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Moving from intent to impact: the voices of SEL directors in implementing social emotional learningFrame, Brandon M. 20 May 2024 (has links)
This dissertation presents a phenomenological qualitative study that examines the lived experiences of six Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) Directors representing county, urban, and suburban school districts. The study aims to explore the perspectives, challenges, and strategies of SEL Directors in implementing SEL programs district-wide.
The study gathered rich data from the six SEL Directors through in-depth qualitative interviews, enabling a comprehensive examination of their experiences.
The findings of this research contribute to the generalizability of the study for the field of SEL. They underscore the complex nature of the SEL Director role, revealing commonalities and unique challenges across different school districts. Participants demonstrated unwavering dedication and passion for fostering social and emotional skill development among students and staff. However, they also faced common obstacles, such as limited resources, SEL and Academic integration, resistance to change, and the need to balance competing priorities. Additionally, the study uncovers the significant role of SEL Directors in planning for district-wide coherence and alignment of SEL implementation. By amplifying the voices of SEL Directors, this research provides valuable insights and contributes to the ongoing discourse on SEL implementation. It seeks to support the continuous improvement of SEL programs and enhance adults' and students' social and emotional skills across diverse educational settings.
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SEL for DLLs: The Influence of Social-Emotional Learning Programs on Key Outcomes for Dual Language Learners in Head StartKane, Codie 08 1900 (has links)
Dual language learners (DLLs) represent a rapidly growing population of students in United States preschools. DLLs increasingly experience social emotional learning (SEL) programs in their early learning environments, which are now widely implemented in Head Start and other publicly funded preschools. However, limited research has explored the extent to which SEL programs support DLL development. Investigating the impact of SEL programs on DLL skills is critical to both enhance the literature on SEL programs and to identify the types of preschool curricula that benefit DLLs.
In the present study, I took an ecological systems and sociocultural approach to evaluating the extent to which SEL programs support DLL language and social outcomes and whether these outcomes depend on classroom contextual factors. Using an existing data set that included a large number of DLLs enrolled in Head Start, I fit a series of multilevel models to evaluate whether participating in an SEL program predicted growth in DLLs’ social skills and vocabulary over time compared to participating in a control group. I conducted a multilevel moderation analysis to examine the extent to which DLL outcomes depended on the overall quality of teacher-child interactions in a classroom and having a teacher who could speak DLLs’ home language (i.e., Spanish).
Results indicated that DLLs who participated in an SEL program showed greater growth in social skills over time than DLLs in the control group. There was not evidence to suggest that the social skills outcomes depended on classroom-level teacher-child interactions, nor on having a Spanish-speaking teacher. Findings also revealed no significant difference in vocabulary growth over time among DLLs in the SEL program group versus DLLs in the control group. However, results indicated that DLL vocabulary outcomes depended on classroom-level teacher-child interaction quality. There was not evidence to suggest that vocabulary outcomes depended on having a Spanish-speaking teacher.
These findings provide support for preschool SEL programs as a tool to enhance DLL social skills. They suggest the need for SEL programs to embed opportunities for quality teacher-child language interactions in curricula to enhance DLL vocabulary skills. Future research should continue to explore the contextual factors that impact DLL outcomes in SEL programs, as well as explore the relative effectiveness of various SEL programs. / School Psychology
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Executive Functioning Skills and Social-Emotional Intervention Exposure as Predictors of Behavioral Outcomes in KindergartnersMager Garfield, Emma 08 1900 (has links)
This study used extant data to examine the role of executive functioning (EF) and intervention dosage in predicting student behavioral outcomes throughout a social-emotional intervention. Data were collected in 19 kindergarten classrooms in Midwest public schools during the 2010-2011 academic year. The sample included 260 students with approximately 49% (n = 126) identified by parents as female and approximately 52% (n = 134) identified by parents as male. Factor analyses and correlational analyses were conducted with all observed behaviors and with all rating scale and task-based EF measures to detect underlying constructs for analysis. However, neither the behaviors nor the rating scale EF measures demonstrated adequately sized correlations to justify combining them into composite variables. Therefore, rating scale EF measures were entered independently into analyses for individual behavioral outcomes. Generalized additive models (GAM) were used to determine the significance of increased exposure to the intervention and various rating scale and task-based measures of EF for prosocial (i.e., cooperative play, on-task, and helping) and maladaptive (i.e., disruptive, physically aggressive, and verbally aggressive) behaviors. Results indicate that some behavioral outcomes improved significantly during the intervention, while most were unaffected. Parent and teacher ratings were predictive of some behavioral outcomes; however, there was no evidence that task-based measures were significant predictors of any classroom behaviors. These results highlight the value and complexity of classroom behavioral observations, as well as the importance of improving understandings of which social-emotional curricula are most effective for addressing both prosocial and maladaptive behaviors, as well as the underlying mechanisms responsible for their efficacy. / School Psychology
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A Seat at the Table: Illuminating Student Voice in Restorative Justice ProcessesReda, Nicole J. 01 August 2024 (has links) (PDF)
This study explored the perspectives and lived experiences of urban youth in relation to Restorative Practices at a free public charter school in Los Angeles, California. This qualitative study used a series of semi-structured interviews with four high school students. This adaptable design allowed for the nature of questions to evolve and shift in accordance with emergent themes and patterns. After a detailed inductive analysis of the data, major themes emerged related to students’ aversion to punitive discipline, their preference for conversation-based Restorative Practices, and their desire to have more agency as school community members. Moreover, participants reported that they only felt trusting of a small handful of staff members, preventing consistent conflict-resolution practices and positive relationship building. This study’s findings indicate a need for changes to be made at the school, district, state, and federal level to halt the use of traditionally racist and punitive discipline practices and replace them with Restorative Practices and social-emotional education and support. Additionally, student voice needs to be included and acknowledged as an integral piece of meaningful decision-making in school settings.
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Addressing Student Mental Health During COVID-19: The Incredible Endeavors of One Group of Urban Elementary School TeachersFerguson, Caitlin 29 July 2024 (has links) (PDF)
This case study investigated one urban school district’s efforts to address the mental health of its students during COVID-19. Specifically, I examined the protocols established by the district and the daily implementation of social-emotional learning and culturally relevant practices during the 2020–21 school year, focusing on the instructors’ perspective. Utilizing a semi-structured qualitative interview approach, I collected data from five teachers and one district personnel and corroborated it with district survey results and the Learning Continuity Plan. Findings indicate that despite teachers not explicitly understanding social-emotional learning (SEL) before COVID-19, they relied on a strong network of support and personal expertise to address the social-emotional needs of their students. Students engaged in activities such as art therapy, journaling, yoga, and community circles. Teachers incorporated culturally relevant lessons into online instructional sessions. The district established protocols to address the mental health of their students; however, teachers perceived them to have little effect on students’ mental health. The protocols specified in the Learning Continuity Plan may not have been fully effective, or the student’s social-emotional needs might have exceeded the support offered by the district, as further evidenced by the fact that teachers were compelled to advance much further than what was stipulated by the district. These findings indicate the need to be more proactive versus reactive. From teacher credentialing programs to new teacher onboarding at Title I schools, educators need more training and long-term coaching provided by experienced professionals to effectively support students’ mental health needs, particularly within marginalized communities.
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The Effect of Hybrid Learning on 6th Grade Students' Outcomes and Social Emotional Well-Being Through the Lens of TeachersWheeler, Nicolle Renee 14 June 2023 (has links)
No description available.
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The Perceived Effectiveness of the 7 Mindsets Social-Emotional Learning Curriculum for Elementary StudentsCochran, Megan 03 August 2023 (has links)
No description available.
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Developmental checklists : a tool for cliniciansWickliffe, Abigail Kay 03 October 2014 (has links)
Parents of children with developmental disabilities seek out therapy in order to assist their child to reach full potential. In order to help parents understand where their child should be in comparison to a typically developing child, they must be provided with proper resources. While commercially available assessments are available to speech-language pathologists, parents only have access to checklists that provide minimal direction at certain age ranges. The purpose of this literature review is to discuss developmental domains important for the developing child, examine developmental milestone checklists available to parents as well as two commercially available assessments for speech-language pathologists, investigate available research on developmental milestones in the areas of language output, language comprehension, cognition, social-emotional skills, and motor development, and identify ages at which developmental milestones within the identified domains occur in typically developing children. The aim of this project will be to create developmental milestone checklists available for speech-language pathologists to provide to parents. / text
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Parental Expectations of Social-Emotional and Self-Help/Self-Direction Development in Abused ChildrenCostas, Lisa Daniels 05 1900 (has links)
The present study examined the existence of unrealistic expectations in abusive parents. It was hypothesized that abusive parents would have higher expectations of their children's social-emotional and self-help skills than nonabusive parents. It was also hypothesized that abusive parents would have higher expectations of their children's social-emotional skills than nonabusive parents when both groups compared their children to average children. Abusive and nonabusive parents were administered the Social Competence Scales of the Child Behavior Checklist and the Daily Living Skills domain of the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales. The results contradict previous studies in this area and raise questions about present conceptualizations of expectations in abusive parents and the importance of this factor in child abuse.
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The Effects of an Emotional Competency Program on the Development of Emotional Capital in Primary School Children / Les effets d'un programme de compétences émotionnelles sur le développement du capital émotionnel chez les enfants des écoles primairesKhan, Rifat Abbas 27 September 2012 (has links)
Pour développer le capital émotionnel, le domaine de l'éducation a besoin des programmes globaux qui pourraient former des individus sains, équilibrés, compétitifs, et capables à apporter le progrès, la paix et la prospérité à la société. Il y a aujourd’hui un besoin urgent de former des individus sains, équilibrés et équipés de compétences émotionnelles, personnelles et sociales pour faire face, dans un premier temps à des problèmes émotionnels, personnels, psychologiques, et socio-économiques, et afin de répondre, dans un deuxième temps, aux exigences du contexte social tout en prenant en compte les futurs défis. Le but de cette recherche était d'étudier les effets d'un programme de formation des compétences émotionnelles sur le développement du capital émotionnel des enfants des écoles primaires au Pakistan. / The purpose of this research was to study the effects of an Emotional Competency Training Program, based on two conceptual models of Mayer & Salovey Model of EI and Goleman model of EI and one action model of Six Seconds Model of EI, on the development of emotional capital of primary school children in Pakistan. The sample of the study was the 4th class students from Amanat Memorial High School in Lahore, Pakistan. The class of 32 students was randomly divided into 16 students for experimental group and 16 for the control group. Different students from both groups could not participate in post-test or follow up and finally the 9 students for each group were included in the final data analysis of this research. The research had a pretest-posttest design with a control group and a follow up after the two month from posttest phase. The data was analyzed statistically by using the multivariate repeated measures analysis of variance technique with SPSS software. The results of the research demonstrate that the experimental group significantly increased the emotional capital scores at post-test phase as compared to the control group’s mean scores. While the experimental group, compared to control group, sustained this development up to the follow-up phase two months after the post-program phase.
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