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Understanding Control

PSHE • Year Year 8 • 40 • 6 students • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England

PSHE
8Year Year 8
40
6 students
11 September 2024

Teaching Instructions

Understand Coercive control, gaslighted and love bombing. And how this links to peer approval. My students love group and hands on activity's

Understanding Control

Lesson Plan for Coercive Control, Gaslighting, and Love Bombing

Learning Objectives

  • Curriculum Area: PSHE (Personal, Social, Health and Economic Education)
  • Key Stage 3, Year 8:
    • Understand what coercive control, gaslighting, and love bombing are.
    • Link these concepts to peer approval.
    • Develop critical thinking and personal safety.

Materials Needed

  • Printed worksheets
  • Whiteboard and markers
  • Scenario role-playing cards
  • Coloured post-it notes
  • Pens and paper

Lesson Duration: 40 minutes

Lesson Breakdown

Introduction (5 minutes)

  1. Welcome and Overview:

    • Greet the students and briefly outline the lesson topics.
    • Explain the importance of understanding these manipulative behaviours in maintaining healthy relationships and detecting red flags.
  2. Ice-breaker Question:

    • Ask students: "Have you ever heard of the terms coercive control, gaslighting, or love bombing?"
    • Allow a few minutes for students to share their thoughts or experiences.

Main Teaching (15 minutes)

  1. Definitions and Explanations:

    • Coercive Control: Discuss it as ongoing psychological behaviour used to intimidate, isolate, and control another person.
    • Gaslighting: Explain it as manipulating someone into doubting their reality or sanity.
    • Love Bombing: Describe it as a tactic involving overwhelming someone with excessive attention and affection to gain control.
  2. Link to Peer Approval:

    • Discuss how seeking peer approval can sometimes make individuals more vulnerable to these behaviours.
    • Provide examples of how friends or peers might use these tactics, consciously or unconsciously, in relationships and friendships.

Group Activity: Role-Playing (10 minutes)

  1. Formation of Groups:

    • Divide the class into two groups of 3 students each.
  2. Scenario Assignments:

    • Hand out role-playing cards with different scenarios illustrating coercive control, gaslighting, and love bombing.
    • Each group will read through their scenario and prepare a short skit demonstrating the scenario and its impact.
  3. Presentation:

    • Allow each group 3 minutes to present their skit to the class.
    • After each skit, engage the class in a brief discussion about what they observed and how the behaviours affect the person involved.

Interactive Discussion (5 minutes)

  1. Reflection Questions:

    • Use coloured post-it notes for students to write responses to questions like:
      • "Why do you think it's important to recognise these behaviours?"
      • "How can we support friends who might be experiencing these?"
  2. Sharing and Feedback:

    • Invite students to stick their notes on the board and briefly share their thoughts.

Conclusion (5 minutes)

  1. Summary of Key Points:

    • Reiterate the definitions and examples of coercive control, gaslighting, and love bombing.
    • Highlight the importance of recognising these behaviours and maintaining healthy relationships.
  2. Personal Safety Tips:

    • Discuss strategies to deal with these behaviours, such as seeking help from trusted adults, and the importance of self-awareness and assertiveness.
  3. Closing Activity:

    • Ask each student to write one piece of advice they would give to a peer who might be experiencing manipulative behaviours.
    • Collect these and read a few aloud to reinforce the lesson’s messages.

Assessment

  • Observation of group activity and role-playing engagement.
  • Participation in discussions and reflections.
  • Collection and review of advice notes for understanding and empathy.

Extension Activities

  • Encourage students to create informational posters on coercive control, gaslighting, and love bombing to display in the classroom or hallway.
  • Organize a talk by a school counsellor or local charity to discuss further support systems.

Final Notes

  • Ensure a supportive and non-judgmental atmosphere.
  • Be prepared to follow up with individual students if sensitive issues arise.

By the end of this lesson, students should have a clear understanding of coercive control, gaslighting, and love bombing, and be able to identify these behaviours within peer interactions.

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