Blogs

NJSBF publishes school guide on social and emotional learning, creates workshops for educators

By NJSBA Staff posted 10-08-2019 11:19 AM

  

The New Jersey State Bar Foundation (NJSBF) has published a new guide for educators to improve social and emotional learning for students in elementary grades through high school.SECD_Guide_Cover.jpg

Social Emotional Character Development draws from the latest research that shows schools that stress social and emotional learning help foster a sense of psychological safety, greater emotional intelligence and enhanced self-esteem in students. The 260-page guide was developed and written by Elissa Zylbershlag, the NJSBF’s director of conflict resolution and anti-bias initiatives, and Erin Lee, a co-facilitator for the NJSBF unconscious bias training, along with other contributors.

The NJSBF, the charitable and educational wing of the New Jersey State Bar Association, also developed a corresponding workshop for educators on how to incorporate Social Emotional Character Development in the classroom. The workshop will be held 10 times throughout the school year, with the first workshop scheduled on Oct. 25 at the New Jersey Law Center.

The program comes at a time of growing concern that students increasingly lack the kind of social emotional and interpersonal skills they need to be successful and resilient in life, which some attribute to increased time spent online.

Social Emotional Character Development is a clear, practical guide that is organized around five competencies or life skills that research shows students need—self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decision-making—and includes lesson plans and materials educators can use to incorporate the concepts in the classroom.

The chapter on self-awareness, for example, includes lessons that help students learn to recognize their feelings and thoughts and the impact their feelings have on their behavior. Another lesson teaches students about 24 character strengths that everyone has, a concept developed by noted psychologists Martin Seligman and Chris Peterson, and instructs them on how they can identify their own dominant character strengths.

The guide helps educators create daily routines to help students form habits around healthy social and emotional skills.

Gayle Colucci, culture and climate coordinator at Cranford School District, said the district will be sending its counselors and social workers to the six-hour Social Emotional Character Development workshop.

“We’re seeing more and more students who don’t know how to deal with their own emotions. I think a big part of the problem is that young people don’t have an awareness about themselves,” she said.

While experts say there are numerous reasons that youth today are struggling with social and emotional learning, their interactions online and with social media play a large part in it, Colucci said.

Colucci, who has participated in several NJSBF’s workshops, including the Social Emotional Character Development pilot training last year, said she particularly likes that the training provides practical strategies and activities educators can use in the classroom.

 

Permalink