• The School-to-Prison Pipeline & Neurodiversity – What Schools Miss with Dr Neil Alexander-Passe
    Feb 24 2026
    If you’re a parent, teacher, or caregiver wondering “Why is this child always in trouble at school?” this conversation will land. Dr Neil Alexander-Passe – teacher, researcher, exam access assessor, and author – unpacks what schools often misread in neurodivergent behaviour (dyslexia, ADHD, autism), why “naughty” can be a disguised help request, and how shame, repeated failure, and isolation-style discipline can build school-based trauma. You’ll also hear practical steps for spotting needs early, how to push for screening and support, and how simple shifts (like not doing your child’s homework for them) can create the evidence schools can’t ignore. Neil also connects the dots to the “school-to-prison pipeline” – not as scare-mongering, but as a systems warning and a call for earlier, wiser intervention. Chapter timestamps (for easy listening) 00:00 – Why neurodivergent children are “always in trouble” at school 03:10 – The three groups teachers often see: “naughty”, “quiet”, and “middle” 05:33 – What school feels like from the inside with dyslexia and ADHD: shame, threat, learned helplessness 12:52 – “School-to-prison pipeline” explained in plain terms 13:52 – Hidden literacy needs and prison systems that assume reading and writing 19:06 – What adults misread: disruptive behaviour as a masked request for help 22:40 – EBSA, school distress, and why “avoidance” can be the wrong frame 31:22 – Homework: why doing it for your child backfires – and what to do instead 34:59 – Language that shapes mindset: grades vs effort, global labels vs specific feedback 38:19 – Practical screening clues: early signs of dyslexia, ADHD, and autism 44:05 – Rebuilding identity after “I’m stupid” / “I’m the bad kid”: strengths, passions, and the right tutor 47:25 – Post-school success: neurodivergent strengths, entrepreneurship, and support networks (including AI tools) 52:09 – A message for exhausted teachers: ask “why” before punishment 54:26 – Hope: inclusion awareness and the changing role of SENCOs 56:16 – Parent takeaway: don’t wait, raise concerns early, and don’t be pushed into removing your child 57:55 – Mainstream vs specialist provision, EHCP realities, and why Year 5 timing matters 01:04:12 – Neil’s upcoming books (including neurodivergent entrepreneurs) Three key messages Behaviour is often communication – and “naughty” can be a child protecting themselves. Avoidance, clowning, shutdowns, and meltdowns can be self-protection when work feels impossible or humiliating. Early identification beats late consequences. Neil argues primary school is the best window for meaningful observation and support – because secondary systems can become too fragmented to “see” the child properly. Stop feeding shame – in school and at home. Public failure, isolation-style discipline, and “I’m rubbish at…” language create learned helplessness. Specific feedback, effort-focused praise, and strengths-based identity building can change trajectories. Resources mentioned in the conversation Screeners and early identification: Neil recommends parents do their own initial research and use screeners for dyslexia, ADHD, and autism, then push the school with something concrete rather than “my child is struggling”. EBSA and school distress: the idea that what’s labelled “emotionally based school avoidance” may often be better understood as school-based distress caused by the environment. EHCP, PRU, managed moves: discussion of how systems and placements can unintentionally intensify difficulties when underlying needs aren’t properly supported. Homework boundary strategy: allow a set time (eg 30–40 minutes), stop, then add a note stating how long your child worked and what they managed – so home and school evidence matches. Martin Seligman’s work: shifting from global labels (“I’m rubbish at maths”) to specific struggle areas – and focusing praise on effort rather than grades. Using AI as an accessibility tool: an example of simplifying language (eg menus) to support independence and reduce shame. Why listen to this episode Because it challenges a common (and tempting) assumption: “They’re in trouble because they’re choosing it.” Neil keeps pulling the lens back to systems, shame, and unmet needs – and that’s uncomfortable in a useful way. If you’re supporting a child who’s labelled disruptive, withdrawn, lazy, or “always in isolation”, this episode gives you language, framing, and next steps that are practical – not fluffy. About Dr Neil Alexander-Passe Dr Neil Alexander-Passe is a London-based teacher, researcher, author, and exam access assessor specialising in the emotional lived experience of learning differences. He completed a PhD in 2018 on dyslexia, traumatic schooling, and post-school success, and has published multiple peer-reviewed ...
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    35 Min.
  • Restorative Practice That Works: How to Debrief After Difficult Behaviour
    Feb 20 2026
    In this solo episode, behaviour specialist and author Andy Baker unpacks one of the most overlooked parts of behaviour support: what happens after the incident. Whether you’re working in a school, supporting adults in care, or navigating tough moments at home, the post-incident debrief is often where the real growth happens – yet most settings rush it, avoid it, or unintentionally turn it into another punishment. Andy breaks down why restorative conversations fail when done too soon, too harshly, or with the wrong focus, and offers a simple, practical framework for debriefing that protects dignity, reduces shame, builds connection and genuinely improves future behaviour. This episode is essential listening for caregivers, parents, teachers, support workers and anyone navigating distress or dysregulation in others. 🧰 Resources Mentioned Andy's Book – Targeting the Positive with Behaviours That Challenge A practical guide featuring the full Six-Stage TARGET Model and the PERFORM Debrief Framework. (Listeners are directed to the link in your episode description.) Able Target System – Trauma-informed, restorative, person-centred behaviour support framework embedded throughout Andy’s training and consultancy. 🔑 Three Key Messages Debriefing is learning, not punishment. If all we take from an incident is a report form and a bruise, we’ve wasted pain that could have become insight. Restorative practice only works when shame is removed. When people feel heard, their brain reopens to learning. When they feel shamed, reflection shuts down. Boundaries and humanity belong together. Restorative approaches don’t remove limits – they strengthen them by pairing accountability with connection. ⏱️ Chapter Timestamps 00:00 – Why debriefing matters more than we think The hidden stage most settings skip – and why outcomes suffer when they do. 00:24 – Where schools, care services and parents go wrong Common mistakes: retraumatising conversations, shame responses, and “confession-based” debriefs. 01:14 – Learning from incidents: the fire analogy Why incident forms aren’t enough without meaningful reflection. 02:23 – Why we avoid debriefs Shame, fear of judgement, time pressures and the myth that “they won’t learn anyway”. 03:33 – Punishment vs restorative learning Why consequences don’t automatically create insight. 04:12 – Supporting the adults too The emotional impact on staff and caregivers – and what reflective practice should include. 05:26 – The PERFORM Debrief Script A step-by-step walkthrough: P – Prepare E – Explore the story R – Reflect on feelings and needs F – Feedback on impact O – Ownership through repair R – Responsibility for next time M – Map the future 08:53 – A real-life story: shouting match avoided How one parent transformed a tense evening into connection through the right questions. 10:18 – Why shouting never teaches what we think it does Fear creates compliance, not growth. 12:14 – The true purpose of restorative practice Connection, rehearsal, emotional safety and future-proofing behaviour. 13:34 – Behaviour is like the weather How to become the “behaviour weatherman” through the TARGET model and emotional insight. 🎧 Why Listen to This Episode? This episode will help you if: You want to repair relationships after meltdowns, crises or confrontations. You support children or adults who experience overwhelm or dysregulation. You feel stuck repeating the same incidents without seeing change. You want a script, not just theory. You’re trying to build a culture of safety, dignity and accountability. If you’re a parent, teacher, care worker, foster carer, SENCO, TA, support worker or leader in education or care, this episode will give you grounded, real-world tools to use today. 📲 Connect with Able to Care & Able Training Podcast Website: https://able-training.co.uk/podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/abletraining/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/abletrainingexperience LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/able-training-ltd-/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@abletocarepodcast
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    Weniger als 1 Minute
  • Future Care Made Simple: Vicky Jones on Planning Before Crisis Hits
    Feb 17 2026

    What if preparing for the future wasn’t morbid… but empowering? In this episode, I sit down with Vicky Jones, founder of Ourlives, former social care director, mum of two, and someone who learned early in life that everything can change with a single knock at the door. Drawing on 25 years in health and social care, her own ADHD diagnosis, sobriety journey, and the sudden loss of her father, Vicky is on a mission to stop people waiting for crisis before taking action.

    Whether you’re a paid carer, an unpaid family caregiver, a teacher supporting overwhelmed families, or a parent trying to balance your own future alongside your children’s, this conversation offers something essential: clarity, calm, and a roadmap for what so many people avoid thinking about until it’s too late.

    We unpack why people discount their future selves, the emotional blocks that stop families having conversations they desperately need, and the key steps every adult should take long before aging, illness or caring responsibilities hit.

    🌐 Resources & Links Mentioned
    • Ourlives – Future planning community & tools Website: https://www.ourlivesapp.com Life Audit (free questionnaire): Add link once live

    • Connect with Vicky Jones LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/victoria-jones-2906ab83 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ourlivesapp TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@ourlivesapp Email: https://able-training.co.uk/podcast

    • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/abletraining/

    • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/abletrainingexperience

    • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/able-training-ltd-/

    • YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@abletocarepodcast

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    1 Min.
  • What Is Positive Behaviour Support PBS ? Real-life examples and practical insights
    Feb 13 2026

    If you’ve ever felt like you’ve “tried everything” with a child or adult showing distressing behaviour—this episode is for you. In this solo episode, Andy Baker, behaviour specialist and author of Targeting the Positive with Behaviours That Challenge, breaks down the misunderstood world of Positive Behaviour Support (PBS).

    With real-life examples and practical insights, Andy explores why PBS is more than a poster on the wall. It’s a mindset and a method—rooted in assessment, adaptation and empathy. Whether you’re a caregiver, teacher, or parent, this episode offers a compassionate and science-backed look at how to reduce distress, not just manage behaviour.

    🧰 Resources Mentioned
    • 📘 Targeting the Positive with Behaviours That Challenge by Andy Baker: Buy on Amazon

    • 🧠 The Able Target System: able-training.co.uk/ats

    • 🖥️ Learn more about Able Training’s behaviour courses: www.able-training.co.uk/podcast

    🧩 Three Key Messages
    1. PBS isn’t soft—it’s strategic. It’s about analysing the function of behaviour, not just punishing the form.

    2. Every behaviour has a benefit. If you don’t see it, you’re not asking the right question yet.

    3. Focus on skill-building, not shaming. Replacement behaviours work best when they meet the same need in a safer way.

    ⏱️ Chapters & Timestamps
    • 00:00 – Behaviour vs Punishment: Why "we’ve tried everything" often isn’t true

    • 00:42 – What is Positive Behaviour Support?: A real-world breakdown

    • 01:08 – Integrating Trauma-Informed Practice: Going beyond the behaviour

    • 02:01 – The 6-Stage TARGET Model: Andy’s unique approach to PBS

    • 03:43 – Real-World Example: Head-Scratcher Strategy

    • 06:19 – Skill-Building vs Compliance: Teaching safer ways to meet needs

    • 07:42 – Autonomy and the Competing Pathway

    • 08:29 – Why PBS Often Fails (and how to fix it)

    • 10:21 – Book Excerpt: Weathering Behaviour with Insight

    🤔 Why Listen to This Episode?
    • If you’re a parent or carer constantly firefighting distress without long-term change

    • If you’re a teacher struggling to apply behaviour policies to neurodiverse students

    • If you want a clear, compassionate alternative to sanctions, shame, and suppression This episode offers tools you can start using today—rooted in neuroscience, not guesswork.

    🔗 Connect with Us

    🌐 Podcast hub: www.able-training.co.uk/podcast

    📲 Instagram: @AbleTraining 📲 LinkedIn: Able Training 📲 TikTok: @AbleToCarePodcast 🌐 Website: Able Training 📲 LinkedIn: Andy Baker
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    Weniger als 1 Minute
  • Living Well With Dementia: Friendship, Dignity and Making Moments Matter
    Feb 10 2026

    In this deeply moving and often joyful episode of the Able to Care podcast, Andy Baker is joined by Peter Berry, who lives with Alzheimer’s, and Deb Bunt, author, counsellor and Peter’s close friend. Together, they explore what it truly means to live well with dementia — not through clinical labels or deficits, but through friendship, dignity, purpose and shared humanity.

    This conversation will resonate strongly with family carers, professional caregivers, teachers and anyone supporting someone with additional needs, as it challenges common assumptions about memory, identity and “loss”. Peter and Deb share honest reflections on diagnosis, stigma, trust, cycling challenges, writing together, and the idea of being an “external memory” — all grounded in a relationship that prioritises connection over care and moments over memories.

    ⏱️ Episode Chapters (Timestamps)
    • 00:01 – Living with a dementia diagnosis: shame, silence and the turning point

    • 05:30 – Purpose, advocacy and planting a new future

    • 06:30 – Not being defined by dementia

    • 08:45 – Dignity, stigma and the “shabby coat” metaphor

    • 13:50 – Living in the moment and finding joy

    • 17:10 – Metaphors, meaning and communicating the unsayable

    • 19:20 – Cycling, challenge and staying active

    • 25:50 – Life after diagnosis: what is still possible

    • 33:15 – “External memory”, trust and friendship

    • 41:45 – Making moments, not memories

    • 47:00 – Support versus care and mutual relationships

    • 56:05 – Messages for those newly diagnosed or supporting someone

    • 59:05 – Books, advocacy and what comes next

    💡 Three Key Messages from This Episode
    1. Dementia does not erase identity Peter is not “a person with dementia” — he is Peter. Diagnosis may change memory, but it does not remove personality, humour, values or worth.

    2. Dignity is shaped by how we respond As Peter powerfully explains, dignity isn’t taken by dementia itself, but by how others react to the label. Compassionate responses preserve humanity.

    3. Moments matter more than memories You may not be able to create lasting memories — but you can always create meaningful moments. Joy exists in the here and now.

    📚 Resources Mentioned in the Episode
    • Slow Puncture – Living Well with Dementia Available in print, Kindle and audiobook

    • Walk with Me – Musings Through the Dementia Fog

    • Patching the Puncture – Continuing to Live Well with Dementia (Released February 2026) 👉 Pre-order: https://bookguild.co.uk/bookshop/memoir/patching-the-puncture

    • 🌐 Peter & Deb’s website and media appearances: https://www.peter-berry.com

    🎧 Why Listen to This Episode?

    If you support someone living with dementia — professionally or personally — this episode offers hope, clarity and a reframe. You’ll gain:

    • A deeper understanding of memory, identity and emotional connection

    • Practical insights into supporting someone without diminishing them

    • Reassurance that life, joy and purpose do not end with diagnosis

    • A reminder that friendship, humour and dignity still matter deeply

    This is not a conversation about “managing dementia” — it’s about being human together.

    🔗 Connect with Our Guests
    • Deb Bunt – Author & Advocate LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/deb-bunt-ab247524/ Instagram: @deb.bunt Twitter/X: @debbunt

    • Peter Berry – Living with Alzheimer’s Facebook: Peter Berry Living with Alzheimer’s Website & media: https://www.peter-berry.com

    🌍 Able to Care – Links & Social Media 📲 Instagram: @AbleTraining 📲 LinkedIn: Able Training 📲 TikTok: @AbleToCarePodcast 🌐 Website: Able Training 📲 LinkedIn: Andy Baker
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    1 Min.
  • Trauma Isn’t a Behaviour Problem: 3 Mindset Swaps for Carers and Teachers
    Feb 6 2026

    Why trauma-informed practice isn’t soft — it’s smart, strategic, and essential for real behavioural change.

    In this solo episode of the Able to Care podcast, behaviour specialist Andy Baker unpacks a powerful mindset shift: what if “won’t behave” is really “can’t cope”? With relatable examples from schools, care settings and families, Andy explores how trauma impacts the nervous system, why traditional discipline strategies often backfire, and how a more compassionate, strategic approach creates better outcomes for everyone. If you support children or adults with complex needs, this episode offers practical insights to rethink behaviour, build connection, and respond with clarity—not just consequences.

    📚 Resources Mentioned
    • Book: Targeting the Positive with Behaviours That Challenge by Andy Baker Order now on Amazon UK

    • Able Training – Trauma and Attachment Courses https://www.able-training.co.uk

    💡 Three Key Messages
    1. Behaviour is Communication: What looks like defiance is often the nervous system protecting itself.

    2. Language and Goals Matter: Swap “What’s wrong with you?” for “What happened to you?” and “Compliance” for “Safety.”

    3. Connection Before Correction: Build trust and co-regulation before expecting behavioural change.

    ⏱️ Timestamps / Chapters

    00:00 – Why trauma isn’t a behaviour problem 00:57 – The story of Ryan: behaviour in context 03:01 – Understanding fight, flight, freeze and fawn 04:49 – The brain’s alarm system and trauma response 07:35 – The behaviours we misinterpret: defiance, shutdown, hyperactivity 08:58 – Shame, punishment, and internalised beliefs 09:18 – Language swap: from blame to curiosity 10:05 – Goal swap: from control to safety 11:00 – Strategy swap: from punishment to teaching regulation 12:03 – The golden question: “What are you trying to protect right now?”

    🎧 Why Listen to This Episode

    Whether you're a teacher facing ‘challenging’ behaviour in the classroom, a foster carer navigating emotional outbursts, or a support worker helping someone who keeps shutting down—this episode reframes what behaviour really means. Learn how trauma impacts the body and brain, and why responding with curiosity and connection changes everything.

    🔗 Connect with Us
    • 🌐 Website & Podcast Hub

    • 📸 @AbleTraining

    • 💼 Able Training

    • 📲 TikTok: @AbleToCarePodcast

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    14 Min.
  • From Carer to Diagnosis: Michael Booth on Living with Young Onset Dementia
    Feb 3 2026

    What happens when the person you once cared for… becomes the person you are?

    In this deeply moving and insightful episode of the Able to Care podcast, host Andy Baker speaks with Michael Booth – dementia educator, author, and advocate – who brings a rare dual perspective to the conversation. Michael first cared for his mother, Christine, through young onset dementia. Then, just months after she passed away, he received the same diagnosis himself, at just 46 years old.

    Now 51, Michael is defying expectations. He’s speaking out, mentoring others, and sharing his powerful message: dementia is not the end. This conversation challenges misconceptions about identity, memory, and diagnosis – and offers practical guidance for anyone supporting a loved one with dementia.

    If you're a parent, teacher, or caregiver, this episode will help you better understand distress behaviours, communication, and how to stay present when everything feels uncertain.

    📚 Resources Mentioned
    • 📖 Dementia: You Are Not Alone by Michael Booth – Order on Amazon

    • 🏥 Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Trust – Website

    • 🌐 Able Training Podcast Archive – able-training.co.uk/podcast

    💬 Three Key Messages
    1. Dementia is not the end – A diagnosis does not erase who someone is.

    2. Behaviour is communication – Even ‘aggression’ often signals distress, confusion, or unmet need.

    3. Perspective matters – Understanding dementia through both the eyes of a carer and the person living with it changes everything.

    ⏱️ Timestamps & Chapters
    • 00:00 – What if the person you cared for became you?

    • 03:00 – What it feels like to live with dementia day to day

    • 06:20 – Lessons from caring for his mum Christine

    • 10:40 – Receiving his own diagnosis at 46

    • 17:00 – What people get wrong about identity and dementia

    • 22:00 – Can you still enjoy life after a dementia diagnosis?

    • 26:00 – What really helps on a good day

    • 30:00 – Writing Dementia: You Are Not Alone

    • 36:00 – How services need to change

    • 50:00 – If you’ve just had a diagnosis: Michael’s message to you

    🎧 Why Listen to This Episode?
    • Gain insight into young onset dementia from both carer and lived experience

    • Understand how language, environment, and expectations shape support

    • Learn how to build emotional safety when words are lost but feelings remain

    • Be inspired by Michael’s resilience, clarity, and practical wisdom

    This is a must-listen for anyone navigating dementia – professionally or personally.

    🔗 Connect with Michael Booth
    • 📘 Dementia: You Are Not Alone – Buy on Amazon

    • 💼 Michael Booth on LinkedIn

    🔗 Connect with Able Training & Podcast
    • 🌐 Website & Podcast Hub

    • 📸 @AbleTraining

    • 💼 Able Training

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    1 Std.
  • When Dementia Looks Like Aggression: What Behaviour Is Really Saying & How to Respond
    Jan 30 2026

    If you’ve ever supported someone living with dementia and been faced with shouting, swearing, hitting, or refusal of care, this episode is for you.

    In this solo episode, Andy Baker unpacks one of the most misunderstood areas of dementia care: behaviour that looks aggressive but is almost always communication driven by distress. Drawing on years of experience in behaviour support, Andy helps caregivers, teachers, and parents move away from labels like “challenging” or “difficult” and instead understand what the behaviour is trying to say.

    You’ll learn why dementia affects far more than memory, how fear, pain, confusion, trauma, overstimulation, and even poor care practice can drive behaviour — and most importantly, what to do in the moment. Andy shares a simple, practical three‑step response framework and language you can use immediately to de‑escalate situations while protecting your own wellbeing.

    This episode is especially valuable for anyone feeling exhausted, overwhelmed, or unsure whether they’re “handling things right”.

    ⏱️ Episode Chapters (Timestamps)

    00:00 – Aggression or communication? Reframing behaviour in dementia 00:49 – Why dementia affects personality, perception, and processing 01:10 – Why behaviour becomes the fastest communication channel 02:22 – Fight, flight, and the safety of saying “no” 03:30 – From “challenging behaviour” to “distress behaviour” 04:19 – Hidden drivers: pain, fear, trauma, overstimulation, under‑stimulation 05:12 – When behaviour isn’t dementia — it’s poor care 06:07 – A simple 3‑step response framework 06:29 – Step 1: Pause, protect, and regulate yourself 06:58 – Step 2: Scan for unmet needs (HELP model) 07:31 – Step 3: Adjust, connect, and reduce distress 08:13 – What to say when someone is frightened or overwhelmed 09:05 – The HEART approach: Hear, Empathise, Align, Reassure, Transition 10:26 – Why “calm down” doesn’t work 10:51 – Caregiver regulation and burnout 11:52 – The core message: behaviour is communication 12:22 – Resource: Targeting the Positive

    🧩 Three Key Takeaways
    1. Aggression in dementia is rarely intentional What looks like defiance or hostility is often a terrified brain trying to cope with confusion, pain, or fear.

    2. Behaviour makes sense when you understand the context Distress behaviours are often driven by unmet physical, emotional, cognitive, or environmental needs — not the diagnosis itself.

    3. You can’t calm someone else if you’re dysregulated Supporting distress starts with your own regulation. Compassionate care requires supported carers.

    🛠️ Resources Mentioned
    • Targeting the Positive with Behaviours That Challenge by Andy Baker A practical, person‑centred guide to understanding and responding to distressed and dysregulated behaviour across dementia, trauma, neurodiversity, and mental health. Click here to find out more

    🎯 Why Listen to This Episode?
    • You’re supporting someone with dementia and struggling with aggression, refusal, or distress

    • You want practical language and tools, not theory

    • You’re tired of feeling blamed, judged, or unsure

    • You want to support others without losing yourself

    • You believe behaviour has meaning — and want to understand it better

    This episode offers reassurance, clarity, and immediately usable strategies grounded in empathy and realism.

    🔗 Connect with Able 📲 Instagram: @AbleTraining 📲 LinkedIn: Able Training 📲 TikTok: @AbleToCarePodcast 🌐 Website: Able Training
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    Weniger als 1 Minute