June Training Session
We are running another session of our ‘ Developing Your Resilience’ Training at the end of June.
This session is aimed specifically for low income families with autistic children. Please have a look at the leaflet below for full details! (more…)
We are Colchester Big Choice Award Winners
Find your Spark was grateful to receive a 5k grant on behalf of the Colchester Big Choice Award! (more…)
2015 statistics
We have been busy working out our stats from last year. Â 80 young people and staff took part in programmes last year and the outcomes reported are an increase in motivation, confidence, resilience, positive emotion and calmness. 96% of young people feel more positive and calm about going into the world of work and have got jobs/apprenticeships as a result. Â 88% feel more motivated and confident after participating in our resilience programme. Â Great results and we are optimistic that 2016’s statistics will be just as good if not better!
July blog. Confidence comes from doing, not thinking about it.
The past month has seen Find Your Spark travelling across London, Suffolk, Essex and even to France in order to deliver conferences, trainings and presentations on the effectiveness of coaching and positive psychology for at risk young people.
We have picked up a lot of tips and learning along the way, for example when speaking at the European Positive Psychology Conference we learnt that: (more…)
June musings from our founder
I write this in the scorching heat as Summer has well and truly arrived (well for the next couple of days at least!) The past month has been a bit of a whirlwind for me/Find Your Spark which I am now musing reflectively.Â
I have spent the last nine months starting up Find Your Spark in North Essex which has meant attending a lot of meetings, drinking lots of cups of tea/coffee and sending lots and lots of emails! I am delighted to say that all the seeds that I have been planting over the last six months are beginning to sprout and finally everything has begun to fall into place. (more…)
May blog. A testimonial from Fight for Peace
We here at Find Your Spark HQ always like to receive feedback on how we are doing and what impact we are making (especially if its positive! 😉 Â
This month, we were delighted to receive this wonderful endorsement from Fight for Peace, following a workshop we delivered in January. Thanks Fight for Peace for having us and we look forward to working with you again soon!
Fight for Peace commissioned Find Your Spark to run a Resilience Programme at the Academy this year. Both the young people/staff found the Resilience programme very informative and engaging. So much so, that staff have come back and requested additional training by Find your Spark as a result.
Positive psychology coaching research
Check out the positive psychology coaching research by founder Michelle Pritchard & Christian van Nieuwerburgh
Objectives: The research sought to analyse the perceptual life changes and perceived quality of life (PQoL)Â subsequent to participating in an integrated coaching and PPI programme.
Design: A qualitative approach was employed and Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) was utilised to analyse the data. (more…)
April 2016 The importance of being tenacious
This month’s blog post/musing on this grey and rainy day is on the topic of persistence. Â Something that I have learnt to have as a business owner of a Social Enterprise with a mission of doing good in a world where money talks. Â You have to be persistent, tenacious and NOT GIVE UP as it is a tough world out there and in order to make it you need to keep going, keep trying, keep evolving until one day, when you least expect it, you will.
I say this as a reminder to myself more than anything and hopefully to inspire you to continue even when the going gets tough. Â You will get little glimmers of what life will be like should you keep going, as I did when I was humbled to receive the accolade of one of the top 10 female UK Entrepreneurs to watch out for:Â http://www.abouttimemagazine.co.uk/life/top-10-young-female-entrepreneurs-to-watch-uk/
Prior to this and even now, there were times i wanted to give up and life was and can be a struggle. Â But I didn’t because I believe in the cause and you never know what is around the corner.
Always have in mind, should you ever wish to give up, that tomorrow could just be the day when it turns around for you and when it does, you will grateful that you did not give up.  Good luck readers and feel free to comment below with any thoughts you may have! 🙂
Find Your Spark delivers positive psychology coaching programmes to young people across London, Essex and Kent.
March 2016
This month I wanted to share something I saw on the change.org website which is written by a London teacher called Eleanor Rudd. Â It perfectly explains what a lot of our young people are experiencing and how schools are setting our young people to struggle. Â Please share your comments below.
“I think that more thorough Mental Health education and practical support methods need to be taught in schools and colleges. Student resilience is at its lowest I have noticed in some of my cohorts before. They are facing challenging circumstances: they may not ever go to university despite a a recent historical educational pressure to choose that option and if they do, they take on a huge financial burden, many just to attend school or college are in financial difficulty requiring school/college bursaries which rarely actually cover their travel needs, many are not educated adequately regarding banking, budgeting, benefits, taxes, voter registration and democracy, volunteering, sexual health, how to sign up to a GP or appropriately use the health service, how to seek support re housing, loans etc. Our education system is failing our young people in so many ways to not prepare them for real life, as well as pre employment – it should be no surprise that mental health is becoming such a big issue for our students. It is evident in the high numbers of people 30 and under who are suffering with depression and anxiety (plus others) as these issues re education are nothing new. However, we have now been living in a society of cuts and debt and very few wage increases for a larger part of these students lives as well, so the impact is apparent for them at a younger age as well.
Mental health education must be included on the syllabus. Teachers must be trained to recognise symptoms, to know how to react and not stigmatise! How to support a student who self harms, as well as make an appropriate support referral. These to me are as integral as the student having their English gcse. What is the point of having their English gcse if they cannot deal with their mental health appropriately and are not job ready in that respect??”