Category: Social and Emotional Learning

  • High School to College: Arts-based SEL & Student Success Planning

    High School to College: Arts-based SEL & Student Success Planning

    This article discusses one of the most effective, yet often overlooked vehicles for fostering Emotional Intelligence (EQ) and Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) – arts education. Let’s look at 5 types of Art-based SEL and how they improve student success planning. It was originally published on the ThinkBuildLive Success website.

    The development of Emotional Intelligence (EQ) and Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) skills in high school has never been more vital. Just ask college educators why this matters. They are increasingly tasked with supporting students who arrive on campus academically prepared but emotionally under-equipped.

    One of the most effective, yet often overlooked vehicles for fostering these essential competencies and supporting student success planning is arts education.

    5 Types of Art-based SEL for Student Success Planning are:

    • Visual Arts
    • Performing Arts
    • Creative Writing
    • Dance and Movement
    • Music Education

    Why Social-Emotional Skills Matter in College

    Social-emotional learning enables students to manage emotions, set and achieve goals, and show empathy. It further enables them to maintain relationships and make responsible decisions. These are competencies identified by CASEL (the Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning).

    In higher education, these skills translate into these critical success factors:

    • resilience
    • self-regulation
    • adaptability
    • collaborative ability.

    When students have a strong SEL foundation they are better positioned to thrive both inside and outside the classroom.

    The Adolescent Window of Opportunity

    Early adolescence – roughly middle and high school – is a period of heightened brain plasticity. During this time, neural pathways that influence emotional regulation, social perception, and behavioral habits are solidified.

    According to Brooks (1999), this developmental window is ideal for reinforcing self-esteem, empathy, and personal responsibility. Programs that focus on SEL during these formative years are preparing students for high school graduation and laying the groundwork for college readiness.

    The Arts as a SEL Catalyst

    Arts education – whether visual, performing, or literary – engages the emotional and social dimensions of learning in ways few other disciplines do. As Ping Ho of UCLA’s UCLArts & Healing notes, the arts enhance SEL by facilitating self-awareness, emotional expression, and empathy.

    In fact, decades of research show that structured arts programs can reduce stress, boost self-confidence, and build social connectedness. For students, this translates to improved academic performance, better communication skills, and greater college preparedness.

    Research-Backed Impact

    Studies have long pointed to the connection between arts engagement and positive developmental outcomes. A seven-year California Endowment study found that arts participation significantly boosted both academic achievement and self-esteem in adolescents.

    Shirley Brice Heath’s 1998 study showed that students in arts-based afterschool programs were more confident, more resilient, and more likely to aspire to and succeed in higher education than their non-arts peers.

    Another standout example is the YouthARTS Development Project. It demonstrated how arts programs improved communication, emotional expression, and teamwork in at-risk youth. These are precisely the qualities students need to navigate the social and academic demands of college life.

    If we want to build resilient, adaptable, and socially conscious college graduates, we need to support arts education in high school. It’s not a luxury. It’s a prerequisite for 21st-century success.
    ~Elizabeth Kemler

    Arts Modalities and Their Lasting Effects

    Visual Arts help students process complex emotions and express themselves non-verbally. These forms of self-expression often translate into stronger observational and critical thinking skills. These traits are valuable in every college discipline.

    Performing Arts provides safe environments for risk-taking, empathy-building, and collaboration. These experiences enhance public speaking and leadership abilities, both essential in higher ed.

    Creative Writing fosters reflective thinking and emotional articulation. Students who’ve had opportunities to develop their voice through writing tend to be better equipped to engage in academic discourse and build peer relationships.

    Dance and Movement activities promote body awareness and stress relief while encouraging discipline and persistence. Such skills support overall wellness. This is increasingly recognized as a foundation for academic performance.

    Music Education enhances emotional regulation, concentration, and group cohesion. Programs that integrate music often see increased student engagement and attendance. These are key indicators of college readiness.

    A Personal Perspective: Why This Matters

    My own experience speaks to the power of the arts. As a student managing ADHD, dyslexia, and social anxiety, the arts were my lifeline. They allowed me to process emotions, build self-worth, and explore identity in a way that academics alone could not. This creative outlet helped me arrive at college more grounded and self-aware. I’ve since seen countless students walk a similar path.

    The Takeaway for College Educators

    When students arrive with a background in arts-integrated SEL, we notice the difference. They participate more fully and adapt more quickly. They often lead with empathy.

    High school educators should advocate for high school arts programs as both enrichment and essential college prep. College educators can create bridge programs that collaborate with feeder schools. They can also integrate arts-based activities into orientation and first-year experience curricula.

    Arts education isn’t just about producing artists. It’s about developing well-rounded, emotionally intelligent students who are prepared to succeed in college and contribute meaningfully to their communities.

    Final Thought

    If we want to build resilient, adaptable, and socially conscious college graduates, we need to support arts education in high school. It’s not a luxury. It’s a prerequisite for 21st-century success.

  • ChatGTP Offers Multiple Layers of Support to Students With ADHD

    ChatGTP Offers Multiple Layers of Support to Students With ADHD

    Artificial Intelligence is building an impressive track record of offering learners with ADHD multiple layers of personalized assistance. Differentiation tools and strategies will continue to play a large role in education as student populations become more diverse and students with special needs are increasingly placed in general education classes. According to aChatGTP Offers Multiple Layers of Support to Students With ADHDChatGTP Offers Multiple Layers of Support to Students With ADHD survey that I did, personalized learning is also the area of education that teachers believe will continue to be the most impacted by AI.

    AI algorithms analyze students’ learning styles, strengths, and weaknesses to create tailored learning plans that are differentiated by content, pacing, and rigor. Robots are improving social skills via storytelling directly affecting childrens’ cognitive performance, watches with sensors provide reminders for students to focus, software provides immediate feedback and develops personalized, engaging, lessons, and much more.

    Each student with ADHD is unique and has different support needs; but a common theme is tasks related to executive function such as organization, structure, and focus. The accessibility of ChatGPT means that students have the independence and agency to access support at any time and from any place. Students can ask ChatGPT to create a study schedule for them within their personal time constraints, create a list of suggested tasks to complete a project or assignment, provide ways to effectively study and manage time and much more.

    Students can also independently access commonly used scaffolding supports through ChatGTP such as visual aids, a summary of main concepts, comprehension questions, examples, the text restated differently, outlines, the text translated, steps to a process (with explanations), etc. When students with ADHD are taught to use AI as a support, far from “cheating”, they are accessing metacognitive learning strategies. The process of developing the awareness needed to identify the type of support a learner needs coupled with access to that support is one of growth and empowerment as students embrace the technology that will shape the workplace they will enter.

    Younger students require a significant amount of guidance and instruction on the effective use of ChatGPT. These skills have to be explicitly taught but the investment definitely pays off as they are integral to students owning their learning and becoming self advocates. It should also be noted that for students under the age of eighteen, parents and educators should use ChatGTP together since it is not currently authorized for minors due to legal and privacy concerns.

    Reading can easily become a landmine of distractions for the ADHD learner because of the sustained effort and focus required. Without going into the possible distractions that a student might experience from finding the text boring, a mismatch of rigor, or possible difficulties with reading, the assignment itself can present considerable distractions. When students are not able to understand a text, reading it over and over again can be overwhelming. Multi-step problems, word problems, and using formulas in Math present similar challenges for students in terms of maintaining focus and becoming overwhelmed. Students can easily find themselves in a negative cycle that ends in frustration and not completing their assignments.

    Enter ChatGTP which can function as a personal tutor of sorts. Students can type in specific questions or enter blocks of text and ask for a summary. They can also request a specific formula or multi-step operation with examples. ChatGTP’s interface is easier to use than a search engine since it is designed to be conversational in tone. It also provides an answer rather than a wide variety of results (some irrelevant) that are essentially just more information to sort through. ChatGTP can summarize difficult concepts or answer specific questions, provide steps for problem solving, and quickly defines terms within seconds.

    People with ADHD are brilliant, fast thinkers and many have trouble organizing their thoughts into linear language since they’re not linear thinkers. Their minds shift from different topics quickly and then at times they can hyperfocus in one area. While this way of thinking can facilitate forming connections that others miss, it can be difficult to communicate their ideas to others. The planning and organizing aspects of writing, as well as gathering research for longer pieces rely heavily on strong executive functioning skills which is an area of weakness for students with ADHD. ChatGPT offers assistance with creating outlines and templates, enhancing the style of writing, grammar, answers to specific questions, as well as a dictionary and thesaurus. This doesn’t mean that ChatGTP will do all of a person with ADHD’s thinking, researching, or writing for them; it means that ChatGTP can provide the executive functioning support that neurodiverse people need to be able to publish their ideas in written form.

    It’s important to understand that AI is a resource, a prompt, an organizer, a tool, not a think tank or a fount of innovation. Humans still reign as the planet’s visionaries, those with ADHD being some of the most brilliant and creative among them. The support that AI offers students who have ADHD can reduce or even remove some of what is standing in the way of kids with ADHD from communicating their thoughts and being successful academically. What more could geniuses with ADHD such as Einstein, Leonardo da Vinci, and others have accomplished with AI by their side?

    Nicole Biscotti is a Momvocate, Educator, & Author whose focus is on the future of school as being informed by relevancy and the needs of our currently marginalized, under-supported learners. We have a lot to learn if we listen!

    Nicole wrote I Can Learn When I’m Moving: Going to School With ADHD http://bit.ly/icanlearnwhenimove with her 9 year old son from the unique perspectives of a child and a mother who is also a teacher. She has seen both personally and professionally how children struggle to be understood and how adults are often at a loss with how to handle the difficult behaviors associated with ADHD. She empowers parents and teachers to provide game changing support for children with ADHD in school through sharing her and her son’s story, along with researched-based strategies.

    Nicole has also translated books into Spanish such as El Cuento del Perdón by Melody McAllister and Todos Pueden Aprender Matemáticas by Alice Aspinall. I Can Learn When I’m Moving: Going to School With ADHD is also coming soon en español.

    Her next book, Invisible con ADHD: Real Voices, Real Policy for Latino Students is co-authored with Andrea Aguirre. They address the issues around the disproportionate lack of support that Latino children with ADHD are faced with. Through interviews with former students, educators in the United States and Mexico, and extensive research, they will offer educators a holistic view of the obstacles that currently stand in the way of protecting kids from poor outcomes as well as offering research based solutions.   

  • Four Quick Fixes for Increased Engagement in Secondary History Classrooms

    Four Quick Fixes for Increased Engagement in Secondary History Classrooms

    In today’s world, one can argue that hi犀利士
    story is the most important subject area for the 21st century student to master. That’s easy for me to say and defend- I’ve taught and supervised history courses in New Jersey high schools for nearly two decades. I have a natural interest in learning more about these time periods, as do most other history teachers. However, that cannot be said for many high school students who are- quite literally- forced to sit through daily history instruction, which for many students may be the worst part of their school day. This reality saddens me and it is one that I am determined to reverse.

    I quite often hear adults remark that they hated history when they were in high school, but love it as adults. The past practice of lecture-based teaching and rote memorization assessment helped create a bad experience for history students (cue images the interactions between Jeff Spicoli and Mr. Hand). But, gratefully, times have changed, and we are seeing a shift in the way history is taught and assessed. Much of that shift is due to the focus on increasing student engagement. Engagement may be the key to permanently moving history to thumbs-up status and for students to finally realize the benefit of the content. It is now widely accepted that increased engagement positively impacts student achievement. Programs such as Brown University’s Choices Program and Stanford History Education Group’s Reading Like a Historian aim to shift the content to a more hands-on, skills-based approach in order to better engage students. However, incorporating these programs into your existing curriculum could be time-consuming or costly. So, I aim to give you four ways to immediately increase engagement in your secondary history classrooms with the end goal of making history as interesting to students as it is to their teachers.

    Quick Fix #1: Focus on the End Game

    History gains new content by the minute, yet the school year is finite. With this reality, teachers must decide which content is most important for their students to master state standards and leave the class with essential knowledge. This is difficult for many history teachers who may feel constantly rushed or that they are doing a disservice to their students by leaving key figures or events out of their instruction. I ask teachers who struggle with abridging content to ask themselves this question: Is this piece of information critical to my students’ understanding of the overall topic? Imagine a lesson on battles as part of a unit on World War II. One teacher has his students independently fill out a chart listing twenty major battles of the war, their dates, locations, and victors during a 45-minute class period. Let’s compare it to another teacher who, in the same amount of class time, gives the students a completed chart of the seven most significant battles of WWII and asks the students to work in pairs to investigate why these battles are considered most significant to the war’s outcome and to rank the battles from most to least significant. A simple switch in instruction, where the breadth of content was decreased, changed engagement entirely. While the first lesson exposed students to the names of twenty World War II battles, the second lesson required students to investigate, dialogue, reason, and debate. The students in the latter teacher’s class undoubtedly experienced a more engaging, hands-on lesson.

    To those teachers who are hesitant about abridging content, I urge you to try a different approach to content-heavy instruction. Decide what the most important details are- which details help meet your ultimate goal- and deliver them to the class, then offer students enrichment lessons. Post additional readings on your class website, hold an enrichment session after school for interested students, or keep a list of recommended readings on your classroom bulletin board.

    Quick Fix #2: Facilitate Frequent Class Discussions

    Using discussion as a method of instruction and assessment is an efficient use of class time. Discussions are a great way to engage students with content, assess for understanding, and improve speaking and listening skills. To use discussion as a method of instruction, give the students a reading, a set of documents, or short video to examine along with focus questions before the discussion begins. Student preparation around these focus questions is an important part of facilitating an effective class discussion.

    To those worried about students slacking off, dominating the discussion time, or the discussion going off-topic in a negative way, set rules and review them with the students before opening the discussion. Using a rubric, frequently reviewing rules for discussion, and using facilitation techniques will keep the discussion on track. Some teachers also find success in setting up small group discussions before facilitating a whole-class discussion. Just like most things in life, discussions will get better with practice. Your students will become more comfortable expressing their ideas and you will find it easier to facilitate discussion as they become a regular part of the class.

    Quick Fix #3: Incorporate Social-Emotional Learning into Lessons through Primary Source Analysis

    A great way to study the past and engage with the content while developing social-emotional skills is to examine primary sources. Primary sources give students firsthand accounts of the time period they are studying and help students to contextualize the events of the era. They help students realize that history is not just a story about the past, but that it is filled with real people who had feelings, dreams, and setbacks just like them. Primary sources help take these figures out of the history books and make them come alive while also helping students gain a sense of empathy for those figures of the past.

    What is more engaging for students learning about the Civil Rights Movement: reading pages from a textbook about the movement, or studying firsthand accounts from the people who actually lived through the movement paired with photographs from the era? Examining the photograph of Elizabeth Eckford integrating Central High School while Hazel Bryan scream at her and reading Elizabeth’s account of that day is a powerful teaching tool. Photographs are simple primary source with the ability to spark questions about the era, as well as about human behavior; students can contemplate not only “what” is happening in this picture, but “why” it is happening. Asking students to imagine how those teenagers pictured felt the moment that photograph was taken evokes not only a potent history lesson, but also a powerful life lesson. The goal of developing students’ social-emotional skills, in this case their sense of historical empathy, is to transfer that empathy to their everyday lives.

    Quick Fix #4: Connect the Past with the Present

    Just when you thought you could pare down your lesson on Populism, the 2016 Presidential Election happened! We all know the adage “history repeats itself,” and what a great time to bring this phrase into our classrooms. Ask students to decide if this phrase is, in fact, true by comparing current events with events of the past. This is a great technique to pair with the three previously suggested strategies. Craft a question that aligns with your end game, have students prepare their answer to the question using primary source evidence (provided by you or researched by the students themselves) from the past and present, and facilitate a class discussion where students discuss their findings. Connecting the past with the present helps students realize that history is alive.

    Teachers should feel empowered to take these suggestions and tailor them to fit their students’ needs. For educators who are hesitant about changing their instruction, I advise you to start small. Try one strategy and see how it works, and do not hesitate to ask your students or a colleague for feedback.

    You have about 180 tries to get it right!

  • Keep. Them. Safe.

    Keep. Them. Safe.

    Images with sentiments about online safety.

    Talking about SEXTING with teens can make all of us feel uncomfortable.

    As #K12Leaders, we must find ways to support staff, parents and caregivers so they can facilitate the conversation with us.

    Safety doesn’t happen by accident. It happens when we are aware and equipped with resources to make Informed decisions.

    I was recently approached to pull together a team of experts in my district on a presentation for some of our students. We are teaching them about the realities and dangers of sexting among pre-teens and teenagers. Talking about SEXTING with teens can make ALL of us feel uncomfortable. As #K12Leaders, we must find ways to support staff, parents and caregivers so they can facilitate the conversation with us. So, as part of our planning, we brainstormed ideas and pulled together resources.

    What came out of it (besides the ongoing presentations we are doing) was a website created for adults as the intended audience. While there are plenty of resources here to be viewed alongside children, pre-tees, and teenagers – I recommend parents/caregivers spending time learning, exploring and choosing beforehand .

    I am sharing my site with teachers as well. Some teachers have children who did not grow up during times like these, and some have little ones too young to use devices. However, we all know someone with children who are right in the thick of things – or will be soon enough . The Internet is a vast and ever-changing environment. The better informed adults are, the better we can support our students.

    Check it out, provide feedback and share additional resources!

    This website has become a labor of love…

    For you. 💙

    Let’s lead K12 Education together!

    Click. The. Link.

    https://sites.google.com/mpspk12.org/mpsfamilyresources/home

  • Social And Emotional Learning Resistance Confronts K-12

    Social And Emotional Learning Resistance Confronts K-12

    Social emotional learning (SEL) has come under fire in some U.S. districts when, ironically, it appears to be needed most

    Christine Ravesi-Weinstein, an assistant principal in Massachusetts, is worried about her students.

    “2022 was without a doubt the most trying return to school we’ve ever experienced,” she said at a recent K12Leaders online event. “The amount of discipline issues we’re dealing with that were intense, large discipline issues – vandalism, violence, threats – was not something that I was at all prepared for. The number of students in dire need of counseling is off the charts.”

    Yet some groups in the U.S. have started targeting social and emotional learning and mental health education.

    In Carmel, Indiana, activists demand this past fall that a district fire its mental health coordinator from what they said was a “dangerous, worthless” job.

    Some parents are telling school board meetings that emotion-related lessons should be taught at home. Some call even talking of mental health at school brainwashing, indoctrinating students in unwanted progressive ideas about race, gender and sexuality.

    One parent at a school meeting this past September in Southlake, Texas even called the district’s lessons on suicide prevention “advertisements for suicide.”

    SEL experts have responses.

    Good programs tarred by bad ones?

    Driving some of this mistrust is mixed quality in the breadth of what are now called SEL-related services or resources. As with any burgeoning trend, a wide selection of related assets at varying levels of effectiveness have recently come available. Not all these resources are grounded in science, sometimes giving well-meaning initiatives aimed at students’ current mental challenges a bad name.

    “Mental health education is vital. But it’s very important that schools adopt evidence-based approaches and aren’t just bringing in any program or lesson plan they find on the Internet. You want an organization with a track record working with mental health in schools, with programming that’s science-based to show it does no harm and actually improves kids’ mental health and emotional literacy,” said Dr. Molly Lawlor, Director of Curriculum and Research at the Goldie Hawn Foundation’s MindUP social and emotional learning program in a recent online event answering hard SEL-related issues.

    “SEL does well when when it’s a reputable program,” agreed Dido Balla, Director of Educational Innovation and Partnerships at MindUP. “At MindUP, we start with the brain. We aren’t teaching opinions or any new agenda. We show: ‘if you have a brain, this is how it functions.’ Or in other words: no matter what you believe, biologically, anxiety can still affect you. Here’s what to expect, and here’s how to manage it.”

    Children clearly need help today

    Some critics of SEL harken to a time when schools in America only felt they needed to teach core subjects, plus the Ten Commandments and the Golden Rule. But children today face greater challenges than previous generations, like school shootings and social media. And the modern impact on mental health is measurably growing. Factor in the burden of COVID-19, and the more than a million children around the world even as of the summer of 2020 who’d lost a parent to the virus, and experts say we’re facing an unprecedented mental health crisis among kids.

    “Pre-pandemic, we already had 5.2 million children aged 3 to 17 affected by anxiety disorder. And after working with thousands of educators throughout the pandemic, I can tell you those numbers are not going down. They’re going up,” said Balla. “One in five students in a classroom is going to be experiencing a mental health issue over the course of their education.” 

    Educators see today’s challenges up close and feel obliged to assist. Experts say the need has never been greater for strategies, grounded in research that wasn’t available to previous generations, instead of leaving young people to cope with modern stresses themselves.

    “If you don’t talk about it, kids are going to look for information. Especially high schoolers. They’ll go to each other and often they don’t have accurate information about mental health. Not everything they see online or on TV or in movies is good advice. Some kids then adopt habits that aren’t healthy,” said MindUP’s Lawlor.

    “A program that promotes resiliency, improves kindness, improves emotional control, improves perspectives? I’m struggling to see how parents could object to it. I would invite critics to have conversations with people who actually understand what good SEL is, and see how it connects to the goals that you have for your own children. You might be surprised how much alignment there is with what good SEL is teaching,” said Balla.

    Silver lining: conflict management practice

    The uproar itself in some quarters around SEL has benefit. Listening to others, having empathy for others, listening to different perspectives and managing conflict are all emotional skills to learn and exercise.

    “Social and emotional learning helps us appreciate differences. Here we have a great example of a difference of opinion: a group that doesn’t believe that social emotional learning is valuable. Well, we need to listen to that and hear what they’re saying. Even if we may not agree. That’s a skill everyone should have,” said Lawlor.

    Are kids showing up ready to learn?

    Lawlor and Balla spoke at an online event answering hard SEL-related questions submitted in advance by school district leaders in the U.S. and Canada. The event was sponsored by Edsby, vendor of a popular online K-12 learning platform worldwide that recently introduced a system to enable students to share how they’re feeling and then present research-based, age-appropriate strategies and resources to students, including materials from MindUP, to help students regulate their emotions. Finally, Edsby also incorporates mechanisms for educators to take action to help their students succeed. (Disclosure: Edsby is a sponsor of K12Leaders.)

    Other approaches, such as a new add-on to Teams from Microsoft, and standalone systems such as Skodel and School Day, address the issue in more lightweight fashions.

    There are unprecedented challenges facing K-12 students today. Educators, especially trying to teach remotely, need to know how ready their students are showing up to learn. K-12 leadership should defend investment in emotional awareness and infrastructure in the face of criticism, especially when approaches and content are irrefutably grounded in science.

    Ravesi-Weinstein, the assistant principal in Mass., shared another story in her K12Leaders online event, a story from home when she was having a tough night emotionally. Her 8-year-old son came up and said, “Mommy, put your hand up like this. We’re gonna breathe.” Her son put out one hand up with his fingers spread apart. Then, tracing his 日本藤素 fingers with the other hand, he had Ravesi-Weinstein take a deep breath at the tips of each finger and breathe out in between.

    “Feel better, Mommy?” he asked.

    “Where did you learn that?” she replied.

    “School,” he said.

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