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Jennie Bales

SEL and the Inquire Shared Foundation: Lesson Ideas with Picture Books - - 0 views

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    "Have you ever thought that all learning is social and emotional learning (SEL)? This is something I recognize as an educator and as a learner. When teaching and learning new ideas, SEL is an essential part of the process. That's why you'll find social and emotional skills in state and national standards. SEL has many definitions with common ideas. At the core of SEL is noticing and regulating feelings and emotions to reach learning goals. SEL gives learners the skills they need to solve problems, work with others, and pursue interests."
Jennie Bales

Teaching Climate Change Through Social and Emotional Learning | Edutopia - 0 views

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    "As I read their writings, the extent of my students' eco-grief, a term used by mental health professionals to describe feelings of loss related to changes in the environment, became clear to me. It wasn't particularly surprising. But it was the first time I had really paused and thought explicitly about how our youth's developing minds were being impacted by the climate crisis."
Jennie Bales

I-Search - Emerging Perspectives on Learning, Teaching and Technology - 1 views

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    I-Search is the process of searching for answers to questions which have personal meaning to the writer combined with a metacognitive review of the search process. Instead of restating old information as done in the traditional research paper, I-Search is inquiry-based and the path of discovery is driven by the need to find answers. I-Search embraces the emotional involvement of the writer and imparts the inner conflicts discovered as it becomes necessary to choose between alternative answers to questions along the way. I-Search is the story of the search rather than the summary of answers found in traditional research papers.
Jennie Bales

Read-Aloud: Social Justice and Action - 1 views

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    Teachers have always read aloud to young children, but recent research has shown that reading aloud can benefit middle and secondary students as well. Reading aloud to teenagers stimulates their imaginations and emotions; models good reading behavior; exposes them to a range of literature; enriches their vocabularies and understanding of sophisticated language patterns; makes difficult text understandable; models the fact that different genres are read differently; supports independent reading; and can encourage a lifelong enjoyment of reading.
Jennie Bales

Teach Empathy With Literature | Edutopia - 1 views

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    By giving students an idea of what it is like to walk in someone else's shoes, all literature that deals with big ideas and emotions is good for teaching empathy. Still, I have found a few types of stories that I go to when I really want to get my students working to think about how other people live.
Jennie Bales

Teach Empathy With Literature | Edutopia - 2 views

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    By giving students an idea of what it is like to walk in someone else's shoes, all literature that deals with big ideas and emotions is good for teaching empathy. Still, I have found a few types of stories that I go to when I really want to get my students working to think about how other people live.
Jennie Bales

Reading and Writing Activities for Wordless Picture Books - 0 views

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    "reading and writing activities you can do to develop your child's thinking, reading, writing, and emotional intelligence skills."
Jennie Bales

Personification Is Your Friend: The Language of Inanimate Objects | JSTOR Daily - 1 views

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    "By personifying, we often assume social roles and identities for objects and attribute intentions and emotions to them. This not only tells us a lot about our own cognitive states, it increases empathy and understanding. "
Jennie Bales

Practical Tips for Parents of Exceptional Readers | Common Sense Media - 0 views

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    "The key is finding a book -- or series -- that's engaging, well-matched to your kid's literacy skills, and on target with his emotional development. Here are some practical suggestions to help you pick books to suit your super readers. "
Jennie Bales

Are the Kids Doing Well in the Digital Age? - EdTechReview™ (ETR) - 1 views

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    "A new OECD report, "Educating 21st-Century Children: Emotional Well-Being in the Digital Age," says that while better support for physical and mental health has improved modern children's lives, access to tablets and smartphones before you learn to walk and talk has consequences, good and not so good. "
Jennie Bales

http://mirrorswindowsdoors.org/wp/ - 1 views

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    Mirrors, Windows Doors (MWD) is ann online magazine whose aim is to draw attention to the riches of children's and YA books from across the world that highlight cultural and multi-cultural diversity. MWD promotes authenticity of voice, and writing that increases empathy through reading about different experiences within different cultural contexts - maybe next door, maybe across the globe - whilst tapping into a common bond of humanity and shared emotional response. MWD is a resource for librarians, teachers, parents and carers, as well as teens, who want to find out more about the kidlitosphere from a global perspective.
Jennie Bales

How to Use Gameplay to Enhance Classroom Learning | Edutopia - 1 views

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    "Research shows that using games in teaching can help increase student participation, foster social and emotional learning, and motivate students to take risks."
Jennie Bales

How to Teach Empathy Through Fiction - InformED : - 2 views

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    You may have read, or privately suspected, that curling up with a good book can make you a better person. Over the past two years, several major news sources-including Scientific American and The New York Times-have confirmed the relationship between literature and virtue, placing fiction, in particular, in the limelight. The reason? Empathy.
Jennie Bales

Students who like to read - what does the research say? - Teacher - 2 views

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    In 2015, a sample of students in Year 4 in Australian schools participated in PIRLS (Progress in International Reading Literacy Study). PIRLS focuses on Year 4 as the point in schooling where most students are moving from 'learning to read' to 'reading to learn'. However, reading is much more than a tool for education or work. It can take the reader out of themselves and their own experiences, engage and develop emotions and provide new perspectives.
Jennie Bales

50 Picturebooks to Change the World - DevelopmentEducation.ie - 2 views

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    "Thérése Hegarty and Patricia Kennon explore picturebooks in learning contexts and how they allow a discussion of friendship, conflict, struggle, norms, points of view, difference and injustice in a distanced way, thus allowing sensitive issues to be discussed without direct disclosures about the children's own lives."
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