Annie O'Shaughnessy Holistic Restorative Education Certificate Program Coordinator and Instructor

Annie O’Shaughnessy

Bio

M.Ed. Antioch University
B.A. University of New Hampshire

Courses I Teach:

  • GED 501: Transforming Teaching and Learning Through Mindfulness and Restorative Practice
  • GED 504: Holistic Restorative Education Practicum

Programs I Advise:

  • Holistic Restorative Education Certificate Program

Research

I bring a large tool box filled with over 30 years of circle work experience, extensive Restorative Practices training, a M.Ed. in Mindfulness for Educators, Advanced Training in Trauma Informed Practices, 180 hours of clinical training at a therapeutic high school for challenging youth, eight years as a classroom English teacher, and two years in school leadership. After decades as an educator and facilitator, I have been running workshops and courses in Vermont and nationally since 2017 with the goal of creating brave spaces for educators to learn and grow. My dedication to anti-racism began after a multi-day training with Paul Gorski and strengthened during my year-long experience in the Transformative Educational Leadership program. Currently I am facilitating monthly Mindful Anti-Racist Affinity Groups for White Educators.

I am constantly seeking new learning, reaching out to experts all over the globe to find new ideas, courage, and inspiration. I draw support and learning from my memberships in the Restorative Justice Pedagogy Network for Higher Education and Vermont Restorative Approaches Collaborative. I started Saint Michael’s College Holistic Restorative Education certificate program out of the belief that educators today need a foundational understanding of restorative and trauma informed practices, mindfulness, and equity in order to meet the needs of all students sustainably.

Awards & Recognition

Currently I am lead consultant at True Nature Teaching serving private and public schools around the country and founding partner of Partners in Restorative Change where I am working with others in Vermont on a grant funded project to develop best practices in a holistic restorative approach to education.

Recent News

Gretchen Galbraith, dean of faculty, was one among several presenters for the annual Faculty Speaker Series, taking place from January 3 through January 12, 2023. Featured in this year’s lineup also were presentations from Annie O’Shaughnessy of the Graduate Education Department, George Ashline of the Mathematics and Statistics Department, Peter Vantine of the Classical and Modern Languages and Literature Department, Jen Purcell of the History Department, Kate Soons of the  Health Sciences Program, and Patrick Walsh of economics. With topics ranging from the British monarchy to the Pythagorean Theorem, there was something for everyone during this year’s series.
(posted February 2023)

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NOVEMBER 18, 2020
By Ashley DeLeon ’23

Holistic Restorative Education (HRE), a new certificate program in the Graduate Education Department at Saint Michael’s College, provides educators with the ability to integrate “restorative practices” into a class setting.

Restorative practices are gaining wider currency in education and law as a concept rooted in repairing harm by focusing on a variety of practices that move a community to a place of healing. The “restorative justice” aspect of HRE is part of a larger movement to build community and inclusion, and repair harm in the classroom. Proponents say experiences prove that HRE shifts the dynamic of teaching, allowing educators to understand the true meaning of inclusivity in a classroom.

Originators of this new certificate option say that this 4-course, 12-credit program caters to educators of all kinds. Enrollment will be capped at 18 students per “cohort.” They would take the sequence together as a group from start to finish — about a year all told.

The Saint Michael’s program derives from an approach pioneered by Annie O’Shaughnessy, founder of True Nature Teaching and an educator of restorative practices since 1990. O’Shaughnessy offered virtual workshops through the College this past summer, and they proved to be so popular that it inspired this new offering.

“Having participated in and led circles personally and professionally since the ‘90s around the country and in the classroom, I have witnessed the tremendous impact of these experiences on my own and others’ lives,” O’Shaughnessy is quoted as saying in her website testimonial, which emphasizes the importance and essential role that “mindfulness” plays in successful restorative work.  Paired with integrated mindfulness practices, HRE helps to build a foundation for the intricate, nuanced work of restorative practices, O’Shaughnessy said, “transforming how we view student behavior and the factors that influence our every interaction with students and colleagues — positionality, race, trauma, toxic stress, neurodiversity, mental health, and culture.” Mindfulness refers to the practice of paying attention in the present moment intentionally and with non-judgment. Mindfulness meditation practices refer to the deliberate acts of regulating attention through the observation of thoughts, emotions and body states.

“A focus of the program is supporting students so they have internal tools to find balance when shaken,” said Amy Saks-Pavese, director of Graduate Education. Additionally, the Holistic Restorative Education program utilizes trauma-informed practices to aid educators in providing support to students to be successful members of a classroom and the greater community.

Rooted in neuroscience, trauma-informed practices recognize that children arrive at school having experienced trauma. “Many ongoing traumas are experienced as fallout from living in poverty, housing insecurity, and food insecurity,” Saks-Pavese said. Further, students of color experience ongoing traumas as a result of racism, she said.

Trauma-informed practices acknowledge that these experiences alter the brain, and respond to these changes in a way that supports students in building resilience when faced with challenges. According to Saks-Pavese, schools increasingly are seeking out this kind of professional development as they recognize how challenging school can be for students who have experienced trauma, as manifested in the behavior of such students. Schools strive to help build resilience and serve as a vessel of support, she said.

Hoping to attract students beyond the local Vermont area, this new Saint Michael’s program will be delivered virtually (on-line), providing accessibility to learners across the country. It specifically caters to those interested in beginning a master’s program and those with a master’s degree who want to focus on restorative practices.

The four-course program — one course per semester launching in January 2021 — follows a cohort model designed for students to begin and end the program at the same time. Students take one course in the spring, summer, and fall, reaching completion the following spring season. One of the courses is a practicum in which enrolled students place their learning into practice. As one cohort completes its program, another begins. “It is designed to support educators in various stages of their own careers,” Saks-Pavese said.

This past summer, the Graduate Education program at Saint Michael’s offered an online teaching and learning webinar series, “Engaging All Students in a Remote Classroom,” taught by O’Shaughnessy, which effectively provided a sort of preview or “trailer” for the four-course program. The webinar quickly rose in popularity and demand, according to Saint Michael’s education faculty, and four school districts requested to schedule the webinar for their educators after participating in the summer series.

O’Shaughnessy says she feels all educators might benefit from learning about “trauma-sensitive practices, mindfulness, and social-emotional learning.” In recognizing that equity and restorative practices build efficacy for leaders and educators, she said, engaging in these restorative practices promotes wellness for all, “allowing us to become agents for change.”