Tag Archives: covid19

Quaran-teen: Providing Social Emotional Learning Support Online

Social and Emotional Learning approaches provide a foundation for the classroom environment that are both safe and positive for learning, as well as enhancing students’ ability to succeed in school, careers, and life. School is one of the main places where students learn social and emotional skills. Educators daily serve students with different Social Emotional Learning techniques when engaging in learning, behaving positively, performing academically, and deepening their relationships. Now more than ever, educators need to support their students through social-emotional supports.

What can educators do to support teenagers in getting through these difficult times of being quarantined and learning online?

Based on Durlak et al., 2015, an effective SEL program incorporates the acronym SAFE: Sequenced: connected and coordinated sets of activities to foster skills development; Active: forms of learning to help students master new skills by participating; Focused: emphasis on developing personal and social skills; and Explicit: targeting specific social and emotional skills. Some of the top ways to incorporate SEL techniques within an educator’s new virtual instructional continuity plans are to be intentional. Being intentional is extremely hard when changing an entire way of teaching in the classroom to online, but extremely important. 

Remember this is not a hurricane day. It is not a holiday break. It is a quarantine.

Much of the following comes from CASEL’s Playbook. The areas of focus daily within virtual lessons are Getting Started & LessonPlanning, Welcoming Ritual, Explicit SEL Lesson and Engaging Practices/Activities, and Optimistic Closure/Message. 

Getting Started & Lesson Planning: The educator needs to be systematic when introducing students to their new virtual classroom and lessons. Educators not only need to explain to students how to use different features in their virtual classroom, but also set expectations with students in all resources that will be used. Lesson plans must include the social or personal skill underlying their content taught. The teacher modeling everything helps teenagers see how things should be done.

Welcoming Ritual: Every new day and meeting a welcoming ritual should be the opening. Welcoming rituals help the students and teacher to get to know each other (builds relationships), establish safety and predictability, and creates a sense of belonging by allowing people to connect right off the bat. Virtual Welcoming Rituals can be done through the chatbox or by unmuting the microphone and having participants share verbally.

Explicit SEL Lesson and Engaging Practices/Activities: Explicit instruction teaches a specific SEL Skill, provides an opportunity to practice and apply the SEL Skill, and reinforces self-reflection. Engaging practices are brain-compatible strategies that foster relationships, cultural responsiveness, empowerment and collaboration, intentionally build opportunities for brain breaks that provide space for integrating new information and long-term memory, and foster active and engaged participation to support teenagers with making their meaning of the content.

Optimistic Closure/Message: These closure messages provide positive closure to the virtual class lesson, reinforce what students learned, and creates momentum towards taking action in positive ways. These can include reflection questions on how the group functioned, reflection questions for students to make connections to their own lives’ and experiences, or an inspirational word/phrase based on the message the teacher is incorporating. 

One can only hope that every person quarantined is aware and positively working on their social-emotional capacity. Being quarantined is hard for adults to understand, let alone children. Our teenagers have it the hardest as they are missing out on memories they have been told about their whole lives, such as prom, graduation, and just the practice of being in class with their peers. Educators need to ensure that we are supporting our teenagers and incorporating SEL supports within their virtual classroom.

More SEL Resources:

CASEL: Secondary Guide

Podcast: How to Handle Coronavirus Anxiety | Special Edition

Corona Virus Sanity Guide

Handbook of Social and Emotional Learning Research and Practice

References

Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning. (2015). 2015 CASEL guide: Effective social and emotional learning programs—Middle and high school edition. Retrieved from http://secondaryguide.casel.org/ 

Durlak, J. A. (Ed.). (2015). Handbook of social and emotional learning: Research and practice. Guilford Publications. Retrieved from https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=gBPpCQAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PP1&dq=andbook+of+Social+and+Emotional+Learning+Research+and+Practice&ots=AW6jK2Pvgd&sig=C

Serving students online when it wasn’t the plan

The recent global pandemic known as COVID19 has affected every industry, forcing furloughs, business closures, government stimulus packages and the necessity for employees to work from home. As schools attempt to delve into the distance learning model, many tech. enabled schools are well equipped to roll out a distance learning plan however non-tech. enabled schools are struggling to find ways to deliver instruction.  Across the board, schools are facing the challenge to serve students online when it wasn’t the plan. 

In private catholic schools across America, administration teams, school leaders and pastors are meeting (virtually) with diocesan superintendents, district leaders, and partners to assess plans, receive demonstrations on platforms and resources and have roundtable discussions on how to better serve the students entrusted to our care. As one of the newest schools in the District of Eastern North America, Brothers of the Cristian Schools community, Saint John Paul II Academy in Boca Raton, FL  has benefited from receiving support, recommendations and instruction, not only form the 19 diocesan schools in West Palm Beach but also from the 41 ministries in the Lasallian District. Through numerous webinars, discussions with counterparts at other schools and learning about what has and has not worked, our school of 400 students and 33 faculty have developed a distance learning plan that will leverage the prominent technology resources out there (including live video conference sessions) as well as relying heavily on our faculty and their expertise in their respective fields. A collection of educational resources that have been made more accessible to schools and educators in light of COVID 19 is available for immediate access here.  This list was compiled by faculty and staff from across the US in catholic education institutions. 

No doubt, there are numerous aspects of a school that cannot be replicated in a distance model or online format. The face to face, teacher observation and immediate response from a teacher are lost through the webcam. The student to student collaboration, while arguably more accessible with digital apps, is diminished and dependant on self-discipline and maturity. Extracurricular activities also suffer from a lack of physical presence on school grounds, however, they are not entirely at a loss. Many clubs and organizations can continue to meet virtually and fulfill objectives and goals. Student Government, Model UN, and other clubs that are based on the Socratic meeting style can still perform their discussions and initiatives remotely. Service-based clubs will need to identify ways to perform community activities in ways that comply with meeting restrictions and do not depend on school facility access. School spirituality and prayer, which is integral to the culture and identity of so many Catholic schools, is another area that is difficult to replicate on a distance learning platform. Services like Youtube, Zoom, Instagram live and other platforms, have provided a way of reaching our students and now their families for an opportunity to strengthen our community even more.  One important aspect of the plan rolled out by Saint John Paul II Academy was to continue to provide students with reasonable access to a familiar routine focused on the student’s education, in mind, body, and spirit. Our days and classes always begin with prayer, and now that initial morning prayer will absolutely be shared with our whole community. 

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vTXAwjzhLD_JXIiE1k7yOFGAMsr3fUZmnmzq0O4zicw4EZiV0DwcOppVQH6re7kfjpGYVMyuEPxc24b/pubhtml

Cochrane, E., & Fandos, N. (2020, March 25). Congress and White House Strike Deal for $2 Trillion Stimulus Package. Retrieved from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/25/us/politics/coronavirus-senate-deal.html

Hussein, F. (2020, March 25). Covid-19 Forces Employers to Weigh Layoffs Versus Furloughs. Retrieved from https://news.bloomberglaw.com/daily-labor-report/covid-19-forces-employers-to-weigh-layoffs-versus-furloughs