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Understanding OCD in Children Through Relationships and Boundaries: A Case Study from a Therapeutic School Setting
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) in children is often misunderstood. Many people imagine OCD only as repetitive hand washing, checking locks, or organizing objects. However, in children and adolescents—especially those with special needs—OCD can also manifest through rigid thinking, fixation on relationships, difficulty tolerating uncertainty, and an overwhelming need to make situations feel “correct” according to their internal logic. In therapeutic and school settings, t
Charles Mathison
May 185 min read


Why Shame Should Not Be Used to Gain Compliance from Students
At some point, almost every educator has worked with a student whose behavior crossed serious boundaries. In those moments, educators are often faced with a difficult question:
How do you hold a student accountable for harmful behavior without humiliating them?
Charles Mathison
May 156 min read


Recognizing the Pattern: When Behavior Plans Replace Traditional Strategies
There are classrooms where strategies work, and then there are classrooms where nothing works—at least not in the way we were trained to expect. This is where real decision-making begins. In the cases that will be described in this article, all of the students lived in a residential treatment facility, and their needs extended far beyond the classroom. Their behaviors were not isolated incidents; they were patterns—predictable, repeated responses shaped by deeper emotional an
Charles Mathison
Apr 104 min read
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