them. Drawing on experience across education, equality, inclusion, public engagement and social-emotional learning, InclusiveEd resources are designed to support not only academic understanding, but participation, emotional literacy, critical thinking, reflection and confidence. Resources span: PSHE, Citizenship, Politics, emotional wellbeing, anxiety support, critical thinking, discussion-based learning and emotionally safe classroom practice. Materials are designed to reduce teacher workload whilst supporting thoughtful, inclusive and meaningful learning experiences within increasingly pressured educational environments. Many resources include structured discussion prompts, reflection activities, emotional literacy tools and real-world learning approaches that encourage curiosity, participation and perspective-taking. InclusiveEd resources are used by: teachers, parents, home educators, pastoral teams and schools looking to support both learning and wellbeing in balanced, practical and emotionally informed ways. Thank you for visiting InclusiveEd.
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Preview of AQA & Edexcel A Level Political Ideologies: Socialism Revision worksheet

AQA & Edexcel A Level Political Ideologies: Socialism Revision worksheet

Created by
InclusiveEd
5 Political Socialist Thinkers - Printable Description: Bring socialist ideology to life in your classroom with this printable wall display set featuring five influential socialist thinkers: Leon Trotsky, Vladimir Lenin, Rosa Luxemburg, Fidel Castro, and Karl Marx. Each sheet includes a concise summary, key ideas, criticisms, a famous quote, and a modern debate prompt β€” perfect for sparking discussion and supporting A Level Politics, Government, and Ideologies courses. Designed for politics
Preview of Globalisation & Modern Challenges Political Thinkers x 5 Posters

Globalisation & Modern Challenges Political Thinkers x 5 Posters

Created by
InclusiveEd
Description: This classroom resource introduces five influential thinkers who shaped debates on globalisation, modern challenges, and political change. Each printable sheet includes a concise summary, memorable quote, key ideas, criticisms, and a debate prompt β€” perfect for politics, government, and social studies classrooms. Designed for wall display, revision boards, or discussion activities. πŸ‘₯ Thinkers Included Francis Fukuyama – Political scientist, argued the β€œend of history” thesis, cl
Preview of Confidence Workbook for Kids | Emotional Regulation, Resilience & Growth Mindset

Confidence Workbook for Kids | Emotional Regulation, Resilience & Growth Mindset

Created by
InclusiveEd
Confidence, Emotional Safety & Growth A calm and supportive confidence-building workbook for children Help children build confidence, emotional safety, resilience and positive coping habits through gentle, practical and child-friendly activities designed to support emotional growth over time. This printable workbook helps children recognise strengths, build confidence gradually, practise calming tools and reflect on progress in a safe and encouraging way. Designed for children approximately a
Preview of SEL Discussion Cards & Human-Centered Scenarios | Empathy & Critical Thinking

SEL Discussion Cards & Human-Centered Scenarios | Empathy & Critical Thinking

Created by
InclusiveEd
⭐ HUMAN-CENTERED SEL DISCUSSION CARDS Empathy, Student Voice & Critical Thinking | Grades 6–12Struggling to get students to talk meaningfully about behavior, empathy, and responsibility β€” without forcing personal disclosure or getting surface-level answers? These Human-Centered SEL Discussion Cards give you a safe, structured way to build real dialogue, empathy, and student voice in middle and high school classrooms. βœ… THE PROBLEM Many teachers need resources that help students: Discuss sen
Preview of Calm Code for Children Bundle | Anxiety, Worry & Confidence Workbooks for Kids

Calm Code for Children Bundle | Anxiety, Worry & Confidence Workbooks for Kids

Created by
InclusiveEd
Calm Code for Children Bundle 3 printable workbooks supporting anxiety, emotional regulation, coping skills and confidence Help children understand anxiety, manage worries, build emotional regulation skills and grow confidence using calm, child-friendly activities designed for home, school and emotional wellbeing support settings. This bundle combines all three Calm Code for Children workbooks into one supportive emotional regulation toolkit for children approximately aged 7–11. The resources a
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About the store

Experience

Emotionally safe, meaningful and reflective learning resources for schools, families and young people. InclusiveEd was created from a simple belief: human beings learn most deeply when learning feels emotionally safe, meaningful, engaging and connected to real life. I create evidence-informed resources that support children and young people in understanding themselves, other people and the world around them. Drawing on experience across education, equality, inclusion, public engagement and social-emotional learning, InclusiveEd resources are designed to support not only academic understanding, but participation, emotional literacy, critical thinking, reflection and confidence. Resources span: PSHE, Citizenship, Politics, emotional wellbeing, anxiety support, critical thinking, discussion-based learning and emotionally safe classroom practice. Materials are designed to reduce teacher workload whilst supporting thoughtful, inclusive and meaningful learning experiences within increasingly pressured educational environments. Many resources include structured discussion prompts, reflection activities, emotional literacy tools and real-world learning approaches that encourage curiosity, participation and perspective-taking. InclusiveEd resources are used by: teachers, parents, home educators, pastoral teams and schools looking to support both learning and wellbeing in balanced, practical and emotionally informed ways. Thank you for visiting InclusiveEd.

Teaching style

Active, meaningful learning Where possible, I design learning that moves beyond passive screen-based teaching and long periods of sitting still. Many InclusiveEd activities encourage discussion, movement, participation, reflection and interaction because children often learn more deeply when they are actively engaged in the learning process itself. Role play, gallery walks, debate, collaborative tasks and experiential activities can help abstract ideas feel more real, memorable and emotionally meaningful, particularly within PSHE, Citizenship and Politics education where lived experience, perspective and human behaviour matter. Emotionally safe and human-centred InclusiveEd is built around the understanding that children learn as whole human beings, not simply as academic performers. Emotional safety, confidence, participation and wellbeing all influence engagement with learning. My approach is intentionally multi-sensory, reflective and accessible, informed both by professional experience and lived experience with dyslexia and ADHD. Resources often combine visuals, movement, structured discussion and scaffolded reflection so that learners can access ideas, participate confidently and demonstrate understanding in different ways. Curiosity, connection and real-world learning Children often learn most deeply when learning feels meaningful and connected to real life. InclusiveEd resources encourage curiosity, critical thinking and reflection through discussion-based learning, real-world examples and opportunities for students to explore ideas collaboratively. The aim is not simply memorisation, but understanding: of ourselves, other people, and the world around us. Structure, boundaries and thoughtful discussion Emotionally safe learning does not mean the absence of structure or challenge. InclusiveEd resources combine reflective learning approaches with clear routines, structured facilitation and thoughtful boundaries so that discussions remain respectful, purposeful and emotionally safe for all learners. Many activities include facilitation prompts, restorative reflection opportunities and guidance for navigating sensitive or contested conversations carefully and professionally. Practical support for teachers and schools Teachers are working within increasingly pressured systems and often do not have the time, capacity or resources to create everything they would ideally like to for every child sitting in front of them. InclusiveEd resources are therefore designed to be practical as well as thoughtful; ready-to-teach materials that reduce planning time whilst supporting meaningful, inclusive and emotionally informed learning experiences across classrooms, pastoral settings and wider school communities.

Awards & shining teacher moments

Before creating InclusiveEd, much of my professional work focused on equality, diversity, inclusion, public engagement and organisational culture across both the civil service and corporate sector. One of the most meaningful aspects of this work involved designing and delivering EDI and cultural awareness programmes rooted not simply in policy, but in human behaviour, lived experience and psychologically safe discussion. Many programmes were developed using lessons emerging from serious case reviews, restorative practice and organisational change work, with a strong emphasis on creating environments where people felt able to engage thoughtfully with complex or sensitive issues. What interested me most was never compliance alone, but depth of engagement. How do people genuinely learn? What helps difficult conversations remain constructive rather than divisive? Why do some environments encourage reflection and participation whilst others create silence, defensiveness or disengagement? These questions continue to shape the thinking behind InclusiveEd today. Across both organisational and educational settings, meaningful learning rarely happens through information alone. People engage more deeply when learning feels psychologically safe, emotionally meaningful, participatory and connected to real life. Many of the approaches now reflected within InclusiveEd; structured discussion, emotionally safe facilitation, reflective learning, participation, experiential activities and restorative approaches, emerged from this broader professional background. Highlights & Areas of Practice Designing and delivering EDI, cultural awareness and restorative practice programmes across public and corporate sectors Facilitating emotionally safe discussion spaces for sensitive or contested conversations Supporting organisational culture change through participatory and reflective approaches Developing co-created action plans and practical implementation strategies Public engagement and communication work focused on meaningful participation and accessibility Creating discussion-based educational resources that encourage curiosity, critical thinking and reflection Why This Matters Within Education Schools today are navigating increasingly complex emotional, social and educational realities within highly pressured systems. Teachers are often expected not only to teach curriculum content, but also to facilitate discussion, support wellbeing, manage conflict, encourage participation and create emotionally safe classroom cultures simultaneously. InclusiveEd emerged partly from recognising how interconnected these things really are. The same principles that support meaningful engagement within organisations often apply within classrooms too: psychological safety, clear boundaries, participation, reflection, connection, trust and meaningful discussion. Because whether in workplaces, communities or schools, human beings tend to learn most deeply when they feel safe enough to engage authentically rather than simply perform compliance.

My own education history

Background & Educational Philosophy My own educational experience shaped much of the thinking behind InclusiveEd. I struggled within aspects of formal education growing up, yet I was also fortunate to encounter teachers who recognised that children do not all learn in the same way. Those experiences left a lasting impression on me and helped shape my belief in more inclusive, personalised and emotionally aware approaches to learning. They also gave me an appreciation for the importance of emotional safety, confidence and connection within education long before I encountered terms such as Social Emotional Learning (SEL) professionally. Over time, this interest developed across both academic and professional settings. I have worked across universities, the civil service and the corporate sector, designing and delivering training programmes focused on equality, inclusion, participation, communication and emotionally safe engagement. Much of this work explored how human beings learn, participate and respond within group environments, particularly when discussing complex, sensitive or emotionally charged topics. As Public Engagement Coordinator for Social Science in the City at the University of the West of England, part of my role involved translating complex academic research into accessible, meaningful public engagement work. That experience reinforced something I continue to believe strongly today: people engage more deeply when learning feels understandable, relevant and connected to real life. This combination of lived experience, educational reflection, public engagement and organisational practice continues to shape the philosophy behind InclusiveEd. At its core, InclusiveEd is built around a simple idea: that meaningful learning happens most deeply when people feel emotionally safe, genuinely engaged and connected to the world around them.

Additional biographical information

Communication, Engagement & Human-Centred Learning Before moving into education, public engagement and organisational training, I spent many years working within entertainment and live performance, both as a comedian and coaching performers through an entertainments agency. Although very different environments on the surface, that experience taught me something I still consider central to meaningful learning today: human engagement matters. Working with live audiences develops a strong awareness of attention, pacing, emotional atmosphere and participation. You learn quickly when people feel disconnected, overwhelmed, excluded or emotionally uninvested because the room tells you immediately. Equally, you learn that people engage most deeply when communication feels authentic, human and emotionally real. Oddly enough, classrooms are not entirely different. Over time, this experience shaped my interest in how people learn, participate and connect within group environments. It also reinforced the importance of clarity, relatability, emotional safety and reflective discussion within both education and training. Perhaps most importantly, it taught me that people rarely respond well to pretence. Whether in classrooms, workplaces or public settings, human beings tend to engage more openly when they feel respected, included and emotionally safe enough to participate authentically. This continues to influence the design of InclusiveEd resources today. Many activities are intentionally discussion-based, participatory and reflective because meaningful engagement rarely comes from passive delivery alone. Learners often connect more deeply when they are encouraged to move, discuss, question, collaborate and actively participate in the learning process itself. At the heart of InclusiveEd is not simply the idea that children should achieve academically, but that learning should feel human, meaningful and connected to real life.