Categories: All - trauma - trust - relationships - emotions

by David Chiu 2 years ago

179

Social-Emotional Learning

Integrating social-emotional learning (SEL) into everyday practices can significantly benefit students' overall well-being. Encouraging journaling, promoting a growth mindset, and incorporating mindfulness exercises like breathing and sensory awareness can help students manage their emotions and stress.

Social-Emotional Learning

Social-Emotional Learning Best Practices

Trauma

Guiding Principles
Sensitive to cultural, historical, etc. issues
Empower others
Collaboration
Peer support

create chances for deep mutual connection

Trust

Between all stakeholders

not keeping secrets, not withholding info

Safety

from students' perspective

Teacher mindset
From "What is wrong with this child?"to "What has happened to this child?"
From "bad student"to "behaviours trying to soothe emotional dysregulation"
Continuous learning about trauma
Affects
Relationships: unhealthy attachments, hard to form bonds
Regulate emotions: difficulty expressing/managing emotions, over-respond
Academic performance:difficulties with language, communication, info processing
hypersensitive to stimuli(light, sound, event)
Examples
Complex trauma(multiple, ongoing events)

financial, food, housing insecurities

living with alcoholism, substance abuse

abuse, neglect

Chronic trauma

domestic violence

Acute trauma(maybe easier to identify)

victim of crime

medical procedure

accident

Everyday practices

Teacher self-care
Rejuvenate and Refresh
SE Check-Ins
SE Learning Circles
Normalize/routinize journaling
Teach mindfulness exercises
Attune to 5 senses
breathing
Teach growth mindset: Respond positively to mistakes/failures
Assign students role, task, responsibility to build self-worth/efficacy
When reading, discuss how characters might feel

PBIS

Tier 1-AllPrevention
Firm and fair corrective discipline

Instead: Restorative(relationships, environment)

aims: respect, accountability, healing

actions: listen, understand, respond

peer juries

talking circles

Not punishment oriented

only removes student from environmentno consideration of student

detention/suspension/expulsion

Clear, immediate and consistent consequences for problems
Effective instruction and classroom management
Establish classroom expectations for routines and behaviours
School-wide good behaviour recognition programs
Positive school climate initiatives (antibullying, mental health clubs)
Intervene before unwanted behaviors escalate
Tier 2-Some
Tier 3: Select
From zero-tolerance policyto restorative practice

Not punishment-oriented