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Welcome to InclusiveEd

Welcome to InclusiveEd

InclusiveEd was created from a simple belief:

Children learn best when they feel safe, understood and able to engage meaningfully with the world around them.

My work brings together emotional wellbeing, inclusion, PSHE, citizenship, safeguarding, home education and child development to create practical resources that help children build confidence, resilience, empathy and self-understanding.

Drawing on experience in education, equality and inclusion, public engagement and lived experience, I create resources designed to support thoughtful conversations, emotional literacy, critical thinking and real-world learning.

Many of my resources focus on helping children and young people navigate anxiety, school avoidance, relationships, identity, online life, wellbeing and the challenges of growing up in an increasingly complex world. Others explore citizenship, values, democracy and understanding different perspectives in safe and respectful ways.

Whether you're a parent, teacher, SENCO, ELSA, home educator or simply someone passionate about helping children thrive, I hope you'll find something useful here.

These aren't simply worksheets.

They are tools designed to help children understand themselves, connect with others, build confidence and engage more positively with learning and life.

About Me

I'm Jennifer Darch, founder of InclusiveEd, a resource creator, trainer and educator with a background that has taken me from comedy stages and corporate boardrooms to classrooms, community projects and educational resource design.

Throughout my career, one theme has remained constant: helping people understand themselves, other people and the world around them with greater confidence, empathy and clarity.

My professional background includes public speaking, equality, diversity and inclusion, human rights education, facilitation, training design and supporting difficult conversations. Much of this work involved helping individuals and organisations navigate complex issues safely, respectfully and thoughtfully.

Over time, my work expanded into education, emotional wellbeing, political literacy, PSHE, citizenship, home education and supporting children experiencing anxiety, overwhelm and school-related challenges.

InclusiveEd was created from a growing belief that learning is about far more than information. Children and young people learn through relationships, emotional safety, curiosity, participation and meaningful experiences. When children feel safe enough to engage, ask questions, make mistakes and explore the world around them, learning becomes deeper, more memorable and more meaningful.

Today, I create practical resources for parents, teachers, SENCOs, ELSAs, home educators and schools. My resources cover areas including emotional wellbeing, anxiety support, school anxiety and EBSA, home education, PSHE, citizenship, safeguarding, political literacy and confidence-building.

Many of my ideas are also shaped by lived experience, both professionally and personally. Some of the resources I create have grown directly from supporting my own daughter through anxiety, home education and finding alternative pathways to learning and confidence.

Everything I create is guided by four simple principles:

Clarity. Compassion. Curiosity. Confidence.

Whether you're supporting an anxious child, teaching a PSHE lesson, exploring political ideas, navigating home education or simply looking for practical ways to help children thrive, my aim is to create resources that are thoughtful, accessible and genuinely useful.

Because ultimately, education is not just about what children know.

It's about helping them understand themselves, connect with others and engage with the world with confidence, empathy and hope.

Blog Posts

Calm Code™ — Finding Calm Through Nature
Gentle ways children and teenagers can reconnect, regulate and feel calmer in an overwhelming world There is something about nature that slows us down. Not always dramatically. Not in a magical movie-montage kind of way where everybody suddenly beco...
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PSHE, Wellbeing and Attendance: Why Emotional Safety in Schools Matters More Than Ever
Something has shifted in schools. Across primary and secondary education, increasing numbers of children and young people are struggling with anxiety, emotional overwhelm, attendance difficulties and emotionally based school avoidance (EBSA). Persis...
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How Calm Code Helps Children, Parents & Schools Understand Anxiety & Overwhelm
When children are struggling with anxiety, emotional overwhelm or emotionally based school avoidance (EBSA), adults often feel pressure to make things better quickly. We want to calm things down. We want to help. We want to understand what is happen...
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How To Help A Child During A Panic Attack (Without Making It Worse)
When a child is having a panic attack, most adults instinctively want to fix it quickly.We reassure.We ask questions.We encourage them to calm down.We try to reason.We try to stop the panic. But during a panic attack, a child’s nervous system is not...
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What School Anxiety REALLY Looks Like In Children
When people imagine school anxiety, they often picture a child crying at the school gates. And sometimes that does happen. But school anxiety is often far quieter, more complicated and more misunderstood than people realise. Some children become dis...
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Why Some Children Can’t Talk When They’re Overwhelmed
One of the most confusing and upsetting experiences for parents is when a child suddenly stops talking during stress, anxiety or overwhelm. Please rest assured that this is a very common response to Anxiety. It may be out of choice that a child does...
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What To Say To An Anxious Teen
Teenagers today are growing up in a world that can feel incredibly demanding. School pressure. Exams. Friendships. Social media. Body image. Skin changes. Hormones. Constant comparison. Questions about the future. Pressure to achieve. Pressure to “k...
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When Your Child Feels Anxious: What Parents Need to Know
There is a particular kind of fear that comes when you realise your child may be struggling emotionally. Something feels different. Maybe your child suddenly doesn’t want to go to school anymore. Maybe they cry more easily, seem constantly worried o...
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Blog Posts

Building Children's Confidence: Why It Matters More Than We Sometimes Realise
Children are often told to "be confident", but confidence is not something that magically appears one morning. It is something that develops gradually through experiences, relationships, practice and support. Confidence influences far more t...
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Creating Safe Spaces in PSHE: How Social Emotional Learning and Storytelling Transform Dialogue
Teaching issues such as bullying, protected characteristics, sex and relationships, values and identities requires more than curriculum coverage. It requires safe, inclusive environments where learners feel able to speak, listen and reflect. Having ...
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The Journey Back: Why Calm Spaces Matter in Child Anxiety Recovery
When a child is struggling with anxiety, overwhelm or school avoidance, adults often feel pressure to find solutions quickly. How do we get them back to school? How do we stop the panic? How do we help them catch up? How do we build confidence again...
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The Interconnected Nature of Learning - Emotional Safety, Meaning and the Thinking Behind InclusiveEd
One of the things I have found myself reflecting on increasingly over recent years is how strangely fragmented our conversations about children can sometimes become. We discuss behaviour, attendance, wellbeing, academic attainment, anxiety, concentr...
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What to Do When Your Child Refuses School: A Real Parent’s Guide to School Anxiety, EBSA & Starting Home Education Gently
What to Do When Your Child Refuses School Day After Day There’s a moment many parents never expect to face, the morning your child looks at you with a fear you can’t explain away anymore. Not the usual reluctance, not the “five more minutes” we all ...
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What Do We Mean by “Screen‑Free Learning” – And Why Does It Matter?
When we say screen‑free learning, we don’t mean banning technology or pretending we’re back in the 1950s. We mean something more intentional: Screens should serve the learning, not replace it. In a typical secondary classroom, PowerPoint opens almos...
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Why Political Literacy Matters, And Why So Many Young People Still Can’t Access It
If you’ve ever watched a child try to make sense of the world around them, you’ll know they’re naturally curious. They ask big questions. They notice unfairness. They pick up on tension. They hear things adults say when we think they’re not listenin...
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Why PSHE Is Getting Harder to Teach And What Teachers Can Do When “Manosphere” Talking Points Enter the Classroom
Why PSHE Is Getting Harder to Teach And What Teachers Can Do When “Manosphere” Talking Points Enter the Classroom
Why PSHE Is Getting Harder to Teach And What Teachers Can Do When “Manosphere” Talking Points Enter the Classroom If like me, you are engaging in certain platforms and forums where teachers share their fears you'll know that the Manosphere has...
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