The Unfulfilled Promise
of Education: Revisiting Why the "Soft Skills" are the Hard Skills,
and Why they are Essential for Students' Academic Success
Dear
Colleagues,
I hope you are having a great
summer!
Periodically, I look back at previously crafted messages that were either "High Hits" relative to social media attention, or that just continue to resonate with our times.
And. . . with all of the attention on the new Elementary and Secondary Education Act (or ESSA) and its focus on student engagement. . . or schools' focus on disproportionality, trauma sensitivity, bullying, mindfulness, etc.--
We still need to recognize that:
If we do not teach students- - across their school-age years--the interpersonal, social problem solving, conflict prevention and resolution, and emotional coping skills that they need to demonstrate...
Why would we expect them to have them?
Periodically, I look back at previously crafted messages that were either "High Hits" relative to social media attention, or that just continue to resonate with our times.
And. . . with all of the attention on the new Elementary and Secondary Education Act (or ESSA) and its focus on student engagement. . . or schools' focus on disproportionality, trauma sensitivity, bullying, mindfulness, etc.--
We still need to recognize that:
If we do not teach students- - across their school-age years--the interpersonal, social problem solving, conflict prevention and resolution, and emotional coping skills that they need to demonstrate...
Why would we expect them to have them?
_ _ _ _ _
For all of the rhetoric about ensuring that
students are “college and career” ready, the reality is that our schools are
still focused almost exclusively on students’ academic success and—because of
federal legislation pushed even further by the U.S. Department of
Education—academic success that is measured largely by a single, high stakes,
standards-based test.
And yet, we know that—despite earning a high
school degree—many university freshman are spending a significant amount of time
in remedial courses because they do not have the prerequisite skills to be
successful at the college level.
We also know that many students do not
complete their college careers—perhaps again, because they lack the academic
skills to be successful.
And, finally, we know that many high school
graduates—who enter the job market directly from high school—need significant
levels of (re)training in order to apply their reading, math, oral, and written
skills to their new-found jobs.
_ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
Students’ Social, Emotional, and
Behavioral Skills
But today’s discussion is not explicitly
about ways to improve students’ academic proficiency. Instead, it is about the importance of also
teaching students—from preschool through high school—social, emotional, and
behavioral skills. Some call these
skills the Soft Skills.
But these are Essential Skills, because they
facilitate students’ academic success, as well as their ability to relate and
collaborate with others in groups and on project-based teams in high school,
college, and once employed.
And yet, for many students, these are the
Hard Skills, because our schools are not systematically and progressively
teaching these skills in any way or at any level.
The importance of teaching students—from
preschool through high school—interpersonal, social problem-solving, conflict
prevention and resolution, and emotional coping skills is supported both by
research and practice.
Relative to the research:
* A recent study reported in the American
Journal of Public Health tracked 750 youngsters in four diverse U.S.
communities from 1991, when they were in kindergarten, until they were 25 years
old. They found that the youngsters with
good social skills (sharing materials with others, resolving peer problems on
their own, cooperating with peers without prompting, being helpful to others,
listening to others’ point of view, understanding other people’s feelings) were
more likely to graduate from high school and college, and have full-time jobs;
and less likely to drop out of school, commit crimes, or need government
assistance.
CLICK HERE to Link to this Article
* This study followed research published in
2011 that pooled data from 213 well-designed studies (involving 270,034
kindergarten through high school students) that compared schools teaching their
students social, emotional, and behavioral skills versus schools that were
not. The students from the “social
skill” schools were more emotionally well-adjusted and exhibited fewer conduct
problems, they demonstrated better stress-management and interpersonal
problem-solving skills, and they had more positive attitudes toward themselves,
others, and school.
But, critically, the students in the social
skill schools had an 11 percentile gain in academic achievement over those in
the non-social skill schools. And
significantly, all of these results occurred at the elementary, middle, and
high school levels.
CLICK HERE to Link to this Article
Relative to practice:
* As instruction at the upper elementary and
secondary levels becomes more and more dependent on project-based and
cooperative learning, students need to know how to interact effectively in
group situations. Indeed, they need to
be able to listen to each other, plan, discuss, debate, make decisions, agree,
disagree, and agree to disagree.
These
social skills are almost prerequisite to the academic outcomes that are the
focus of these project-based groups. If
students are not taught the social skills that relate directly to effective
group functioning, the ineffective group functioning will undermine the
academic process and results.
* Student teasing, taunting, bullying,
harassment, hazing, and physical aggression still are ever-present problems in
our schools. Without essential
interpersonal, social problem-solving, conflict prevention and resolution
skills, and emotional coping skills, these problems are unlikely to
diminish. However, rather than waiting
for these problems to occur (and teaching the skills reactively), these skills
should be taught proactively—thereby creating the positive and prosocial school
and classroom climates that prevent these problems from ever occurring.
* Finally, as alluded to earlier, when
students graduate without well-developed social, emotional, and behavioral
skills, they are not “college and career” ready. Clearly, when someone causes continual
conflicts and is unable to get along with others at work, there typically is a
very simple “intervention.” It is called
“unemployment.”
Employers
spend millions of dollars every year in this county training employees to excel
in the technical aspects of their jobs.
Very little time or money, however, is invested in teaching them to how
to get along with others at the job site so that they can work together as a
team.
Employees
are expected to have the soft skills mastered before they enter the
workforce. Without these skills, their
chances for full employment diminishes—as does their productivity, their
customer service and collegial interactions, and their job satisfaction and
security.
_ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
What are these Social, Emotional, and
Behavioral Skills ?
One of the most fundamental goals for all
schools is to help students become independent learners. And while “independent learning” varies from
kindergarten to fourth grade to eighth grade through high school, we (and our
students) invest at least thirteen (barring dropping out) pre-collegiate years
in pursuit of this goal.
Similarly, another fundamental,
complementary educational goal should be to help students become independent
social, emotional, and behavioral self-managers. And while this will also look different from
kindergarten to fourth grade to eighth grade through high school, this is
largely an unfulfilled educational goal in most of our schools and districts.
But, what are these social, emotional, and
behavioral skills?
From a “competency” perspective, students
need to progressively develop—from preschool through high school—at least the
following competencies:
•
Social
Competencies
Listening, Engagement, and Response Skills
Communication and Collaboration Skills
Social Problem-Solving and Group Process
Skills
Conflict Prevention and Resolution Skills
•
Emotional
Competencies
Emotional Self-Awareness, Control, and
Coping Skills
Awareness and Understanding of Others’
Emotions
and Emotional Behavior
Positive Self-Concept, Self-Esteem,
and
Self-Statement Skills
•
Cognitive-Behavioral
Competencies
Self-Scripting, Self-Monitoring,
Self-Evaluation, Self-
Correction, and Self-Reinforcement Skills
Social, Interactional, and Interpersonal
Skills
Classroom and Building Routine Skills
Instructional and Academic Supporting Skills
_ _ _ _ _
Drilling this down to a more functional
level, below are twelve social, emotional, and behavioral skill clusters that
all students should learn and master before they graduate from high school—as
individuals, in small project-based group situations, and in large-group
instructional settings:
Listening, Following Directions, Staying On-Task
Accurately interpreting Non-Verbal Cues and Voice Inflection
Being Positive, Motivated, and Persistent
Communicating Clearly, Constructively, and Courteously
Knowing how to Discuss, Interrupt, Debate, Agree, Compromise, and
Disagree
Cooperating with and Accepting Others’ Opinions
Respecting Others, Being a Team Player, Taking on Different Group Roles
Knowing how to Ask for Help, and Accept Frustration or Consequences
Knowing how to Accept Failure, Losing, and Being Wrong
Showing Confidence, Dealing with Peer Pressure, Standing up for
Self/Others
Controlling and Expressing Emotions, Responding to Others’ Emotions
Demonstrating Goal-oriented Planning and Time Management
_ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
How do We Prepare to Teach these Skills ?
In order to teach these skills, schools and
districts need to recognize that they are an inherent and essential part of
school discipline and safety, classroom climate and management, and student
self-management and academic engagement.
Teachers, especially those in states where
their instructional effectiveness is formally evaluated, might parenthetically
recognize that—when students are taught and demonstrate these skills—their
teacher evaluations will benefit in both the classroom management and student
academic outcome areas.
And students—based on our thirty years of
work in this area across the country—will feel safer and more secure in school,
will find school more enjoyable, and will find themselves more productive and
successful.
And so, as they prepare to teach students
these essential skills, districts and schools need to invest a similar level of
investment and preparation in this area as in their academic areas. This investment could include the following
activities:
·
Develop
and implement a preschool through high school “Health, Mental Health, and
Wellness” program guided by a scaffolded scope and sequence of courses,
curricula, modules, skill, and/or experiences
·
Systematically
teach students social, emotional, and behavioral skills consistent with their
developmental levels
·
Identify
classroom and common school area behavioral expectations and standards for all
students, and develop and implement a school-wide behavioral accountability
system involving incentives and differentiated responses to progressive levels
of inappropriate student behavior
·
Have
related service and other staff available to provide consultation to classroom
teachers, to complete functional assessments of behaviorally-challenging
students, and to help implement strategic or intensive instructional and
intervention services, supports, strategies, and programs to underachieving,
unresponsive, or unsuccessful students
·
Reach
out to parents and engage community resources in areas and activities that
support students’ academic and social, emotional, and behavioral learning,
mastery, and proficiency
·
Evaluate
the outcomes of all these activities, especially in the following areas: positive school and classroom climate; high
levels of student engagement and achievement; high levels of prosocial student
interactions; low levels of school and classroom discipline problems requiring
office discipline referrals or school suspensions or expulsions; low levels of
student drop-out rates (at the secondary level) or placements in alternative
schools or settings; high rates of student high school graduations and
post-secondary school successes
While some educators may say, “Another thing
to do !!!” please remember, once again,
the research and practice results described earlier. These approaches will both enhance students’
academic achievement, and help them to be completely college and career ready.
But let’s also recognize that the
recommendations above will also save a significant amount of training and
implementation time if schools are engaging in time-consuming and redundant
efforts implementing different programs that actually have the same core skills
and outcomes.
That is, many schools nationwide are already
spending a significant amount of money, time, and training on a number of
programs whose “common denominators” are the social, emotional, and behavioral
self-management skills that all students need.
Some of these programs focus on:
* School teasing and bully prevention
* Decreasing office discipline referrals and
disproportionate (minority
and student with disabilities) school suspensions
and expulsions
* Establishing progressive discipline
systems that counter historically-based
“zero tolerance” policies and practices
* Creating “trauma sensitive” classrooms
* Improving school climate and preventative
mental health services
* Increasing gender, multi-cultural, racial,
LGBT, disability, and other
awareness, equity, safety, and acceptance
* Introducing “mindfulness” into the
classroom
* Facilitating students’ “executive
functioning”
Critically, many of these programs are not
implemented preventatively. Instead,
they are reactively implemented after the district or school has a problem. Moreover, many of these programs do not have
a sound scientific foundation; they have not been appropriately and
independently field-tested in a diversity of schools and settings; they do not
teach (from preschool to high school) all students the social, emotional, and
behavioral skills discussed above; they often focus on their niche to the exclusion
of broader student, staff, and school needs; and some (quite honestly) are more
about marketing and sales, than long-term and sustainable student success.
Our evidence-based work (as evaluated and
designated by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Substance Abuse
and Mental Health Services Administration as far back as 2000) has demonstrated
that a science-to-practice focus on consistently teaching, reinforcing, and
holding students accountable for demonstrating developmentally-appropriate
social, emotional, and behavioral skills results in virtually no need for most
of the niche programs above.
As noted, schools do not have the money,
time, staff, or wherewithal to implement substantially separate initiatives
that are redundant, might actually compete with each other, and wear teachers
down. What schools need is a single,
integrated, multi-tiered school, grade-level, and classroom blueprint that
results in the social, emotional, and behavioral self-management skills that
reflect their essential goals and outcomes and that all students need.
_ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
What is Needed to Complement the Skill
Instruction ?
But teaching the social, emotional, and
behavioral skills is not enough. In
order to facilitate students’ self-management, while supporting effective
classroom management and sound school safety processes, the following
scientific components are needed (NOTE that the skills instruction is #2):
* Staff,
Student, and Parent Relationships that establish Positive School and Classroom
Climates
* Explicit Classroom and Common School Area Expectations supported by Social, Emotional, and Behavioral Skill/Self-Management Instruction (that—as discussed above—are embedded in preschool through high school "Health, Mental Health, and Wellness" activities)
* School-wide and Classroom Behavioral Accountability systems that include Motivational Approaches reinforcing "Good Choice" behavior
* Consistency—in the classroom, across classrooms, and across staff, time, settings, and situations
* Applications of the above across all Settings in the school, and relative to the Peer Group interactions (specifically targeting teasing, taunting, bullying, harassment, hazing, and physical aggression)
_ _ _ _ _
For students exhibiting significant behavioral challenges, or who are not responding to the preventative approaches above, a data-based problem-solving process is used (guided by school psychologists, counselors, and other behavioral assessment and intervention specialists) to determine the underlying reasons for the student’s inappropriate behavior. The assessment results are then linked to strategic or intensive interventions that are focused on eliminating the “problems,” and replacing them with self-management skills.
Below is a YouTube presentation that describes the five components above
in more detail, and explains how they were implemented in schools across
Arkansas as part of its ten year positive behavioral support initiative.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Summary
In
order to fulfill the real promise of education—to truly prepare our students to
be college and career ready, and to ensure that the next generations of adults
are personally, interpersonally, and professionally successful, districts and
schools need to systematically invest in integrated approaches that teach
students the social, emotional, and behavioral self-management skills that they
need.
This
needs to be a proactive and planned process for all students; not a reactive
and reflexive process for just the inappropriate, challenging, disengaged, or
disaffected students.
This
can be done. And it has been done
successfully in thousands of schools nationwide over the past 30 years.
But
it requires school, grade-level, classroom, teacher,
and student science-to-practice approaches that focus on consistently teaching,
reinforcing, and holding everyone accountable for demonstrating these
skills.
_ _ _ _ _
As you ponder the beginning of the coming
school year (yes. . . it is coming), I hope that you will reflect on this
message's information and thoughts. As you embark on the new-school-year's
educational journey, let's prepare our students not just academically-- but
also socially, emotionally, and behaviorally.
I appreciate everything that you do as
educational leaders in our country. I look forward to your thoughts and
comments. Let me know how I can help you further.
Best,
Howie
As someone who lived in and studied at the University in the UK, I know that it WOULD work.
ReplyDeleteAs with anything, it would just take planning, support, effective implementation, and good evaluation(s).
I agree that it is so important to have positive reinforcement and clear teaching of social skills with the element of holding students accountable. I worked in Derbyshire in the UK in a school where we were all trained in assertive discipline and worked as a team to create rewards and accountability with the kids. We had organised cooperative games every day and a fun time each week for those who were not being made accountable (they missed their fun time). It was a primary school and it worked really well because all staff worked together after training. One aspect I liked though was making parents accountable too and ringing them up whenever their child did really unacceptable things. Management were tasked with backing up the staff in this and not undermining them. We taught cooperative and fun playground games and bought group fun toys for the playground. This was in a very deprived area with difficult kids and they loved it! We also had teams and a cooperative sports day with parents joining in.. It was fun and prevented the usual boredom at sports day.
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