This is my fifth article in a year-long writing partnership where Valentina Gonzales and I attempt to answer some of your questions on EL instruction. 

How to teach social emotional learning

This week, I’ll share thoughts on how to structure social-emotional learning (SEL) as proposed by Brandon Beck.

How to teach social emotional learning

A framework for content-integrated instruction

If we teach only content, then we are teaching half the curriculum.Twitter The other half is the social-emotional skills needed to interact and engage with others. Instead of having a series of lessons about these skills in our advisory class, we seamlessly integrated them with the content.  Here’s a framework for content-integrated instruction of social-emotional skills:

  1. Start with the content
  2. Identify the social-emotional skills derived from the content 
  3. Design content-based learning experiences that highlight the social-emotional skills
  4. Ask students where they can apply these skills in their own lives

Opportunities to teach social emotional learning

Storify social-emotional learning

When we think about young learners, we think of elementary school children gathered on the carpet listening to a story being read aloud. But just like elementary school children, children of all ages (adults included!) love to hear stories.  They not only entertain us, but they can also be powerful tools in teaching valuable social-emotional school skills, such as empathy, emotion management, and impulse control.  

But social-emotional education does not mean imposing a specific program on students or purchasing a curriculum.  Just like with effective vocabulary and grammar instruction, social-emotional learning is best done in context (Beck, McKeown, & Kucan, 2008; Anderson, 2005) through stories connected to the content we are teaching. 

For example, in a 10th-grade English unit on heroes, we watched videos from CNN Heroes, visited a local social enterprise, and read The Hunger Games.  Each text gave us opportunities to identify essential social-emotional skills worth developing. Below are the social-emotional skills we addressed in each of these texts:

  • CNN Heroes: empathy 
  • Interview at a social enterprise: problem-solving 
  • The Hunger Games: emptional management
Integrate social-emotional learning

Integrating social-emotional learning into our unit means creating a text set that stimulates thinking and discussions around the social skills we want students to develop as they explore the content.

For younger ELs (and even secondary ELs), teachers can choose to integrate a read-aloud book, a short video, or a short article into the unit to teach both content and social-emotional skills. Integration doesn’t make the older ELs feel like they’re being babied as each of the texts is connected to the unit in a meaningful way.  

For example, during a 5th-grade unit about access to resources, our central text was the novel, A Long Walk to Water. We read one topic per day from If The World Were a Village before going into the novel study.  This read-aloud expanded their understanding of the disparity of the distribution of resources and helped them develop a greater appreciation for the bounty that my affluent students experience. 

Spotlight social-emotional learning

Choosing the right classroom materials is essential to developing social-emotional skills, but it’s not the only thing you can do. One of the best ways to teach emotional skills is by providing positive feedback on the behavior of your students. 

So my final tip for teaching social-emotional skills to all students is to spotlight when you see behaviors that show empathy, emotional management, and non-violent communication (Kamenetz,  Turner, & Weiner, 2019). As with the previous strategy, this technique doesn’t just benefit ELs, it benefits all students, especially those who have mood or behavior difficulties – such as ADHD, anxiety, depression, or oppositional defiant disorder – that make it difficult to identify and manage their emotions. 

This strategy requires no planning and curriculum integration. It just requires having a heightened awareness of the desired social-emotional skills.  Consider praising students when:

  • They choose to sit away from their friends who might distract them
  • They use “I feel ___, when you ___” statements during a conflict 
  • They take deep breaths to calm themselves when they’re upset 
  • They consider the perspective of others in a conflict 
  • They allow others to speak during a dispute

We often focus too much on when students do not behave in desired ways. This is true especially when they are twice-exceptional and may be struggling with two issues at once, like the EL who struggles with ADHD.  Instead, invest more energy and time in spotlighting moments when they demonstrate the desired skills and celebrate them. 

In Closing 

Whatever method you use, ELs are capable, and they should be taught to develop social-emotional skills.  We want to nurture these soft skills because they lead to greater academic success (Durlak et al., 2011) and are key indicators of later life success (Jones, Greenberg, & Crowley, 2015).  We want our ELs to leave our classes and schools not only with greater language command but with more emotional control and awareness of others’ perspectives. If ELs leave our schools with improved English skills but do not come to the aid of a person who slipped and fell, then we have only taught half of what we needed to. 

 

Anderson, J. (2005). Mechanically inclined: Building grammar, usage, and style into writer’s workshop. Portland, ME: Stenhouse.

Beck, I.L., McKeown, M.G., & Kucan, L. (2008). Bringing words to life: Robust vocabulary instruction. New York: The Guilford Press.

Durlak, J. A., Weissberg, R. P., Dymnicki, A. B., Taylor, R. D., & Schellinger, K. B. (2011). The impact of enhancing students’ social and emotional learning: A meta-analysis of school-based universal interventions. Child Development, 82(1): 405–432.

Jones, D. E., Greenberg, M., &Crowley, M. (2015). Early social-emotional functioning and public health: The relationship between kindergarten social competence and future wellness. American Journal of Public Health, 105(11): 2283–2290. 

Kamenetz, A., Turner, C., & Weiner, C. (2019, May 13). Kindness Can Be Taught. Here’s How. Parenting: Raising Awesome Kids. Podcast retrieved from https://www.npr.org/podcasts/510344/raising-awesome-kids