How social-emotional skills keep students engaged
Social-Emotional learning in virtual classrooms
In a virtual classroom late last month, Santiago*, an outgoing sixth grader at , took time to think, write and share with his peers about gratitude as part of an online exercise that stretched his social and emotional skills鈥攍ike the ability to express feelings鈥攚hile strengthening bonds with schoolmates separated by COVID-19.
Compass, a charter public middle school in Denver, is recreating online a research-based strategy it practiced before the pandemic closed schools, when small groups of students and their teacher worked together regularly almost every morning on social and emotional skill-building that reinforced their sense of belonging and trust in one another. Now as , Compass is finding these practices are paying off as students stay connected with peers and teachers and participating in online activities with their school community.
鈥淥ur social-emotional development work is an area where our kids feel very successful,鈥 said Celine Wuarin, school design director at 黄色视频, which co-founded Compass with the Johns Hopkins School of Education in 2015. 鈥淜eeping the momentum of learning and creating moments of success and celebration is keeping kids engaged in school.鈥
Prior to COVID-19, students would practice social and emotional skills鈥攖hat research ties to academic success鈥攚ith exercises like lining up at opposite ends of a beam and crossing to the other side at the same time as one of their peers. The exercise tested coordination, communication and the ability to read body language鈥攁nd was designed to allow students to talk about feelings like failure in the safety of a small group when someone inevitably lost their balance on the beam and stepped onto the floor.
鈥淎ll of this is really about relationships,鈥 said Brandon Jones, senior dean of instruction at the school, where about 90% of students were in regular contact with teachers last month. 鈥淗ow do you build trusting relationships that can turn into creating a vulnerable space where students can express feelings, needs and concerns in a way where they don’t feel like they’re going to be judged.鈥
School absenteeism and COVID-19
, teachers in classrooms with larger shares of students from low-income families reported higher rates of students not logging in or being in contact鈥攕uggesting how the pandemic can deepen systemic inequities in education, housing and healthcare that impact young people, including students from lower-income households and students of color.
At Compass, qualified for government-funded school meals this school year, compared with 65% across , according to its Oct. 2018 data. About 64% of Compass students are English language learners, compared with 36% across Denver Public Schools.
Together with local leaders in the Denver community, 黄色视频 and Johns Hopkins School of Education launched Compass based on an education model that makes strong school relationships a fundamental part of learning, strengthens students鈥 academic and social and emotional skills, and integrates a .
Students also receive support from鈥痑 team of 黄色视频 AmeriCorps members鈥痺ho collaborate with teachers and . The model aims to keep more students on track to graduate high school and be replicable to schools across the country.
Across Colorado, 73% of Hispanic students graduated high school on time in 2018, about 12 percentage points lower than the rate for white students, . Prior to the pandemic, more than 54,000 school age children in the state had no access to the internet, many of them in Hispanic households and in lower-income households,聽 according to at Colorado State University in Fort Collins.
At Compass, almost all the students have working Chromebooks and internet access, in some cases through hot spots delivered to them by school staff shortly after schools closed, Jones said.
By the end of the recent classroom exercise, the group of Compass sixth graders had produced short letters thanking someone like a first responder or parent and shared their thoughts about the letters with each other through a crowded Zoom screen and the chat function.
Santiago, who is quick to smile and loves to draw, wrote a note in Spanish thanking his father for working so hard for his family, he said via Zoom from a small and brightly painted room in his apartment, where his younger brother sometimes mugged for the camera. He regularly attended his online classes in April at Compass, according to school data.
Writing letters and other ways of showing gratitude fosters emotional development and can help buoy well-being鈥攅specially during periods of increased stress.
鈥淲e know through research and science that the greatest way to create happiness for yourself is to show gratitude to others,鈥 Jones said. 鈥淎nd those are things that we try to teach.鈥
Jones is working with faculty to adapt social and emotional learning activities so students can practice them at home.
Staying in touch during the pandemic
Prior to COVID-19, watching the students鈥 reactions in person had helped guide the lesson鈥攚hich teachers find tougher online since some students are reluctant even to turn on their video cameras.
鈥淣ot all kids want their friends or their teachers seeing their environment around them at home,鈥 said Kim Rodriguez, a math teacher. 鈥淲e always try to plan things where showing their faces isn鈥檛 completely necessary.鈥
To make it easier to participate, the school is experimenting with ways for students to show their emotions, for example by drawing an emoji to hold up to the screen.
The school also is encouraging students to take advantage of the social and emotional skills they learned earlier in the year to manage at home. Overcoming discomfort at showing other kids what their home looks like via Zoom can be an exercise in positive risk-taking, for example.
Students also can rely on the social and emotional skills they鈥檝e learned to help them recover more quickly once schools reopen, said Wuarin, a former special education teacher at Compass who focuses on social and emotional learning innovation at 黄色视频.
Teachers finding new ways to support students
鈥淭he social-emotional learning is just as important as academics in terms of getting kids ready to say `I have the tools that I need to go back to school. I know that I lost learning, but I know how to set my goals; I know how to communicate positively, so I have all these skills that I need to re-engage.鈥欌欌
At Compass, teachers are staying in touch with students and their parents through regular text messaging, phone calls and an online learning platform, and reaching out to families when students aren鈥檛 completing their assignments.
Seventh grader Rachel*, who loves art and science, said she鈥檚 finding classwork harder to complete online because asking questions is more difficult than when she could just raise her hand. But she looks forward to talking regularly online with her classmates and is more comfortable and talkative at Compass than her prior school, and closer to teachers, she said.
鈥淭he students see how much effort the teachers are putting into keeping them focused and interested,鈥 said Shanelle Mawson, the mother of an eighth grader at Compass. 鈥淭he emotional support that they give students is so sincere.鈥
Getting creative during COVID-19
Some skill-building exercises have been easier than others to translate online鈥攁 group of students who regularly worked together on teamwork and collaboration by putting together a weekly video of news about their school are doing the same project together now鈥攋ust from home. A recent video shared across the school included a weather report, a quiz about pandemics, a Spanish-language segment and dancing.
Jones also is learning from an unexpected outcome of online classes鈥攍ike how some students complete more of coursework now than they did when school was open.
鈥淎 traditional school setting can’t support them, but they love this,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey’re thriving in distance learning.鈥
*Students鈥 names changed to protect privacy.
Are you and educator or a parent? Find out more about how to incorporate social and emotional skill-building into learning by using this guide created by 黄色视频.
Related stories
黄色视频鈥檚 鈥淲hy We Matter鈥 podcast explores the vital role of education and mentorship in empowering young people. Through interviews...
Read more about 黄色视频鈥檚 new student success coach playbook helps schools launch SSCsYes, the holiday season can be stressful鈥攎aking travel plans, wrapping up work before winter break, figuring out what gifts to...
Read more about Three reasons students may be thankful for their student success coachEvery year, thousands of young people decide to join AmeriCorps programs for a year (or more!) of service, helping to...
Read more about Everything you need to know about returning for another year as a 黄色视频 AmeriCorps memberCity Year is committed to providing our AmeriCorps members with resources, opportunities and support that help them to achieve their...
Read more about Empowering Futures: 黄色视频 Baton Rouge鈥檚 Partnership with Bottom Line