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Social Emotional Behavioral Competencies
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21st century living requires skills beyond reading, writing and math. In order to be successful at work, school and life, people need to be able to collaborate, problem solve, self-regulate, take the perspective others and so much more. The good news is that the research shows all of these skills can be taught and cultivated.
Social, emotional and behavioral competencies refer to all of the knowledge, skills, attitudes and actions that promote positive human development and interaction.
What can I expect when we build social, emotional and behavioral competencies?
Explicitly teaching and cultivating these social, emotional, and behavioral competencies as a universal intervention is associated with:
- Decreases in behavioral challenges such as misbehavior and aggression (Goldberg et al., 2018)
- Improved social, emotional and relational skills essential for success with post-secondary activities such as post-secondary education or employment (Taylor et al., 2017)
- Increases in youth ability to manage mental health challenges, such as depression and stress (Durlak et al., 2011)
- Improved attitudes about themselves, others and school (Sklad et al., 2012)
- Gains in academic achievement (van de Sande et al., 2019)
Within each element you will find a definition, guiding questions to consider as a team or individual, critical mindsets, essential skills & practices, as well as resources for further exploration.
Jump to a Section:
School procedures and expectations prioritize developing social, emotional and behavioral competencies.
Culture of Social, Emotional
and Behavioral Learning
The culture of the school promotes social, emotional and behavioral learning.
Positive Behavior Support Practices
Adults use positive behavior support practices.
Schools provide social, emotional, and behavioral skill-building opportunities for educators.
Explicit Social, Emotional
and Behavioral Instruction
Social, emotional and behavioral skills are explicitly taught to students.
Procedures and expectations in a school context refer to the established routines, rules, and guidelines that govern behavior and interactions within the school community. Procedures are step-by-step processes for carrying out specific tasks or activities, while expectations are the standards for behavior and academic performance that individuals are expected to meet. These procedures and expectations should prioritize a preventative, universal, data-driven, instructional approach to social, emotional and behavioral competencies for students and staff.
Procedures include:
- Team decision making processes related to discipline, MTSS, referrals for additional support
- School-wide expectations
- Social contracts
- SEB skills instruction and modeling
- Explicitly taught routines
- Integrating student voice in terms of developing rules, expectations, routines, etc.
Expectations Include:
- Behavioral
- Academic
- Social
- Emotional regulation
- What procedures and expectations are in place to support SEB competencies for all- students, staff, and caregivers?
- What are the SEB expectations at your school? How are those identified and determined? Who is involved in those decisions?
- What procedures does your school have that are explicitly SEB focused? How do procedures around SEB have a preventative and universal focus? How are procedures delivered/implemented to students and to staff?
- How does everyone participate, advocate and support SEB policies and procedures?
- How do you discuss the impact of bias on your school-wide policies and procedures?
- How is advancing SEB skills made an expectation for the whole school? What shared language is used around SEBC at school?
- Staff believe procedures and expectations guide behavior.
- Staff are aware of biases which might influence procedures and expectations around SEB competencies.
- Staff are aware of the dangers of implicit bias within school-wide policies and procedures.
- Staff believe that SEB competencies can be taught, learned and shaped.
- Staff understand that punishment is not effective at creating long-term behavioral change.
- School leadership views issues of SEB competencies with a universal, prevention-focused lens.
Skills and Practices
- Restorative practices are integrated throughout disciplinary procedures.
- Teachers develop shared agreements with students around expected behavior in classes.
- Staff discuss issues of SEB competencies with a skill-focused, strengths-based approach.
- Essential behavioral expectations are consistent across the school.
- Expectations are identified using collaborative, diverse, team approach that includes students, staff and families.
- Parents and caregivers are included in the decision-making process regarding culturally responsive conversations, discipline processes, and the development of SEB competencies at the school level.
- Staff regularly have explicit conversations about possible impacts of bias on development and implementation of procedures, expectations and school practices.
- Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports website (CDE - Office of Learning Supports)
- PBIS Implementation Blueprint (Center on PBIS)
- Integrating Social and Emotional Learning within a Multi-Tiered System of Supports to Advance Equity (CCSSO, CASEL, AIR)
The school culture refers to a group of beliefs, assumptions, values, actions, language, and artifacts which provide the identity of the school and a sense of shared identity among its members. The school culture values, develops and supports SEB learning within and among students, staff and families.
- How does the climate and culture of the school support and cultivate SEB competencies for all?
- How do your staff teach SEB skills? When? Where? Are these skills taught continuously, or only when a crisis emerges?
- How is discipline handled in your school/district? In what ways do discipline practices foster the development of SEB competencies and meet the various social and emotional needs of students and staff?
- How are staff encouraged to show/model their authentic selves & experiences?
- How do staff talk about student performance? How do staff discuss individual students' SEB skills?
- How do staff know what are developmentally appropriate SEB skills for their students? What supports are in place for staff as they support youth skill development?
- In what ways does school leadership treat the staff the way staff are expected to treat the students?
- All staff believe that advancing SEB competencies is part of role of the school.
- Staff believe that learning includes mistakes and failure.
- Staff believe that school is a place to practice.
- Staff are curious about the behavior of others and believe it is important to learn more about the function of others' behavior.
- Staff understand how SEB competency building is clearly connected with trauma-responsive, culturally-responsive, and restorative practices.
- School staff and families understand how SEB competencies relate to academic performance.
- Staff understand that it is important to model SEB competencies with students which includes showing emotions and modeling emotional regulation.
- Staff understand that SEB skill development is individualized.
- Staff set aside time in the day for SEB learning, such as morning meeting, homeroom, restorative circles, etc.
- Staff integrate instruction around SEB competencies during all academic subjects.
- Staff receive ongoing training around social emotional skill development.
- Discussions of individual or aggregate student performance includes discussion of student SEB competencies.
- All students are discussed in terms of their SEB competencies, not just those with behavioral challenges.
- Staff show and model SEB skills by being authentic and transparent with their students.
- School leadership show and model SEB skills when interacting with staff.
- Understanding and Cultivating a Positive School Climate (CDE and Colorado State University)
- Instructional Practices that Supports Social-Emotional Learning in Three Teaching Evaluation Frameworks (Center for Great Teaching and Learning - AIR)
- Resilience in Schools and Educators (RISE) Program (University of Colorado - Center for Resilience and Well-Being)
- Restorative Justice Practices and Racial Justice (Restorative Justice Colorado)
Positive behavior supports refer to evidence-based strategies used to teach, model, reinforce and monitor prosocial skills that enhance students’ social, emotional and behavioral competencies while decreasing undesired or unwanted behaviors that inhibit learning and exclude students from learning environments. When integrated into a prevention-based framework, positive behavior supports create positive, predictable, equitable and safe learning environments, as well as improve social-emotional competence, academic success, and school climate.
- How do adults in the school community support student behavioral skills?
- What positive behavior supports are implemented schoolwide?
- How do educators measure, recognize and celebrate student progress and growth related to SEB competencies?
- How do educators get help (mentoring, training, etc.) with using effective positive behavior support practices in their individual classrooms?
- Staff believe that reinforcement is more effective than punishment.
- Staff believe that behavior can be taught.
- Staff understand that all behavior is communication. Behavior often communicates an underlying unmet need.
- Staff understand that maladaptive behavior is often the result of students lacking the skills to behave appropriately ("can't do vs. won't do" mindset).
Skills and Practices
- Staff provide, teach, and reinforce clear explicit expectations with students.
- Staff use, teach, and reinforce predictable routines.
- Staff create classroom environments that support positive behavior, including but not limited to developing consistent routines, providing redirections in private conversations with students, using proximity to address behavior.
- Staff carefully supervise and engage all students.
- Staff provide positive reinforcement for expected behavior.
- Staff use redirection and corrective feedback for unwanted behavior.
- Staff utilize more positive reinforcement than correction (e.g.: 4:1 praise: correction ratios).
- Professional development is regularly offered to staff regarding positive behavior supports, including but not limited to formal and informal trainings, access to refresher materials, mentoring/coaching.
- Staff use restorative discipline practices.
- Staff collaborate to solve problems.
- Tier 1 PBIS Implementation (Center on PBIS)
- Tier 2 PBIS Implementation (Center on PBIS)
- Tier 3 PBIS Implementation (Center on PBIS)
- Supports for Specific Behaviors (PBIS World)
- Praise Students Frequently (PBIS World)
Social, emotional, and behavioral competencies refer to the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and actions that promote positive human development and interaction.
Skill-building opportunities include training, supported practice, mentorship, reinforcement, and ongoing coaching.
Staff skills to focus on include:
- Self-awareness
- Emotion labeling
- Emotional understanding
- Emotional acceptance
- Emotion regulation and coping strategies
- CASEL 5
Staff skill building includes:
- Explicit training
- Supported practice
- Mentorship
- Reinforcement
- Ongoing coaching
- How are social, emotional, and behavioral (SEB) competencies taught to all staff?
- How is embodiment/modeling by adults an explicit focus of your SEB competencies teachings?
- What curriculum/materials/models/frameworks are being used to support SEB competencies for staff?
- How does staff learn about the impact of trauma on SEB competencies for both youth and adults?
- In what ways do staff incorporate culturally responsive, equity-centered practices into your instruction of SEB competencies?
- How are staff taught to support the SEB competencies of all students?
- How are staff taught to build and support SEB competencies for individual students?
- Staff believe that you can still build skills as an adult.
- Staff believe that relationship skills need continued awareness, work, fine-tuning, growth, etc.
- Staff are willing to examine their own skills and learn new skills.
Skills and Practices
- Teachers receive training on how to explicitly teach SEB skills during whole group instruction (Tier 1).
- Some staff receive training on how to explicitly teach SEB skills during small group instruction (Tier 2).
- Staff receive explicit training on SEB skills for themselves.
- Throughout the school day, staff explicitly model/embody SEB competencies in a variety of ways. (Examples: metacognition around their self-regulation process, transparency around their own emotional state and modeling of self-regulation, modeling use of effective problem solving strategies, etc.)
- Staff receive opportunities for practice and feedback on their own SEB skills.
- Staff receive training on trauma-responsive instruction, including how trauma might impact an individual’s SEB competencies.
- Staff receive training on being culturally responsive with regard to SEB competencies.
- Staff receive training on how to support SEB competencies in individual students, through coaching, mentoring, collaborative problem solving, etc.
- Strengthen Adult SEL - CASEL Guide to Schoolwide SEL (CASEL)
- Social and Emotional Learning Coaching Toolkit (American Institutes for Research (AIR))
- Trauma-Informed Teaching Strategies (ASCD)
- Making SEL Culturally Competent (Edutopia)
Social, emotional, and behavioral competencies refer to the knowledge, skills, attitudes and actions that promote positive human development and interaction. Students require explicit instruction in these areas, including opportunities for direct instruction, supported practice, reinforcement and ongoing coaching.
Example student SEB skills include:
- Self-awareness
- Self-regulation
- Empathy
- Emotion identification and labeling
- Perspective taking
- Responsible decision making
- Social awareness
Student skill building strategies includes:
- Direct Instruction
- Supported practice
- Mentorship
- Reinforcement
- Ongoing coaching
- Peer support
Qualities of effective SEB instruction:
- Referred back to regularly
- Modelled consistently beyond explicit instruction
- Connections are developed between SEB instruction and other classroom activities (woven throughout)
- How are SEB competencies taught to all students? Does your school have a set of SEB skills for students?
- What curriculum/materials/models/frameworks are being used for SEB competencies for students? What is the scope and sequence? What skills are covered, and how do they align with your school expectations?
- How do staff promote SEB competencies beyond the SEL curriculum? In what ways do staff support SEB competencies through daily interactions with youth?
- In what ways are you incorporating culturally responsive, equity-centered practices into your instruction of SEB skills?
- How are opportunities for individual practice embedded into the school day? How are opportunities to practice SEB competencies appropriately scaffolded for students age, ability, etc.?
- If universal interventions around SEB competencies are not meeting the needs of an individual student, what other supports (Tier 2, Tier 3) are available at school?
- Staff believe that social, emotional and behavioral skills can be taught/learned ; they are not just innate.
- Staff believe that SEB skills are important enough to be taught, practiced and prioritized.
- Staff believe that SEB skills require explicit instruction rather than implied structures, expectations, or rules.
- Staff believe that social, emotional, and behavioral skills are all interconnected; you can't teach one without the others.
- Staff believe that prevention work matters; it is important to teach these skills before we see a deficit.
Skills and Practices
- Staff integrate instruction around SEB competencies during all academics.
- Staff also receive SEB competencies specific curricula, including training on its effective implementation.
- Staff interact with students individually and promote SEB skills through coaching, mentoring, collaborative problem solving, etc.
- Students have opportunities to practice and receive feedback on their SEBC competencies throughout the school day (examples: group work, think-pair-share, practicing self-regulation strategies as a class, restorative circles, morning meetings, mediation, etc.).
- More intensive individual mental health, behavioral supports and social instruction are available for students within the school setting.
- Supporting and Responding to Students' Social, Emotional, and Behavioral Needs: Evidence-Based Practices for Educators (Center on PBIS)
- Social Emotional Learning District Implementation and Professional Development Guidance (Minnesota Department of Education)
- Keeping SEL Developmental: The Importance of a Developmental Lens for Fostering and Assessing SEL Competencies (CASEL)
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