Social emotional development and the skills for a successful life!
Social emotional development and the skills
for a successful life!
How do children learn for life, how do
they get to know themselves and understand others?
And how do we send them out into the
world confidently?
By Ria Uiterloo
In this series, I write about
competences and experiences to promote a successful life for children. In this
article, three (3) educators are giving their perspective on positive
approaches for children’s relationships and development.
Education and child development cannot
happen without knowing a relationship with the other, with the environment and
with self. Therefore, I think the need for developing Social Emotional Learning
(SEL) in schools is very important.
Competencies are crucial and should be a priority for student success.
For me, Social Emotional Learning is LIFE.
Social and Emotional Learning involves
developing competences such as self-awareness, self-management, social awareness,
relationship skills and making responsible choices (see figure 1).
Figuur 1 CASEL’s integrated framework
promotes five core competencies[1].
I have long been associated with the Foundation Catholic Education
St. Maarten and the Stichting Expertise Centrum Ervaringsgericht Onderwijs (EGO
Foundation). Both organizations see the importance of Social Emotional Learning
programs as an essential part of upbringing and education. I personally believe
they are the basis for healthy social emotional development (to grow in
language development, for example, but also in motor development).
Social-Emotional Learning is the process by which pupils acquire and apply
necessary knowledge, attitudes and skills so that they can better relate to
themselves and others. And SEL supports social-emotional development.
Studies have shown that effective SEL programs improve cognitive
development. The programs improve students' self-regulatory ability, which in
turn leads to better academic results and behavior.
As an education expert, I believe it is important that children be
well supported as they grow up. At SKOS schools and Stichting EGO’s After-school programs, we have various activities,
resources and tools to develop SEL competences (for example: Box full of
Feelings and House full of emotions[2] , programs
to teach coping skills (Partnership for Children UK[3] ),
Habits of Covey[4]
).
Audrey
Wilson, Student Care Coordinator at the Sr. Regina School on St. Maarten and Train
the Trainer of coping skills programs as Zippy's and Apple's friends, responds
in an interview about the importance of and her experience with Social
Emotional Learning:
"In my view, social emotional learning cannot be separated
from academic learning. Indeed, when the child's social-emotional development
has been given space, guided and supported, the aforementioned CASEL core
competences can be expressed to the maximum extent.
We can challenge a child academically all day, and if we are
lucky, the child manages to store, process AND make connections between
different subjects/areas throughout the day. On that day, the child has not
experienced what it means to lose once, to properly assess danger of a game
or/and to solve a dilemma.
When we approach children mainly academically, we do not pay
attention to the child's brain that is developing intensively, mainly until the
age of 8. Anyway, until the age of 23, it is still in an intensive and complex
growth process.
When, especially in the first period up to age 8, we shift the
emphasis to learning to (re)know your Self, developing, and reflecting on
Self-Awareness, Self-Regulation, Social Awareness, Relational Skills, making
Responsible Choices, we help children to eventually reach maximum academic
learning, recognize their strengths and weaknesses, accept and apply them in
both the academic and the socio-emotional world.
We can start this at a very young age, by making children aware of
their executive functions[5].
By including their parents in this as well, parents and children learn from
each other and each other’s talents. From that basic attitude, an understanding
of academic talents and development will grow.
The "Zippy's Friends" coping skills lessons, especially
in grade 4, are very special to me. Around the age of 7 - 8 years children
manage to reflect on behavior better, they start to make connections and
understand. For example, when we work on module 3 "Starting and breaking
relationships", they know to refer back to module 1 "Feelings",
they can compare a story with a situation they have experienced. As a result,
they manage to process emotions more easily, develop and refine their coping
skills."
Marcel van
Herpen of Centrum Pedagogisch Contact[6],
education expert, explains in a conversation from his
perspective what a teacher/educator needs to consider when it comes to
competences and basic needs. I first share with him how difficult teachers find
it to integrate SEL competences drawn from the various sources available to
them into their actions.
To my question "If you now look at the competences derived
from CASEL and the (basic) needs (which a teacher/educator has to take into
account) that you describe so beautifully in your books, what are good
practical actions?” Marcel van Herpen responds as follows:
"Man is a psycho-social being. He thinks and acts. His mind
and body are connected. And although you can distinguish all kinds of aspects
of man, he is one. So everything man experiences, influences what he thinks and
what he does. The unconscious influences
the conscious. Emotions affect actions. And emotions affect cognitive
abilities. A child who can face the world emotionally free and uninhibited can
access his potential and develop his cognitive abilities. Optimal development
requires more than a stable emotional state of mind. But it is an important part
of a contingent foundation.
When a child is born, he requires - besides food - emotional
affection above all else. He is more or less assimilated into the environment.
Security - we know it from the attachment process - is then the most important
condition for further development.
A toddler discovers that he is a unique person. He wants to do
everything himself. It is as if he
discovers the words 'I' and 'no'.
The baby asks for a relationship. The toddler for autonomy. And
from then on, these two basic psychological needs revolve around each other.
The toddler starts taking more and more initiatives. The primary
school pupil takes big cognitive steps. The adolescent does too, but at the
same time will also try - to some extent - to break free from family ties.
So every human being needs both relationships with others and autonomy to
be/become himself. The freedom a human being needs for autonomous development
(needs, desires, etc.) is limited by the needs of others. Thus, in proper
development, a child can articulate and practise his own needs while assessing
and giving space to the needs of others. One could say that in doing so, the
emancipation process and the democratisation process go hand in hand. Therefore, in a right pedagogical relationship,
a child is given the space (needed to have experiences) for which he can take
responsibility (needed to be considerate of others).
When educators (teachers, parents, youth leaders, trainers, etc.) align
this vision, development proceeds better."In doing so, Marcel gives
practical examples:
Toddler at the
chalkboard
In group 1/2, a toddler walked up to the chalkboard. He picked up a piece
of chalk and started 'scratching'. He explored the whole board. The edges, the
whole middle section. Then he lays down and continued drawing. Then upside down.
Then dancing. Then throwing the chalk at the board. Then using big circles. And
so he continued -exploring himself and the chalkboard -for 28 minutes. The
teacher was in the circle playing a game with the rest of the class. She lets the toddler have his way. She left him free. This allowed him to make
discoveries he would never have made in an imposed work or a play-through
circuit.
Pedagogical and didactic differentiation
In a grade 5 class, the
children had to make a worksheet. The teacher allowed the children look at the
sheet. She said that the children who thought they could make it themselves
could start - if they would work quietly. (Freedom and responsibility). The
children who had questions were allowed to wait in the circle for interactive
instruction. If during the instruction children thought they could continue
independently, they could continue at their own table. As a result, no one had
to wait for someone else. After all, waiting is demotivating and encourages
undesirable behaviour. And from the moment the teacher (relationship) was no
longer needed, everyone could work independently (autonomy).
By granting autonomy from your relationship,
you give children more opportunities to take responsibility themselves. That
responsibility, in turn, is conditional to gaining more freedom!
Tips:
1.
Give children the freedom
they can take responsibility for.
2.
Allow children
experiences in which they can discover what they can do themselves, and what
you as an educator are needed for.
3.
Watch carefully and talk
regularly about what children are doing and experiencing.
4.
Agree with educators
(teachers and parents) about the strategy you use.
5.
Enjoy what children can
do on their own and help them reach their limits.
Framework CASEL 2018
Marcel
van Herpen thus
confirms that when pupils have supportive relationships and opportunities to
develop and practice social, emotional and cognitive skills in different
contexts, they develop better. As teachers, parents and educators, we need to
grant autonomy from the relationship and allow children to take
responsibility. This is only possible if
we design the environment so that children learn this at school, at home and in
their environment. As we teach those skills and when confidence is given, children
learn, and academic learning accelerates.
Research
shows that SEL not only improves achievement, but also prosocial behavior (such
as kindness, sharing and empathy), and improves students' attitudes towards
school and reduces depression and stress among students (Durlak et al., 2011).
The
relationship between parents and school but also the relationship with the
community can enhance the effect of the school approach by extending learning
to home, neighborhood, After-school programs and Sport’s organizations/clubs (tennis,
swimming, football, chess club, etc.). Social contexts, and thus social clubs,
sports clubs and after-school clubs, can support classroom and school efforts,
especially by providing students with additional opportunities to refine and
apply different SEL skills (Catalano et al., 2004).
After-school
activities also provide students with opportunities to connect with supportive
adults and peers (Gullotta, 2015). They are a great venue to help young people
develop and apply new skills and personal talents. Research has shown that
after-school programs focused on social and emotional development can
significantly improve students' self-esteem, attachment to school, positive
social behavior, school grades and achievement test scores, while decreasing
problem behavior (Durlak et al., 2010).
Students
are more successful in school and everyday life when they:
- Know and
control themselves
-
Understand the perspectives of others and interact effectively with them
- Make
good choices about personal and social decisions
Alejandro
Francisco, manager at Ego Foundation's After School Programs shares a scenario.
Six and
Seven year old children in one of the After-school programs were engaged in a
game where the group had to line up and roll a dice. The side that happened to
come up when rolling determined the number of steps the player was allowed to
move forward, straight forward and sideways to the left and right. The aim of
the game was to see which child would eventually complete the circuit first. As
the game progressed, the youth leader's irritation increased. One pupil was
very busy and distracted other pupils by making funny noises. This game in
itself is a wonderful activity for promoting concentration, numeracy and other
math activities, and patience. But the design compromised the strategies
children could learn.
Alejandro
continued: the
group was large and could have been divided into 2 sections. The waiting time
for children was long which reduced engagement.
He
suggested that after explaining the game, the youth leader should let the
children form their own groups and assign game leaders to ensure that the game
is played correctly and smoothly. This promotes positive self-esteem and
autonomy and increases self-respect in children.
As a
coordinator, he also advises that the group leader can suggest new rules and
more challenge during the game in consultation with the children. This
stimulates creative ability and critical thinking skills. Children come up with
their own ideas and solutions and are able to try out new things.
[1] https://selspace.ca/what-is-social-emotional-learning/
[2] https://incentiveplus.co.uk/product/box-full-of-feelings-house-full-of-emotions/
[3] https://www.partnershipforchildren.org.uk/
[4] https://aes.highlands.k12.fl.us/about-aes/the-7-habits-of-happy-kids-covey-leader-in-me
[5] https://developingchild.harvard.edu/science/key-concepts/executive-function/
[6] https://centrumpedagogischcontact.nl/ YouTube-channel for weekly pedagogical inspiration: https://www.youtube.com/c/MarcelvanHerpenpedagoog
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