Title: Emotional literacy: a whole school approach
1Emotional literacy a whole school approach
- Connect E.L. with the central concerns of
education - Outline kind of holistic approaches we need to
promote E.L.
2Objectives to explore
- Context of increased interest in EL
- Key areas of education that relate to it
- Key competences
- Rationale for a whole school approach
- Successful LEAs
3Overlapping terms
literacy
well being
intelligence
learning
mental health
competence
emotional
behaviour
social
4Use whatever terms...
- Work
- Are appropriate
- Make sense
- Bring people together
5Some key terms that work currently
6Emotional literacy is
- The ability to understand ourselves and other
people, and in particular to be aware of,
understand, and use information about the
emotional states of ourselves and others with
skill and competence. - It includes the ability to understand, express
and manage our own emotions, and respond to the
emotions of others, in ways that are helpful
others and to ourselves.
7Emotional and social wellbeing
- Broad concern with whole person
- Concern with underlying determinants
- Focus on context and environment
8Growth of research evidence in education
9Changes in Education
- Realisation that effective learning and pursuit
of standards demands EL too - Development of effective programmes of emotional
and social competence/ literacy - Inclusion demands EL
- Growth in interest in managing behaviour through
positive approaches and contextual determinants - Healthy schools movement - emotional and social
at centre
10Gardners intelligences include
- Logical
- Spacial
- Verbal
- Kinaesthetic
- Intra-personal (understanding self)
- Inter-personal (understanding others)
11Golemans work on impact of emotional
intelligence on...
- Work
- Education
- Personal life
12Emotional and social competence missing key to
many educational problems, e.g.
- Learning difficulties
- Behaviour problems
- Exclusion and disaffection
- Teacher retention
13Some emotions block learning
- Cannot think straight e.g. when angry
- Chronic emotional problems make learning
difficult - Low self esteem makes us feel incompetent
- Lack of attachment to others makes it hard to
take direction
14Some emotions aid learning
- Pupils learn better with self esteem, sense of
optimism - Teachers more effective when feel respected
15Links between emotions and learning
- Need to feel relaxed, calm safe to use whole
brain approaches to learning - Whole brain approach based in the emotional
centre of the brain - Need to feel safe to use a range of learning
styles
16Emotions are essential for rationality we need
them to
- Direct attention to what matters
- Prioritise
- Plan
- Anticipate our actions and those of others
- Determine value
17Emotional and social competences
- that are essential to educational and personal
success
18Self understanding and belief
- Accurate self concept
- Self esteem
- Optimism
- Resilience
- Awareness of own power
- Ability to change and grow
19Self control
- Thinking clearly and rationally
- Managing the emotions
- Impulse control
- Self motivation
- Deferring gratification
- Taking responsibility for own actions
20Emotional awareness and expression
- Developing emotional complexity through language
- Impact of emotions on the body
- Impact of self on others
- Awareness of emotion/ feeling deeply
- Expressing self, through language and action
- Expressing -ve e.g. fear, guilt, anger
- Expressing ve e.g. happiness, having fun, going
with the flow
21Social competence includes.
- Communicating effectively
- Making relationships
- Empathy
- Genuineness/ authenticity
- Respect for others
- Sociability/ reciprocity
- Balancing needs of self and others
22Social competence also includes...
- Anger management
- Negotiation
- Co-operation
- Conflict resolution
- Mediation
- Active listening
- Tolerating/ celebrating difference
23A whole school approach
24Whole school/ holistic approach also called.
comprehensive
universal
environmental
health promoting school
healthy school
safe school
25Holistic e.g. whole school, approach means
- Focus on organisation not individual
- Includes all aspects, not just curriculum
- Focus on environmental causes, not outcomes e.g.
behaviour - Seeing the school in its community
- Involving all parties at all levels
- Coordination, congruence between the parts
- Teamwork, multi professional working
26Who/ what is emotional and social education for?
- Traditional view
- Pupils
- Special needs
- Those with problems
- Focus on behaviour change
- EL worked on for its own sake only
- Whole school
- And teachers
- And mainstream
- All of us
- Focus on emotional growth and self empowerment
- EL linked with mainstream learning
27Why use whole school approach?
- All of us need EL links with wellbeing and
effective learning for all - Demonstrably more effective in producing change
- Less stigmatising for those with problems
- Causes of problems often environmental anyway
- Emotional and social problems are extremely
widespread and on a continuum - Processes which help some shown to help all
- Herd immunity/ critical mass to help those with
problems
28Whole school approach to special needs
- Same strategies work for all pupils - and promote
wellbeing and learning of all and prevent
problems - Same teaching programmes work, if level and
amount of input is adjusted - Need early identification and help for all
- Support teachers to keep students in mainstream
schools where possible - Withdrawal units and rest of school should use
same clear, warm strategies
29Whole school approach produces higher levels of...
- Learning
- Attendance
- Results e.g.examinations
- Pupil and teacher effectiveness
- Morale of teachers and pupils
- Self esteem
- Sociable behaviour
30Some key areas for a whole school approach
Management Policies
Relationships Communication
Curriculum Methods
Community Parents Agencies
Physical environment
314 key features
- Relationships
- Participation
- Autonomy
- Clarity
32Relationships based on
- Social competence
- Empathy
- Respect
- Genuineness
- Listening the listening school?
33Participation means
- Bottom up approach
- Open and transparent
- Consultation and involvement
- Shared goals, values, power
- Whole ethnic and social mix
- Slower and difficult pupils
34Clarity means having clear and positive.
- Boundaries
- Structures
- Rules
- Roles
- Expectations
35Autonomy means...
- Self determination
- Independence
- Having control
- Personal responsibility
- Independent thinking
- Critical awareness
36Need a balance
- Relationships
- Participation
- Clarity
- Autonomy
37Unbalanced.
- Clarity only cold, rigid environment
- Relationships only laissez faire
- Relationships clarity participation
brainwashing
38Effective programmes of teaching and learning
- High profile
- Support at the top
- Whole school experience
- Involve all subjects and all pupils
- Explicit and planned
- Spiral, developmental and long term
- Start early
39An effective curriculum for EL
- Integrated
- Planned
- Developmental
- Active methods
- Teaches skills as well as attitudes and knowledge
- Generalises to real life
- Culturally appropriate
40Working with parents to promote EL
- Parents welcome and comfortable
- School listens actively to parents interests and
concerns - Parents involved in school life, decision making,
learning - School and home support one another
41DFES project
- What works in developing emotional and social
competency in children and young people? - Review of evidence
- Case studies of best practice in 5 successful
LEAs
42Successful links and locations for this work in
LEAs
- Behaviour support teams
- National Healthy School Standard
- CAMHS
43Successful LEAs.
- High priority
- Holistic approaches
- Multiprofessional teams
- Inclusive framework
- Explicit teaching programmes
- Staff development