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In a webinar with The Education Hub, Claire Chuter from John Hopkins University in the USA talked about the importance of the different mindsets, skills, and competencies that constitute social emotional learning, or SEL, and how they can be integrated into teaching and learning.
Social emotional learning describes the mindsets and skills that students need in order to thrive in their life and learning. While SEL covers a broad range of categories, the three core pillars of social emotional learning are social connection, motivation, and self-regulation. Importantly, each of them is malleable – in other words, they can be developed and enhanced.
School leaders and teachers can promote and enhance social connection by:
Teachers can promote and grow motivation by:
Teachers can support and promote self-regulation by:
It is better to learn all these strategies in practice rather than in theory, and the evidence suggests that embedding SEL strategies in all teaching and learning programmes is more effective than using a programmatic approach that sequesters SEL from learning activities. Teacher modelling is a highly effective and powerful method of promoting the development of students’ social emotional learning skills and mindsets.
It is important to measure how well schools are doing at promoting social emotional learning. This can be done once or twice a year using formal tools such as Panorama surveys, as well as more frequently using informal classroom-based checks such as exit cards that ask questions like ‘do you have a trusted adult to talk to?’ and ’do you persevere to achieve your goals?’ Some questions, particularly those relating to motivation, should be asked in relation to particular subjects and curriculum areas rather than applied broadly.
If students are struggling academically, the following questions might help teachers to identify barriers to their engagement and achievement: