Walking the Talk: Enhancing Future Teachers’ Capacity to Embed Social-Emotional Learning in Middle Years Classrooms

Early adolescence marks a developmental period during which there is a window of opportunity to explicitly teach and make a significant difference in a young person’s development of social and emotional competencies (SECs). All students can benefit from the inclusion of SECs and failing to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Katherine Main
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-09-01
Series:Education Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/8/3/143
id doaj-2960bc2cb3a74eef86b2cc12ea211237
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2960bc2cb3a74eef86b2cc12ea2112372020-11-25T01:32:12ZengMDPI AGEducation Sciences2227-71022018-09-018314310.3390/educsci8030143educsci8030143Walking the Talk: Enhancing Future Teachers’ Capacity to Embed Social-Emotional Learning in Middle Years ClassroomsKatherine Main0School of Education and Professional Studies, Griffith University, University Drive, Meadowbrook QLD 4131, AustraliaEarly adolescence marks a developmental period during which there is a window of opportunity to explicitly teach and make a significant difference in a young person’s development of social and emotional competencies (SECs). All students can benefit from the inclusion of SECs and failing to develop such SECs can result in poor outcomes in several domains including personal, social, and academic outcomes. Research on social and emotional programs for young adolescent learners has shown that a ‘skills and drills’ approach is far less effective than focusing on mind-sets and classroom climate. Although the role teachers play in explicitly teaching and supporting young adolescents’ SECs has been recognised, teachers have reported a lack of confidence in knowing what, and how to teach these skills. This paper reports on a teacher education course that embedded social and emotional skills into both coursework design and assessment expectations. Results drawn from an analysis of students’ responses to their main assessment task showed that pre-service teachers had a growing awareness of SECs and, in particular, were able to recognise the importance of focusing on the building of students’ SECs to support academic success across a broad range of curriculum areas.http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/8/3/143middle schoolyoung adolescentssocial and emotional competenciesteacher training
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katherine Main
spellingShingle Katherine Main
Walking the Talk: Enhancing Future Teachers’ Capacity to Embed Social-Emotional Learning in Middle Years Classrooms
Education Sciences
middle school
young adolescents
social and emotional competencies
teacher training
author_facet Katherine Main
author_sort Katherine Main
title Walking the Talk: Enhancing Future Teachers’ Capacity to Embed Social-Emotional Learning in Middle Years Classrooms
title_short Walking the Talk: Enhancing Future Teachers’ Capacity to Embed Social-Emotional Learning in Middle Years Classrooms
title_full Walking the Talk: Enhancing Future Teachers’ Capacity to Embed Social-Emotional Learning in Middle Years Classrooms
title_fullStr Walking the Talk: Enhancing Future Teachers’ Capacity to Embed Social-Emotional Learning in Middle Years Classrooms
title_full_unstemmed Walking the Talk: Enhancing Future Teachers’ Capacity to Embed Social-Emotional Learning in Middle Years Classrooms
title_sort walking the talk: enhancing future teachers’ capacity to embed social-emotional learning in middle years classrooms
publisher MDPI AG
series Education Sciences
issn 2227-7102
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Early adolescence marks a developmental period during which there is a window of opportunity to explicitly teach and make a significant difference in a young person’s development of social and emotional competencies (SECs). All students can benefit from the inclusion of SECs and failing to develop such SECs can result in poor outcomes in several domains including personal, social, and academic outcomes. Research on social and emotional programs for young adolescent learners has shown that a ‘skills and drills’ approach is far less effective than focusing on mind-sets and classroom climate. Although the role teachers play in explicitly teaching and supporting young adolescents’ SECs has been recognised, teachers have reported a lack of confidence in knowing what, and how to teach these skills. This paper reports on a teacher education course that embedded social and emotional skills into both coursework design and assessment expectations. Results drawn from an analysis of students’ responses to their main assessment task showed that pre-service teachers had a growing awareness of SECs and, in particular, were able to recognise the importance of focusing on the building of students’ SECs to support academic success across a broad range of curriculum areas.
topic middle school
young adolescents
social and emotional competencies
teacher training
url http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/8/3/143
work_keys_str_mv AT katherinemain walkingthetalkenhancingfutureteacherscapacitytoembedsocialemotionallearninginmiddleyearsclassrooms
_version_ 1725082599649443840