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Siri Anderson

Frontiers | Could Acting Training Improve Social Cognition and Emotional Control? - 0 views

  • Goldstein et al. (2013) found that a year of acting practice decreased the use of emotional suppression in children aged 7–10, while adolescents majoring in acting at high school (compared to other art majors e.g., music) used less suppression. Additionally, 4–5-years olds randomly assigned to an 8-week drama condition (compared to block building or reading) showed increased emotional control (i.e., inhibition of affective responses to observed or discussed distress; Goldstein and Lerner, 2018).
  • The ability to represent others' mental states, referred to as ToM or cognitive empathy, plays a critical role in understanding and navigating social situations
nikkilh

Emotional-and-Behavioral-Disability-Eligibility.pdf - 0 views

shared by nikkilh on 29 Jan 22 - No Cached
  • An emotional and behavioral disorder is an emotional disability characterized by the following: (i) An inability to build or maintain satisfactory interpersonal relationships with peers and/or teachers. For preschool-age children, this would include other care providers. (ii) An inability to learn which cannot be adequately explained by intellectual, sensory or health factors. (iii) A consistent or chronic inappropriate type of behavior or feelings under normal conditions. (iv) A displayed pervasive mood of unhappiness or depression. (v) A displayed tendency to develop physical symptoms, pains or unreasonable fears associated with personal or school problems.
    • nikkilh
       
      Definition of Emotional and behavioral disorder (EBD)
  • A child with EBD is a child who exhibits one or more of the above emotionally based characteristics of sufficient duration, frequency and intensity that interferes significantly with educational performance to the degree that provision of special educational service is necessary
  • Eligibility and Placement.
Kelly Nuthak

Advancing Social and Emotional Learning - CASEL - 1 views

  • Preparing Young People for the Workplace Requires Social and Emotional Learning
  • Learn about the Fundamentals of SEL
  • Advancing Social and Emotional Learning
    • nikkilh
       
      SEL site to reference!
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  • Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning
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    Evidence, Implementation, and Policy for SEL students
jessiwattenhofer

9 Effective Teaching Strategies for Students With Emotional and Behavioral Disorders - 0 views

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    EBD strategies: first day
Bill Olson

Teamwork Skills: Being an Effective Group Member | Centre for Teaching Excellence | Uni... - 0 views

  • To function successfully in a small group, students need to be able to communicate clearly on intellectual and emotional levels. Effective communicators: can explain their own ideas express their feelings in an open but non-threatening way listen carefully to others ask questions to clarify others’ ideas and emotions can sense how others feel based on their nonverbal communication will initiate conversations about group climate or process if they sense tensions brewing reflect on the activities and interactions of their group and encourage other group members to do so as well
  • To work together successfully, group members must demonstrate a sense of cohesion. Cohesion emerges as group members exhibit the following skills: Openness: Group members are willing to get to know one another, particularly those with different interests and backgrounds. They are open to new ideas, diverse viewpoints, and the variety of individuals present within the group. They listen to others and elicit their ideas. They know how to balance the need for cohesion within a group with the need for individual expression. Trust and self-disclosure: Group members trust one another enough to share their own ideas and feelings. A sense of mutual trust develops only to the extent that everyone is willing to self-disclose and be honest yet respectful. Trust also grows as group members demonstrate personal accountability for the tasks they have been assigned. Support: Group members demonstrate support for one another as they accomplish their goals. They exemplify a sense of team loyalty and both cheer on the group as a whole and help members who are experiencing difficulties. They view one another not as competitors (which is common within a typically individualistic educational system) but as collaborators. Respect: Group members communicate their opinions in a way that respects others, focusing on “What can we learn?” rather than “Who is to blame?” See constructive feedback in the process section for more details.
winkler_deb

Dan Mades - TCEC Teachers - 0 views

    • winkler_deb
       
      Social Emotional Learning Milaca Pilot Program
jessiwattenhofer

Tips for Handling Emotional Behavior Disorder in Classrooms | Resilient Educator - 2 views

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    Most of these strategies I found to be very helpful with the EBD students I work with! What do you think would be the most effective strategy? Anyone else have experience in working with these students?
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    5 tips for helping EBD students on the first day of school
jkolodji

BASC-3 Behavior Assessment System for Children 3rd Ed | Product Details - 0 views

  • Solve behavior issues today. For better lives tomorrow.
  • Benefits
  • BASC-3 uses a comprehensive set of rating scales and forms to provide a complete picture of a child's or adolescent’s behavior and emotions.
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  • Self, Teacher, and Parent using a comprehensive set of rating scales and forms to help you understand the behaviors and emotions of children and adolescents.
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    Pearson website with information on forms and kits to use if needed for assessments
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    Pearson site details
nikkilh

Dr. Ross Greene - 1 views

    • nikkilh
       
      Lost at School By: Dr. Ross Greene
  • Lost at School
  • In so many schools, kids with social, emotional, and behavioral challenges are still poorly understood and treated in a way that is completely at odds with what is now known about how they came to be challenging in the first place.
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  • A review of ten years of research found that these policies have not only failed to make schools safe or more effective in handling student behavior, but have actually increased behavior problems and dropout rates. Yet public elementary and secondary schools in the United States continue to dole out a whopping 110,000 expulsions and 3 million suspensions each year, along with countless tens of millions of detentions.
  • These kids would like nothing better than to be able to handle the social, emotional, and behavioral challenges being placed on them at school and in life, but they can’t seem to pull it off.
  • Three massive shifts are required: (1) a dramatic improvement in understanding the factors that set the stage for challenging behavior in kids; (2) creating mechanisms for helping these kids that are predominantly proactive instead of reactive; and (3) creating processes so people can work on problems collaboratively.
jessiwattenhofer

Mylemarks | Therapy resources for kids and teens - HOME - 0 views

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    EBD strategies: first day
julielyncarlson

11 Strategies To Promote Inclusion In The Clasroom - 0 views

  • Inclusion is better for kids with special needs because they can see other ‘typical’ kids and emulate them. They get an opportunity to learn acceptable social behaviors and to learn from their peers.
  • Kids social and emotional needs also must be considered.
  • The more kids with special needs are included the more their peers start to see the kids for who they are.
    • julielyncarlson
       
      Kids are kids.
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  • Build Relationships:
  • Encourage Interaction:
  • Educate Yourself:
  • Education leads to understanding
  • Celebrate Diversity:
  • Strengths-Based Approach:
  • Teaching Strategies For Inclusion
  • “I do, We do, You do”
  • Have a Positive Attitude:
  • Inclusion is good for all students.
joshua_mooney

Equity and SEL - Casel Schoolguide - 0 views

  • While SEL alone will not solve longstanding and deep-seated inequities in the education system, it can help schools promote understanding, examine biases, reflect on and address the impact of racism, build cross-cultural relationships, and cultivate adult and student practices that close opportunity gaps and create a more inclusive school community. In doing so, schools can promote high-quality educational opportunities and outcomes for all students, irrespective of race, socioeconomic status, gender, sexual orientation, and other differences.
    • joshua_mooney
       
      SEL is more then just emotional learning. It can be used to promote educational equity. SEL should be woven in not a separate skill set, taught only once during the day.
mrsremick4

No Child Is Just Born Gifted: Creating and Developing Unlimited Potential | National As... - 0 views

  • High intelligence, whether expressed in cognitive abilities such as the capacity to generalize, conceptualize, or reason abstractly, or in specific abilities such as creative behavior, results from the interaction between inherited and acquired characteristics. This interaction encompasses all of the physical, mental, and emotional characteristics of the person and all of the people, events, and objects entering the person’s awareness. Our reality is unique to each of us.
nikkilh

What is ENVoY and How does it Impact Teacher Efficacy? | MESPA Advocate Blog - 0 views

  • What is ENVoY and How does it Impact Teacher Efficacy?
    • nikkilh
       
      ENVoY and how it impacts teachers
  • The most significant byproduct of deep levels of ENVoY implementation relates to teacher efficacy, which gives teachers the ability to perform at higher levels while having a positive mindset about their work as a professional.
  • creating a safe and nurturing classroom environment is critical to meeting the emotional, social and academic learning needs of students and that classroom management training is a key component to supporting both pre-service and in-service teachers
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  • Classrooms are increasingly culturally and linguistically diverse and have a wide range of learning abilities in every class, and because most teachers are Caucasian and derive from middle-class backgrounds (Tileston & Darling, 2008), these educators may be unintentionally unaware of the needs that diverse learners require, which include the following: significant relationships, assistance with prioritizing and planning, problem solving, locus of control, ability to trust, and responding to criticism.
  • Understanding the differences between self-efficacy and teacher efficacy allows the educator to interact with their students in a manner that produces less power and control in the classroom when operating through the lens of teacher efficacy
nikkilh

Sample-Teaching-Activities-to-Support-Core-Competencies.pdf - 0 views

SEL

shared by nikkilh on 11 Apr 22 - No Cached
  • Sample Teaching Activities to Support Core Competencies of Social and Emotional Learning
  • What is SEL?
  • Four Strategies that Promote SEL
nikkilh

The Power of Mindfulness: What You Practice Grows Stronger | Shauna Shapiro | TEDxWashi... - 0 views

shared by nikkilh on 12 Apr 22 - No Cached
  • 5:58Translator: Peter van de VenReviewer: Mile ŽivkovićUp nextLiveUpcomingCancelPlay NowYou're signed outVideos you watch may be added to the TV's watch history and influence TV recommendations. To avoid this, cancel and sign in to YouTube on your computer.CancelConfirmTEDx Talks
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    TED Talk Dr. Shauna Shaprio
Siri Anderson

What about the other kids in the room? - Unconditional - 4 views

  • The “other students” in the room have agency over how they show up in difficult moments. Just like we support students to practice and use their agency responsibly in their learning, friendships, and community, we can do the same when it comes to moments of crisis
  • What’s the dividing line between stress and trauma? While there’s no clear answer, one key element is sense-making
  • When we are upset and overwhelmed, sometimes we hurt others.
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  • Our students need us to help them understand what it means when a classmate is struggling. They need us to create space and hear how they felt, and validate their emotions. They need help understanding why a situation got so big and scary all of a sudden. They need to hear us say that their classmate is getting the support they need (and mean it), and to hear us say that their classmate is still a cherished member of our community
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    Great read forwarded by Dr. Pesek.
drewevanaho

COE - Students With Disabilities - 1 views

  • In 2019–20, the number of students ages 3–21 who received special education services under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) was 7.3 million, or 14 percent of all public school students. Among students receiving special education services, the most common category of disability (33 percent) was specific learning disabilities.
    • nikkilh
       
      Statistics about students with disabilities
  • Enacted in 1975, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), formerly known as the Education for All Handicapped Children Act, mandates the provision of a free and appropriate public school education for eligible students ages 3–21.
    • nikkilh
       
      When IDEA was enacted
  • Thirty-three percent of all students who received special education services had specific learning disabilities, 19 percent had speech or language impairments,2 and 15 percent had other health impairments (including having limited strength, vitality, or alertness due to chronic or acute health problems such as a heart condition, tuberculosis, rheumatic fever, nephritis, asthma, sickle cell anemia, hemophilia, epilepsy, lead poisoning, leukemia, or diabetes). Students with autism, developmental delays, intellectual disabilities, and emotional disturbances each accounted for between 5 and 11 percent of students served under IDEA. Students with multiple disabilities, hearing impairments, orthopedic impairments, visual impairments, traumatic brain injuries, and deaf-blindness each accounted for 2 percent or less of those served under IDEA.
Katelyn Karsnia

Twice-Exceptional Students | National Association for Gifted Children - 2 views

  • The term “twice-exceptional,” also referred to as “2e,” is used to describe gifted children who, have the characteristics of gifted students with the potential for high achievement and give evidence of one or more disabilities as defined by federal or state eligibility criteria.
    • nikkilh
       
      Twice exceptional definition
  • Twice-exceptional children often find difficulty in the school environment, where organization, participation, and long-term planning play a role
  • What the Teacher Might See What the Parent Might See
    • nikkilh
       
      What the adults see in the twice exceptional children/students
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  • (SpLD), speech and language disorders, emotional/behavioral disorders, physical disabilities, autism spectrum, or other impairments such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
  • used to describe gifted children who, have the characteristics of gifted students with the potential for high achievement and give evidence of one or more disabilities as defined by federal or state eligibility criteria
  • twice-exceptional,” also referred to as “2e,”
  • highly knowledgeable and talented in at least one particular domain.
  • ifficulty in the school environment, where organization, participation, and long-term planning play a role.
  • highly creative, verbal, imaginative, curious, with strong problem-solving ability, and a wide range of interests or a single, all-consuming expertise
  • difficulty keeping up with course rigor, volume, and demands--resulting in inconsistent academic performance, frustration, difficulties with written expression, and labels such as lazy, unmotivated, and underachiever.
    • Katelyn Karsnia
       
      What a 2e students look at home and school, great resource for parents
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    "Twice-Exceptional Students" Lots of information for parents and teachers!
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