Conflict Engagement for Individualized Education Program Team Members

Date Published:
Source
Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools
Volume
55
Issue
2
Page Numbers
381-388
In this powerful, brief article, Greg Abel's presents key insights he gleaned through years of experience in education. He invites readers to recognize their opportunity to engage conflicts constructively, always for the benefit of children. He notes, "Effective and intentional conflict engagement practices have the potential to build trust, build social capital, increase the possibilities for innovation and creativity, and improve the capacity to address complex challenges. We can learn to leverage conflict to better serve the needs of the children, youth, and families we serve." Abell closes with "essentials for effectively engaging conflict":
mutual purpose/mutual benefit
curiosity
self-awareness
inquiry
advocacy
synthesis
moving forward
dealing with imperfection
long-term perspective

As professionals working in schools, we are often expected to function as teams to meet the unique needs of the children, youth, and families we serve. This provides us the opportunity to work with people of diverse experience, perspective, and expertise. In this context, we will encounter conflict. How we engage this challenge will ultimately determine what is possible. Conflict has the potential to be productive or destructive. Our individual and collective experience with conflict is based on the choices we make in our engagement of this shared experience. Ineffective conflict engagement practices will often compromise trust, erode social capital, and challenge psychological safety. This may result in individual and collective disengagement from the pursuit of a shared objective and be manifested in the avoidance of, and unwillingness to, engage critical complex challenges. We can individually and collectively adopt practices and develop skills for aligning our actions and speaking with what we say we believe that there is value in diversity of experience and per- spective. New learning, innovation, and creativity are born in the context of con- flict. Effective and intentional conflict engagement practices have the potential to build trust, build social capital, increase the possibilities for innovation and creativity, and improve the capacity to address complex challenges. We can learn to leverage conflict to better serve the needs of the children, youth, and families we serve. In this viewpoint article, we will explore the role of conflict in shared learning, innovation, and creativity in service of children with special needs. [abstract]