What is SEL » SEL & Other Educational Movements

Most people familiar with the world of education are well aware that new programs, frameworks, and theories seem to appear on the horizon nearly every day. Sometimes it can be difficult to keep up with all of them, let alone be clear about the differences among them. We see SEL as an umbrella that encompasses many different educational movements covering similar concepts and skills. It can provide a framework within which several major trends can coherently work together.

OTHER MOVEMENTS

Whole Child
Whole Child Education stresses that students learn best when their academic, emotional, physical, and social needs are met. The Association of Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD) has established a major new multi-year Whole Child initiative advocating a broader definition of educational achievement and accountability. Specifically, the initiative calls for communities to make sure each student:

  • Enters school healthy and learns about and practices a healthy lifestyle.
  • Learns in an intellectually challenging environment that is physically and emotionally safe for students and adults.
  • Is actively engaged in learning and is connected to the school and broader community.
  • Has access to personalized learning and is supported by qualified, caring adults.
  • Is challenged by a well-balanced curriculum and is prepared for success in college or further study and for employment in a global environment.

Promoting physical, social, and emotional health as the foundation for success in school is the essence of the approach defined by The Whole Child.  As such, the initiative recognizes SEL as an essential component of local, state and national policies and practices to support healthy and high-quality education for all students. ASCD’s report on The Whole Child specifically calls for SEL polices and practices, using the SEL policy work established in the state of Illinois as an example. (See pp. 12-14 of The Learning Compact Redefined: A Call to Action).  

Character Education
Many programs refer to themselves as both SEL and character education (CE). The CE movement seeks to create schools that foster ethical, responsible, and caring students by modeling and teaching good character. CE emphasizes common values, such as respect, responsibility, honesty, fairness, compassion, courtesy, and courage. The goal is to help young people develop socially, ethically, and academically by infusing character development into all aspects of the school culture and curriculum.

Although SEL and character education have much in common, SEL programs tend to address a broader array of outcomes, such as drug use, violence, social relationships, academic engagement, and health. SEL can be thought of as helping students develop the social and emotional skills necessary to enact good character.

Service-Learning
Service-learning integrates community service into the classroom curriculum. Students learn and use academic skills, perform needed service, reflect on and learn from their experience, and provide tangible benefits that serve the community. Young people, guided by teachers, are encouraged to take the lead, at levels appropriate to their age and skills, in responding to genuine needs in their school or community. SEL can enhance the quality of service-learning, both for the students and the community. Students who prepare for their service-learning activities and reflect on them using self-awareness, social awareness, self-management, relationship skills, and responsible decision-making will be more effective in their service roles. Similarly, service-learning can be one component of integrated, schoolwide SEL programming. Particularly at the high school level, service-learning offers schools a developmentally appropriate way to practice and reinforce core social and emotional competencies.

Positive Behavior Supports (PBS)
PBS evolved from the special education tradition as a method to address the emotional and behavioral needs of students who experience significant difficulties. PBS as an intervention model for individual students has evolved in recent years to address the broader student population and school environment. Schoolwide PBS focuses on establishing consistent expectations for behavior, positive approaches for teaching the requisite behaviors, and strategies for reinforcing the expectations. The targeted behaviors are determined by individual schools and form the basis of systematic “management strategies” (Lewis & Sugai, 1999). PBS and SEL programming both address the needs of all children; however, SEL has a slightly different focus, with an emphasis on emotions and development: developmentally appropriate, sequenced skill-building instruction provided in a caring school environment that promotes children’s positive development and success in school and life. SEL extends beyond the management and discipline emphasis of PBS to focus on the development of the whole child.

Cooperative Learning
Cooperative learning is the instructional use of small groups in which students work together to maximize their own and each other's learning. The research clearly indicates that cooperation, compared with competitive and individualistic efforts, typically results in (a) higher achievement and greater productivity, (b) more caring, supportive, and committed relationships, and (c) greater psychological health, social competence, and self-esteem (Johnson & Johnson, 1989). Because of its positive effects on many important outcomes, cooperative learning is a valuable tool for educators. Cooperative learning plays an important role in fostering the SEL competencies of social awareness and relationship skills by systematically structuring the basic elements of cooperative learning into group learning situations. Those essential components are positive interdependence, face-to-face promotive interaction, individual and group accountability, interpersonal and small group skills, and group processing (Johnson, Johnson, & Holubec, 1993). Development of these skills both promotes academic success and also prepares students for teamwork required in work settings.

Differentiated Instruction
Differentiated instruction is a teaching theory based on the premise that instructional approaches should vary and be adapted to individual and diverse students in classrooms. It allows students to take greater responsibility and ownership for their own learning and provides opportunities for peer teaching and cooperative learning. Differentiating is now recognized to be an important tool for engaging and addressing the individual needs of all students (Tomlinson, 2001).

Just as with SEL, at the heart of differentiated instruction is attention to knowing the individual child. Schools committed to differentiated instruction will find SEL to be wholly compatible with this orientation, since SEL can enhance the connections between students and teachers, in turn improving the ability of teachers to identify and respond to the needs and strengths of individual students.

Prevention/Positive Youth Development
Research has shown that the skill development promoted by SEL programs helps prevent high-risk behaviors such as drug use, violence, and early sexual activity that put adolescents at risk for HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases, adolescent pregnancy, and suicide. Because these behaviors have roots in many of the same factors and can be addressed by similar prevention strategies, there is growing support for a coordinated approach with the goals of preventing risky behaviors and also promoting positive youth development. SEL provides a framework for coordination of school-based prevention efforts.

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Working to establish social and emotional learning as an essential part of education from preschool through high school.