Transcript Slide 1

Promoting Social
Emotional Competence
Promoting Children’s
Success: Building
Relationships and Creating
Supportive Environments
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Agenda
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Introduction
Examining attitudes
Relationship between challenging behavior and social
emotional development
• Creating environments
• Building relationships
• Designing physical environment
• Schedules, routines & transitions
• Activities that promote engagement
• Giving directions
• Following rules & directions
• Ignoring/redirecting
• Ongoing monitoring and positive attention
• Using positive feedback & encouragement
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• Pulling it all together
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Learner Objectives
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Participants will be able to describe the relationship
between children’s social emotional development and
challenging behaviors
Participants will be able to describe the importance of
building relationships with children, families, and
colleagues
Participants will be able to describe the relationship
between a number of environmental variables and
children’s challenging behaviors
Participants will be able to identify strategies to build
positive relationships
Participants will use positive feedback and
encouragement appropriately
Participants will evaluate their work
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Examining Our Attitudes about
Challenging Behavior
• What behaviors make you crazy or
push your buttons?
• How do these behaviors make you
feel?
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Managing Personal
Stress: Thought Control
Upsetting Thoughts
“That child is a monster.
This is getting ridiculous.
He’ll never change.”
“I’m sick of putting out fires!”
Calming Thoughts
“This child is testing to see
where the limits are.
My job is to stay calm and help
him learn better ways to behave.”
“I can handle this. I am in control.
They have just learned some powerful
ways to get control. I will
teach them more appropriate
ways to behave.”
“
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Managing Personal
Stress: Thought Control
Upsetting Thought
“I wonder if Wal-Mart is hiring?”
“He ruins everything! This is
going to be the worst year of my
career.”
Calming Thoughts
“I feel undervalued right now –
I need to seek support from
my peers and supervisor.”
“Having him in my class is going to
be a wonderful Professional
Development experience.”
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Key Social Emotional Skills
Children Need as
They Enter School
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• Key Skills
– Confidence
– Capacity to develop good relationships
with peers
– Concentration and persistence on
challenging tasks
– Ability to effectively communicate emotions
– Ability to listen to instructions and be
attentive
• When children don’t have these skills, they
often exhibit challenging behaviors
• We must focus on teaching the skills!!
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Some Basic Assumptions
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• Challenging behavior is most often
related to some skill deficit (e.g.,
language, social)
• Behavior that persists over time is
working for the child
• When we have positive relationships
with children, supportive classroom
environments, and focus on teaching
social and communication skills, we
reduce the likelihood of challenging
behavior
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Classroom Preventive Practices Promoting Children’s Success
• Create a context that makes EVERY
child feel good about coming to school
• Design an environment that promotes
child engagement
• Focus on teaching children what To Do!
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– Teach expectations and routines
– Teach skills that children can use in place
of challenging behaviors
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Intensive
Individualized
Interventions
Social Emotional
Teaching Strategies
Creating Supportive Environments
Positive Relationships with Children,
Families, and Colleagues
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Building Relationships
with Children
• Why is it important?
– Creating a safe environment for
children
– Ensuring that all children, even
those with the most challenging
behaviors, have access to ongoing
positive relationships
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• How do we build relationships with
children?
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Strategies for
Building Relationships
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• Select a partner
• Brainstorm a list of things you could do to
build or strengthen relationships with children,
families, or other colleagues
• From that list, identify 2-3 things you are going
to work on in order to build stronger
relationships with the children, families, or
colleagues
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Intensive
Individualized
Interventions
Social Emotional
Teaching Strategies
Creating Supportive Environments
Positive Relationships with Children,
Families, and Colleagues
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Classroom Arrangement and
Design: Traffic Patterns
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• Carefully plan traffic patterns
– Minimize large open spaces
– Minimize obstacles and other
hazards
– Consider the needs of children
with physical and sensory
disabilities
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Classroom Arrangement and
Design: Learning Centers
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• Physical Design
– Clear boundaries
– Visibility
– Visual prompts when centers are not
an option
– Adequate number of centers
– Size and location of centers
– Number of children in centers
– Organization of materials
– Preparation of centers
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Classroom Arrangement and
Design: Learning Centers
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• Create Meaningful and Engaging
Learning Centers
– Relevant to children’s needs,
interests, and lives
– Highly engaging and interesting
– Variety of materials in each center
– Changed and rotated on a regular
basis
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Classroom Arrangement and
Design: Activity
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• With a partner, sketch a
classroom. Review item 3 on the
Inventory and consider what
changes need to be made in the
classroom based on what you heard
or what is in the Inventory
• Revise your sketch of the
environment and then share major
changes with other participants at
the table
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Schedules and Routines
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• Develop a schedule that promotes child
engagement and success
– Minimize the number of transitions
– Balance active and quiet activities, small
group and large group activities, teacherdirected and child-directed activities
–Teach children the schedule
• Establish a routine and follow it consistently
– When changes are necessary, prepare
children ahead of time
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Transitions
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• Plan for transitions
– Minimize the length of time children spend
waiting with nothing to do
– Prepare children for transitions by
providing a warning
– Structure the transitions so that children
have something to do while they wait
• Teach children the expectations related to
transitions
– Individualize supports and cues
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Schedule Activity
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• Divide into groups of people who currently
work together
• Write down a schedule from one of the
participant’s classroom
• Consider the things we have just talked
about. What changes could you make in the
schedule that might increase engagement
and prevent challenging behaviors?
• Share your major changes with others at
your table and brainstorm possible
solutions
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Large Group Activities
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• Planning the activity
– Consider the length
– Be clear about the purpose and goals of the
activities
– Use circle time to teach new things
• Implementing the activity
– Provide opportunities to be actively involved
– Assign jobs to children
– Vary your speech and intonation patterns
– Have children lead activities
– Pay attention to children’s behavior
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Circle Activity
•Clip 1.2:
–Are the children engaged?
–What tells you that?
–Describe the teacher’s behavior in this clip.
•Clip 1.3:
–Are the children engaged?
–What tells you that?
–What is the teacher doing that engages the children?
•Both Clips:
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–What strategies can you suggest that would help the
teacher engage the children even more?
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Small Group Activities
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• Importance of small group activities
– Skill building
– Individualized attention
• Planning and implementing
– Be clear about the goal
– Use peers as models
– Ensure participation by all children
– Make them fun
– Provide feedback throughout
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Adaptations and Modifications
(Sandall & Schwartz, 2002)
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Environmental support
Materials adaptation
Simplify the activity
Use child preferences
Special equipment
Adult support
Peer support
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Giving Directions
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• Make sure you have the
children’s attention before you
give the direction
• Minimize the number of
directions given to children
• Individualize the way
directions are given
• Give clear directions
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Giving Directions
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• Give directions that are positive
• Give children the opportunity to
respond to a direction
• When appropriate, give the child
choices and options for following
directions
• Follow through with positive
acknowledgment of children’s
behavior
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General Guidelines about
Rules and Directions
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• Have a few simple classroom rules
• Involve the children in developing
the rules
• Post the rules visually
• Teach the rules systematically
• Reinforce the rules at high rates
initially and at lower rates throughout
the year
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Involving Children in
Developing the Rules
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• Have children help generate the rules
• Name the rule and have a child
demonstrate the rule
• Name the rule and have the children
identify the visuals that might go on a
poster
• Have children help decorate a rules
poster
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Rules
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• Should Address
– Noise level
– Movement inside
– Interactions with property
– Interactions with adults
– Interactions with peers
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Rules Activity
• Develop a list of 3-5 rules you use
or would use in a classroom
• Discuss these rules with others at
the table
• Brainstorm fun and creative ways
for teaching the rules
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Fun Ways to
Reinforce the Rules
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• Rules Bingo!
• Make a big book about school
rules
• Homework – what are your rules
at home?
• Play “rule charades”
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Ignoring Misbehavior
• Is one of the most effective techniques
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that can be used with students
• Maintains positive teacher-student
relationships based on respect rather
than fear
• Requires that adults give attention for
positive behaviors as opposed to
negative ones
• Can be a powerful tool for changing
behavior since access to attention is
such a positive thing for children
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Ignoring Misbehavior
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• Will only be effective with students
who desire teacher attention
• Is probably the hardest teaching
strategy for teachers to carry out
• Is unnatural - our natural tendency
is to attend to students who are
being disruptive
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To Use Ignoring
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• Identify the specific behaviors you want to
focus on
• Plan carefully to provide attention and positive
feedback to the prosocial behaviors
• Neutralize your reaction to what the student is
doing
• Return your attention by acknowledging
appropriate behavior as soon as student begins
to behave appropriately
•Teach other students to ignore inappropriate
behaviors
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When You Ignore
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• Most children will initially react to
ignoring with an increase in the
challenging behavior to see if they
can recruit the adult’s attention
• Be prepared to wait out the testing
period
• Remember that consistency is the
key to using ignoring!
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Redirecting
• When children are withdrawn or off
task, it is important that teachers do
not ignore them. That can send the
message that the teacher has low
expectations for them or does not
care.
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Redirection
• Can be nonverbal, verbal, or
physical in nature
•Should not be confrontational
•Should focus on the behavior you
saw and provide specific feedback
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Ongoing Monitoring and
Positive Attention
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• Give children attention when they
are engaging in appropriate
behaviors
• Monitor our behavior to ensure that
we are spending more time
using positive descriptive
language and less time giving
directions or correcting
inappropriate behavior
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Positive Attention Activity
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• Count the number of positive comments
the teacher makes (and positive
nonverbals)
• Have a large group discussion about what
types of comments and nonverbal
behaviors the teacher exhibited
• Generate some ideas to help adults
remain focused on the positive throughout
the day
• Encourage participants to include some of
these ideas on their Action Planning Form
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Using Positive Feedback and
Encouragement: 4 Principles
• Contingent on appropriate
behavior
• Descriptive
• Conveyed with enthusiasm
• Contingent on effort
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Using Positive Feedback
and Encouragement
• Remember to use nonverbal forms
of positive feedback and encouragement
• Individualize use of positive feedback
and encouragement based on children’s
needs and preferences
• Encourage other adults and peers to use
positive feedback and encouragement
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Increasing Positive
Behaviors: Activity
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• What are 3-5 behaviors you
would like to see increase in your
setting?
• Review item 8 on the Inventory
• What changes might you make in
your use of positive feedback and
encouragement in order to
increase the behaviors you just
identified.
• Add this to your Action Plan
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Sample Certificate
SUPER FRIEND AWARD!!!
This certificate is to certify that Marleco
SUPER FRIEND!!
is a
Today, Marleco used his words to ask Malen nicely for
a turn on the swing. When he was done swinging, he
asked Malen if she wanted another turn and then
helped to push her. At circle time, he gave his friend
Cesar a compliment! YAY Marleco!! What a Super
Friend you are!!
Give yourself a pat on the back!!
Signed by: Miss Gail & Mr. Jim
Date: January 7, 2003
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Major Messages
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• The first and most important thing that we can
do is to build positive relationships with every
child and family
• Focus on prevention and teaching appropriate
skills
• Promoting social emotional development is not
easy. There are no quick fixes to challenging
behavior
• It requires a comprehensive approach that
includes building relationships, evaluating our
own classrooms and behaviors, and TEACHING
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