Showing posts with label Meta-Analysis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meta-Analysis. Show all posts

Saturday, August 26, 2023

Research Does Not Support Growth Mindset Strategies in the Classroom: How “Culturally Fluent Ideas” Influence Educators to Waste Time, Money, Resources, and Good Faith

 [CLICK HERE to read this Blog on the Project ACHIEVE Webpage]

 

Dear Colleagues,

Introduction

   I was listening this week to a National Public Radio program on the history of “Sesame Street” which began its PBS run on November 10, 1969. The show was created by television producer Joan Ganz Cooney who was talking with friends at a cocktail party in New York City about whether a children’s television show could teach children—largely from poverty—how to read.

   At this point in television history, most of the programming for children consisted of cartoons or other “entertainment” programs funded largely by companies and advertisers to sell their products. If you still remember some of the “now-ancient” advertising products, catch-phrases, or ad-tunes/“jingles” locked in your nostalgic brain, you know they were good at it.

   Similarly, Cooney—with funding from the Carnegie Corporation, the Ford Foundation, and the U.S. federal government—wanted to “master the addictive qualities of television and do something good with them.” But in order to justify her funding, she knew that Sesame Street needed to quickly demonstrate that it could help young children to be better prepared for school.

   And so, she did something that few commercial (or governmental) ventures in education do today. . . she convened a diverse group of experts in early childhood education and developmental psychology, music and entertainment, cultural diversity and second language learning, and outcome-based research and evaluation. And for two years, they created, tested, researched, and established the best ways to use television as an educational vehicle.

   Today’s educators should attend to the now 55-year old Sesame Street lessons of research before large-scale implementation, data-based outcomes before testimonials and sound-bites, and proven practices before marketing and gratuitous promises.

   But these lessons often fall on deaf ears.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

The Growth Mindset “Promise” Lacks Proven Practices

   Over the years, my Blogs have highlighted many programs and approaches that have been formally or informally marketed or promoted by individuals, companies, foundations, and even the U.S. Departments of Education or Health and Human Services that have not demonstrated their efficacy through independent and objective research.

   And yet, the popular press and mass marketing of these programs have been so successful that thousands of schools have implemented them to the tune of millions of dollars and countless other time and personnel resources. Some of these programs have done little to improve students’ academic and/or social, emotional, or behavioral outcomes.

   And some of these programs have left students, staff, and schools further behind, more frustrated, and resistant to future innovations—even those that are proven to produce the results needed and desired.

   One very popular trend in many schools involves the training and implementation of “Growth Mindset” strategies and programs.

   In a recent 2023 article in the highly regarded, refereed journal Psychological Bulletin, authors Macnamara and Burgoyne summarized the Growth Mindset “movement”:

According to (Dweck’s) mindset theory, students who believe their personal characteristics can change— that is, those who hold a growth mindset—will achieve more than students who believe their characteristics are fixed.

 

Holding a fixed mindset means believing intelligence or other characteristics are relatively stable. Proponents of mindset theory claim holding a fixed mindset is detrimental for a variety of real-world outcomes because people with fixed mindsets (a) seek to appear smart/talented at all costs, (b) avoid effort, and (c) refrain from challenges and conceal weaknesses. In other words, people with fixed mindsets have the “one consuming goal of proving themselves” (Dweck, 2016, p. 6), and therefore avoid challenges (Dweck, 2016) and are “devastated by setbacks” (Dweck, 2008a, p. 1).

 

In contrast, holding a growth mindset means believing intelligence or other characteristics are malleable. Proponents of mindset theory claim holding a growth mindset is beneficial for a variety of real-world outcomes because people with growth mindsets (a) focus on learning, (b) believe effort is key, and (c) embrace challenges and mistakes (Dweck, 2007a, 2009). In other words, people with growth mindsets have a desire to learn, and therefore seek challenges and are resilient to setbacks (Dweck, 1986, 2006, 2009, 2016).

 

Mindset proponents encourage parents and teachers to promote growth mindsets in students because, “what students believe about their brains—whether they see their intelligence as something that’s fixed or something that can grow and change—has profound effects on their motivation, learning, and school achievement” (Dweck, 2008a, p. 1). The promise of profound effects on learning and achievement led researchers to develop growth mindset interventions—treatments designed to teach students to have more of a growth mindset.

 

Millions of dollars in funding from private foundations (e.g., Raikes Foundation, Gates Foundation) and government agencies (e.g., National Science Foundation, U.S. Department of Education) have been awarded to researchers, nonprofit organizations, and for-profit companies for growth mindset intervention studies.

 

As an example, the U.S. Department of Education’s Institute of Education Sciences recently awarded a $3.5 million grant to Mindset Works (a for-profit company established by Carol Dweck—the researcher behind the Growth Mindset movement). The goal of this grant was to determine whether “Brainology”—Mindset Works’ flagship growth mindset intervention product—is effective or not.

 

For context, Mindset Works has been selling Brainology to schools for thousands of dollars for the past decade claiming that it benefits students. This conflicting information raises the question of whether (a) Brainology is beneficial, as Mindset Works claims on its website, or (b) there was not enough evidence to make this claim, hence why the grant from Institute of Education Sciences was needed.

_ _ _ _ _

   Macnamara and Burgoyne decided to examine the concerns above, assessing both published and unpublished research investigating the impact of growth mindset interventions on students’ academic achievement.

   To do this, they conducted three meta-analyses involving a total of 61 independent records (e.g., articles, dissertations, commissioned studies) that included 63 studies and 79 independent samples with a total sample size of 97,672 students. The studies included in the meta-analyses were published or available from 2002 through 2018, with 44 of them from 2016 or later. Significantly, the authors established their research selection, inclusion, and analysis criteria before beginning their study, and they used appropriate statistical methods to control for random or artifactual “results.”

   This highly sophisticated, comprehensive, transparent, and detailed study produced the following, according to the authors, results:

When examining all studies (63 studies, N=97,672 students), we found major shortcomings in study design, analysis, and reporting, and suggestions of researcher and publication bias: Authors with a financial incentive to report positive findings published significantly larger effects than authors without this incentive. Across all studies, we observed a small overall effect: d=0.05), which was nonsignificant after correcting for potential publication bias. No theoretically meaningful moderators were significant.

 

When examining only studies demonstrating the intervention influenced students’ mindsets as intended (13 studies, N=18,355 students), the effect was nonsignificant (d= 0.04). When examining the highest-quality evidence (6 studies, N=13,571 students), the effect was nonsignificant (d= 0.02).

 

We conclude that apparent effects of growth mindset interventions on academic achievement are likely attributable to inadequate study design, reporting flaws, and bias.

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Volley and Counter-Volley: Response and Rejoinder

   The same 2023 issue of Psychological Bulletin that published the Macnamara and Burgoyne article discussed above also included a second meta-analysis article on the Growth Mindset research (by Burnette et al.), as well as three commentary articles from different authors who reviewed the two studies.

   In a later 2023 Psychological Bulletin issue, Macnamara and Burgoyne published a new article reflecting on these three commentaries. Noting that their original meta-analysis was more objective, methodologically sophisticated, and comprehensive than the Burnette et al. study, Macnamara and Burgoyne further defended their research conclusions:

We (Macnamara & Burgoyne, 2023) tested 11 preregistered moderators and examined the evidence according to a well-defined set of best practices. We found major areas of concern in the growth mindset intervention literature.

 

For instance, 94% of growth mindset interventions included confounds, authors with a known financial incentive were two and a half times as likely to report positive effects, and higher quality studies were less likely to demonstrate a benefit.

 

Yan and Schuetze (2023) contextualized these findings by describing problems with mindset theory and its measurement.

 

Likewise, Oyserman (2023) discussed how growth mindset is a culturally fluent idea; papers supportive of growth mindset are widely embraced, whereas papers taking a skeptical approach are challenged.

 

In another commentary, Tipton et al. (2023) challenged our results, claiming to produce positive effects by reanalyzing our data set using Burnette et al.’s (2023) approach. However, in addition to changing the approach, Tipton et al. changed effect sizes, how moderators were coded, and which studies were included, often without explanation.

 

Though we appreciate the discussion of multiple meta-analytic approaches, we contend that meta-analytic decisions should be a priori, transparently reported, and consistently applied. Tipton et al.’s analysis illustrated our (Macnamara & Burgoyne’s, 2023) conclusion: Apparent effects of growth mindset interventions on academic achievement may be attributable to inadequate study design, reporting flaws, and bias.

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How Culturally Fluent Ideas Help Vendors (Even Harvard Psychologists) Brand and Market Effective, but Common, Strategies

   Critically—as with academic learning styles, emotional intelligence/social-emotional learning, trauma-informed schools, restorative justice programs, mindfulness, and some other contemporary educational “movements” (see some of my past Blogs)—there are districts and schools that say they are “doing” growth mindset “programs or activities” in their schools.

   But, in reality, they are just doing what good schools do, for example, to:

·       Develop positive and self-affirming students with good self-esteem; 

·       Encourage students to be optimistic and believe in their ability to learn and grow over time; 

·       Help students focus more on their mastery of skills and how to get correct answers, rather than obsess over grades and the number of right answers they’ve gotten; and

·       Teach students how to focus on and organize their school work, plan their time and study effectively, and evaluate their effort when they are both academically successful and unsuccessful.

   You don’t need a packaged, marketed intervention or program to do this.

   And you don’t need to call these interactions “Growth Mindset activities” to (a) rationalize the presence or importance of these interactions, or (b) be a “with-it” educator who is an “in vogue” member of the “GM Appreciation Club.”

   You use these strategies because they are beneficial, and because they have successfully impacted students way before Dweck coined the phrase “Growth Mindset,” opened Mindset Works, and started her side-hustle Brainology.

_ _ _ _ _

   Indeed, Oyserman—one of the three Discussants who critiqued Macnamara and Burgoyne’s meta-analytic study in the second 2023 Psychological Bulletin issue (see the Blog section above)—discussed how growth mindset is a “culturally fluent idea.”

   This means that its descriptions, characteristics, and alignments to what many educators already believe (NOTE the four bullets immediately above), make it and its name accepted without criticism.

   This helps explain why—even in the face of the unsupportive research summarized by Macnamara and Burgoyne—educators have nonetheless invested needless time, effort, and resources into this “Emperor with No Clothes” endeavor.

   But it also helps explain why those who legitimately question a culturally-fluent idea—like growth mindset programs or interventions (along with academic learning styles, emotional intelligence/social-emotional learning, trauma-informed schools, restorative justice programs, mindfulness, and the like)—are often met with disbelief, disdain, criticism, rejection, and indignant (but unsupported) counter-assertions.

_ _ _ _ _

   While it is disconcerting that popularism and populism override science and sound scientific study, there are four practical reasons why Macnamara and Burgoyne’s well-organized and executed meta-analysis should be closely attended to. . . especially if your district or school is implementing Growth Mindset interventions from, for example, a direct descendent or a casual disciple of Dweck.

·       As already noted, districts and schools do not have the time, money, resources, and teachers’ good faith to waste on strategies that cannot provide the academic, or social, emotional, or behavioral student outcomes needed, marketed, or promised. 

·       When these strategies do not work, students, staff, and schools often are left further behind, more frustrated, and more resistant to future innovations—even those that were unselected, but are proven to produce the results originally needed and desired.

·       There is always a fear—especially when student motivation and productivity is a desired outcome—that an intervention’s failure to improve student performance is “blamed” on the students for “not doing what we trained or told them to do,” rather than on a poorly selected or implemented, or ineffective, intervention.

·       Finally, given our country’s student academic gaps after the pandemic and the attempts to close these gaps especially with accelerated programs, there is a concern that schools will use growth mindset interventions to supplement the acceleration process.

This might result in a “double jeopardy” situation where (a) the failure to “close the gap” is (again) blamed on the students (as in the bullet above); (b) teachers put even more pressure on students to implement their growth mindset training; (c) schools avoid (or ignore) questioning both the growth mindset and accelerated learning interventions; and (d) students never get the academic interventions they need, and fall further behind. 

[CLICK THE LINK HERE to our July 22, 2023 Blog: “When State Policy Undermines Effective School Practice: Too Much of Anything Often Results in Nothing (or Worse)”]

   Clearly, the most concerning of the negative outcomes above are the emotional and academic effects on the students who receive misguided growth mindset interventions.

   Indeed, ignoring gaps in their prerequisite academic skills, learning and mastery struggles, inadequate curricular materials and supports, and/or ineffective teacher instruction, how will different students’ short-term and long-term motivation and self-concept be affected when they are told—only— that their success depends on implementing and sustaining growth mindset beliefs and practices?

   And what will happen to these students’ motivation and self-concept when, predictably, these growth mindset beliefs and practices are not successful, and they are told to “just try harder”?

   Moreover, what will happen to their teachers’ beliefs when some of these students simply give up?

   And where—academically, behaviorally, now, and post-graduation—will these misplaced beliefs end up?

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Summary

   This Blog began with a celebration of 55 years of “Sesame Street,” the first children’s television program to apply psychological and educational research—for two years before going on the air—to empirically demonstrate that it could teach preschoolers how to read, count, and get along with their friends.

   Sesame Street’s research-embedded approach stands in direct contrast with some of the most prevalent “programs” in our schools today. . . programs that were never comprehensively and objectively field-tested before being disseminated to schools, and that have been aggressively marketed by their developers and enabled by a too-willing popular press.

   Among these programs are those selling misguided strategies that purport to “address”, for example, (a) students’ different academic learning styles, emotional intelligence, social-emotional learning, and mindfulness; and (b) schools’ need for trauma-informed schools programs, restorative justice programs, and accelerated learning initiatives.

   This Blog, though, focused on yet another program: classroom-based Growth Mindset interventions.

   According to Dweck’s mindset theory, students who believe that their cognitive skills are not fixed or predetermined. . . but that they can grow and evolve with time and effort. . . will academically achieve more than those who believe these skills are fixed. Dweck has monetized her work through the for-profit Mindset Works which offers its “Brainology” program.

   Analyzing the broader Growth Mindset research, the Blog describes the recent research published by Macnamara and Burgoyne who conducted three meta-analytic studies involving 63 studies and 79 independent samples with a total sample size of 97,672 students. They found:

Major shortcomings in study design, analysis, and reporting, and suggestions of researcher and publication bias: Authors with a financial incentive to report positive findings published significantly larger effects than authors without this incentive. Across all studies, we observed a small overall effect: d=0.05), which was nonsignificant after correcting for potential publication bias. No theoretically meaningful moderators were significant.

 

When examining only studies demonstrating the intervention influenced students’ mindsets as intended (13 studies, N=18,355 students), the effect was nonsignificant (d= 0.04). When examining the highest-quality evidence (6 studies, N=13,571 students), the effect was nonsignificant (d= 0.02).

 

We conclude that apparent effects of growth mindset interventions on academic achievement are likely attributable to inadequate study design, reporting flaws, and bias.

   The 2023 issue of Psychological Bulletin—that published Macnamara and Burgoyne’s article—included a commentary article by Oyserman. She suggested that schools were adopting growth mindset interventions—despite Macnamara and Burgoyne’s negative research results—because growth mindset is a “culturally fluent idea.”

   This occurs when interventions or programs contain characteristics and/or approaches that align with those that educators already believe in.

   The result is that many educators then tacitly accept the intervention or program without evaluating its efficacy and (student) outcomes, and even reject (or worse) research or recommendations by those who legitimately critique their favored approach.

   This Blog also discussed how some districts and schools say they are “doing” growth mindset programs or activities but, in reality, they are just implementing effective strategies that:

·       Develop positive and self-affirming students with good self-esteem;

·       Encourage students to be optimistic and believe in their ability to learn and grow over time;

·       Help students focus more on their mastery of skills and how to get correct answers, rather than obsess over grades and the number of right answers they’ve gotten; and 

·       Teach students how to focus on and organize their school work, plan their time and study effectively, and evaluate their effort when they are both academically successful and unsuccessful.

   In the end, schools do not need a packaged, marketed growth mindset intervention or program to implement the approaches above. And they don’t need to call them “Growth Mindset activities” to (a) rationalize the presence or importance of these interactions, or (b) appear to be current.

   But if schools are implementing Growth Mindset interventions from, for example, from Mindset Works (or another vendor), we identified four concerns.

   The most troubling of the four involve the negative emotional and academic effects on the students who receive growth mindset training that is (predictably) unsuccessful. This may result in teacher criticism that they “are not doing what they have been taught to do.”

   But it also might discourage analyses that demonstrate that students are not academically achieving because they lack prerequisite academic skills, inadequate curricular materials and supports, and/or effective teacher instruction.

   The result is that students might emotionally or socially withdraw due to the criticism, and their academic performance may suffer. . . or continue to be unaddressed.

_ _ _ _ _

   Thanks for reading this important Blog. While I believe that all educators’ hearts are in the “right places” for their students, it is important that our minds be aware of the potential effects of culturally-fluent ideas.

   As most of us make our transition into the new school year, know that I am always available for a free one-hour consultation conference call to help you and your colleagues move “to the next level of excellence” during the coming months. Please feel free to reach out and let’s talk.

Best,

Howie

[CLICK HERE to read this Blog on the Project ACHIEVE Webpage]

Saturday, January 28, 2023

Why “Do” SEL If It Doesn’t Improve Student Behavior in the Classroom and Across the School?

Focusing on Individual and Group Skills to Enhance Student Engagement and Cooperative Group Outcomes

[CLICK HERE to read this Blog on the Project ACHIEVE Webpage]


Dear Colleagues,

Introduction

   I am not a big “label” or “program” guy when it comes to school discipline programs.

   In general, the all-purpose, one-size-fits-all “programs” marketed to schools and districts are often poorly researched, they pull “magical data” out of a hat to allegedly “prove” the program’s “success,” and they over-sell and under-deliver.

   Moreover, many programs’ “successful” outcomes usually are NOT due to the program as a whole, or to the program at all. That is, the successes are either due (a) to some (usually unidentified) small part of the program; or (b) to the fact that school faculty have committed to clear student outcomes and, as such, they are interacting with students in more consistent, goal-directed, and observable ways, respectively.

   Finally, even when positive outcomes occur, most programs rarely work dependably in schools that vary significantly across different and diverse historical, demographic, and other background characteristics and conditions relative to their students, staff, neighborhoods, and communities.

   Most programs also have difficulty attaining and sustaining the needed buy-in and involvement of a critical mass of staff, the fidelity of their implementation, and the resources, training, and coaching needed for success.

_ _ _ _ _

   Relative to labels: The name of a program typically is chosen to enhance its marketability. . . to demonstrate that “We are different from the others who came before us”. . . “We are better than those before us”. . . and “If you join our movement, we can lead you to the Promised Land.”

   Early in my career, schools simply talked about school safety and discipline, classroom management and engagement, and student behavior and self-control.

   Then—starting in 1997, and still to this day—the U.S. Department of Education began its multi-million dollar investment in “Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports” (PBIS).

   Rather than calling PBIS a “program,” it marketed itself as “new and different” by organizing its strategies in a “framework.”

   But that didn’t work, because districts and schools used the strategies in the framework as a “fruits to nuts” framework menu—simply choosing the strategies that they wanted to do (rather than what they needed to do), and ending up with initiatives that did not produce real, observable, and sustainable student outcomes—especially with challenging or very challenging students.

   Indeed, over the years, objective program evaluations of PBIS—some funded (and then hidden) by the U.S. Department of Education—have shown that most PBIS schools:

·       Implement only at the Tier I level—never getting to Tier II or Tier III levels where the challenging students “live;” 

·       Rarely sustain their implementation for more than three years—at which time, the faculty kick the framework “to the curb,” and search for something “new;” and

·       Eventually realize that they could have produced real student outcomes with fewer resources, less time, and without the need for unnecessary rituals (like having to quiz students and staff about “our three primary PBIS “pillars”).

   For the past decade or more, the U.S. Department of Education has tried to maintain PBIS’s relevance by creating “PBIS apps” to “fix” many of the most pressing social, emotional, or behavioral challenges in our homes and families, neighborhoods and communities, and in our society at-large.

   This includes school climate and safety, teasing and bullying, multi-tiered services and mental health, disproportionality and racial equity, poverty and parenting, and school shootings and pandemic relief.

   It has not worked. . . largely because PBIS comes historically from a special education—and not a multi-dimensional psychological—foundation, and because it focuses more on eliminating student deficits, rather than teaching and motivating student strengths.

   Indeed, the PBIS National Technical Assistance Center has always been funded by the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Special Education Programs.

   And, PBIS’s “benchmark” outcome has consistently been to decrease students’ office discipline referrals. . . rather than the development of preschool through high school students’ social, emotional, and behavioral skills, self-management, and competence.

   Said a different way: The school discipline, classroom management, and student self-management goal for all districts and schools should be the developmentally-sensitive and differentiated teaching of students’ behaviorally-observable interpersonal, social problem-solving, conflict prevention and resolution, and emotional awareness, control, communication, and coping skills. . . across the multi-tiered continuum of student needs and challenges.
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Social-Emotional Learning: The “Next Kid” on the Block

   Not long after PBIS began its U.S. Department of Education-marketed push into schools across the country, a group of psychologists used Emotional Intelligence as a foundation to establish the “Social-Emotional Learning” framework (Yes. . . yet another framework and menu).

   At this point, virtually everyone in education “knows” the term SEL—even though, according to Harvard University’s Ecological Approaches to Social Emotional Learning (EASEL) Laboratory and Education Week, no one really knows what SEL is.

   Indeed, Harvard’s EASEL Lab identified more than 40 different SEL frameworks a few years ago, concluding that “SEL is in a state of confusion.”

   And this state of confusion has not changed as Education Week recently noted (December 19, 2022):

Immerse yourself in the world of social-emotional learning, and one thing quickly becomes clear: What, exactly, social-emotional learning is can be hard to pin down, and people often resort to analogies and examples to explain it.

 

And. . .

(While) educators say they recognize the importance of developing students’ social and emotional skills, such as managing emotions and setting goals. . . they feel that in order to teach academic subjects effectively, there is little time for social-emotional learning lessons.

 

A recent EdWeek Research Center survey polled teachers, principals, and district leaders nationally and found . . . (that) the biggest (SEL) barriers remain educators’ usual foes: time is too short, students’ needs are too big, and there are not enough resources.

_ _ _ _ _

   Attempting to clarify the confusion over “what SEL is,” Education Week asked seven national SEL experts to define social-emotional learning (December 22, 2022).

   From the President and CEO of CASEL, to district directors of SEL and MTSS, to (again) the Director of Harvard’s EASEL Lab, the answers were confusing, sometimes contradictory, laden with jargon, classroom and teacher un-friendly, and all across the galaxy.

   Quite honestly, Education Week’s attempt to “clarify the confusion,” only escalated the confusion.

   But one of the root causes of this confusion is that so many organizations, companies, consultants, and others are trying to “carve out” their piece of the “SEL pie.”

   And while the U.S. Department of Education created the PBIS pie, the SEL pie was largely baked by the Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning (CASEL), an independent 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that launched its movement using power and politics, and foundations and their funds. Critically, one of CASEL’s primary “services” is to lobby at both the state and federal levels to influence different state’s educational strategic planning processes in the areas of social-emotional learning.

_ _ _ _ _

   Indeed. . . what many educators don’t know is that SEL’s popularity evolved because its founders courted wealthy foundations, powerful movers and shakers, influential members of the U.S. Congress, and state politicians . . . and that many of the large districts working with CASEL have paid for its consultative services (some as much as $150,000 per year).

   Again, historically: Knowing that the leaders of PBIS had the U.S. Department of Education in their pocket, the SEL leaders went a different route by targeting individual states. One of CASEL’s goals was to successfully codify SEL “standards” in state education or related laws, regulations, or in benchmark White Papers.

   And the primary foundation to the SEL leaders’ argument—initially—were three meta-analytic studies that appeared to demonstrate how a wide variety of different “social and emotional programs” had a positive impact on students’ “social-emotional outcomes” (which were similarly diverse and wide-ranging) and academic achievement, respectively.

   But there were (and are) significant methodological problems with these three studies which we have previously discussed.

See:  

Social-Emotional Learning is Education’s Newest Bandwagon: The History of How We Got There and Why Most Schools are Wasting Time and Resources by Implementing Scientifically-UnSound SEL Practices

[CLICK HERE for this Past BLOG]

_ _ _ _ _

   Briefly, among a number of concerns, these three meta-analytic studies:

·       Are correlational—not causal—in nature.

They only demonstrate that some schools that implemented social-emotional programs—among a wide variety of other school discipline, classroom management, and student behavior approaches—had a higher probability of showing social, emotional, behavioral, and academic student outcomes (versus schools without these programs).

_ _ _ _

·       Only one of the three studies was objectively reviewed by an independent panel of peer-experts (and was subsequently published), while the earliest paper “published” by CASEL co-mingled the three studies.

_ _ _ _ _

·       The only formally published study had significant methodological flaws that call its results into question.

The most critical flaw—relative to generalizing the study’s results to U.S. schools—was that 46% (38 of 82) of the studies used in the meta-analysis were in non-American schools. 

Beyond this, the authors reported that an unspecified number of the 82 studies were taken from books and were not published in refereed journals. 

Finally, the authors also reported that (a) 34% of the studies did not use a randomly-selected sample; (b) 18% of the studies reported “significant implementation problems;” (c) 27% and 45% of the studies either did not have (or did not report) reliable or valid outcome measures at follow-up; and (d) 28% of the studies collected their outcome data only from the students and not also from teachers and/or administrators.

_ _ _ _ _ 

   While CASEL continues to highlight research that demonstrates that SEL “works” (I recently received a CASEL Newsletter headline “New Research”), here is the bottom line:

·       As noted above, NONE of the meta-analytic or single-focused research studies can validate “SEL” when there are 40 or more different SEL frameworks, and there is confusion as to what SEL “is.”

_ _ _ _ _

·       None of the studies collectively validates a specific SEL program or SEL implementation process; and none validates an approach on how to effectively select, resource, prepare for, implement, or evaluate a specific SEL program.

(Indeed, CASEL publishes a resource of “effective” SEL programs that are selected based on CASEL’s own criteria, and that often identify programs that have only one study demonstrating a specific program’s efficacy.)

_ _ _ _ _

·       CASEL is using the research to its own self-serving benefit.

CASEL promotes its own framework (which it recently modified without showing any research to support the modification), and it often highlights research that appears to “validate SEL” in a way to suggest that its framework is valid.

_ _ _ _ _

   Please understand: I fully believe, from a research-to-practice perspective, that teaching students to apply learned and mastered social, emotional, and behavioral skills to school and classroom interactions does contribute to academic engagement and achievement, and social-emotional self-management and proficiency.

   But this occurs, as noted earlier, because districts and schools are teaching students, in a developmentally-sensitive and differentiated way, behaviorally-observable interpersonal, social problem-solving, conflict prevention and resolution, and emotional awareness, control, communication, and coping skills. . . across the multi-tiered continuum of student needs and challenges.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

 What Should Districts and Schools Do?

   Summarizing psychological and behavioral science, sprinkled with forty-plus years of working successfully with students and staff in thousands of schools across the country, the “goal statement” in the paragraph immediately above can only be accomplished by the following:

·       Schools need to identify the observable, teachable, and measurable behavioral skills—including thoughts—that students need to demonstrate to be socially successful.

The skills need to be practical and school-specific. . . the individual, small group, and large group skills that students need to be successful in the classroom and across the school. 

The thoughts related to students’ attributions. . . the attitudes, beliefs, expectations, and interpretations. . . that positively support students’ efforts and successes, as well as to how they respond to challenging situations, disappointments, or even “failures.”

_ _ _ _ _ 

·       Schools need to teach students how to demonstrate their skills under conditions of emotionality. 

At times, academically, students have mastered the content and skills needed to “pass the (proficiency) test,” but they are not confident (they don’t “believe they can succeed”) and/or they are unable to handle the pressure. And thus, they underperform or even “fail.” 

One of our scientific principles is that “Mastery is attained when students can demonstrate their skills under conditions of emotionality.”

Hence—just like an athlete, a doctor in an Emergency room, a performer on stage—students need to learn how to demonstrate their social and interpersonal skills under adverse or stressful circumstances.

This is a learned skill that needs to be practiced by preschool through high school students.

That is, just like the basketball coach who has the team run different plays for the “last seconds of a game” during practice, students need to roleplay their social skills under simulated levels of stress.

_ _ _ _ _

·       The skills, attributions, and ability to perform “under pressure” need to be taught in consistently positive and supportive settings by staff who are consistent and teaching with fidelity.

Here, the instruction should include strategies to “transfer the training” so that students can demonstrate their skills more and more independently in real-life situations.

They also include motivational (especially, self-motivational) approaches that complement the instruction. These systems employ the positive responses and periodic incentives (that are faded out over time) that reinforce appropriate or progressively appropriate behavior.

They also include consequences paired with re-teaching, restitutional, and/or restorative practices when students make “bad choices,” and consistent administrative responses (by school principals) when inappropriate behavior is persistently disruptive, physically harmful, or dangerous.

_ _ _ _ _

·       Finally, supported by related services/mental health professionals (in the district or out in the community), schools need to have an accessible multi-tiered continuum of services, supports, and interventions for students with mild to significant social, emotional, behavioral, and/or mental health challenges.

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   I know that this appears to be a lot.

   But this is the science-to-practice that works.

   And we have demonstrated that the actions and strategies within each of the bullets above can be reasonably implemented and sustained with commitment, planning, and the right training and resources in one to three-year school-wide effort.

[Link HERE to Three Free Resources from the Project ACHIEVE Store with will the information you need to succeed:

Evaluating School-wide Discipline/Positive Behavioral Support Systems: Three Years of Sequenced Implementation Activities

The Stop & Think Social Skills Program: Exploring its Research Base and Rationale

A Multi-Tiered Service & Support Implementation Blueprint for Schools & Districts: Revisiting the Science to Improve the Practice

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   Bottom Line: Schools do not have the time, the staff, or the resources to waste on approaches that will not work, that might delay needed services and supports to students, and/or that could make existing problems worse or more resistant to change.

   Indeed, as in the title of this Blog, why would districts and schools implement “SEL programs” that don’t improve students’ collaboration and interactions in classrooms and across other settings in their schools?

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Drilling Down with a Few More Specifics

   Let’s take two of the “bullet areas” above, and provide more specific research and practice examples.

Examples of Practical Individual and Group Social Skills

   Below are some of the practical and school-based social skills taught in our evidence-based Stop & Think Social Skills Program.

·       Listening

·       Following Directions

·       Using Nice Talk

·       Contributing to Discussions

·       Asking and Answering Teacher Questions

·       How to Interrupt

·       Asking for Help

·       Asking for Permission

·       Waiting for an Adult’s Attention

·       Waiting for Your Turn

·       Joining an Activity

·       Beginning and Ending a Conversation

·       Ignoring Distractions

·       Apologizing/Excusing Yourself

·       Accepting Consequences

·       Asking and Answering Questions

·       Setting and Evaluating Goals

·       Avoiding Trouble/Conflict Situations

·       Deciding Whether to Follow the Group

·       Dealing with Peer Pressure

·       Being Honest/Acknowledging your Mistakes

·       Dealing with Teasing

·       Dealing with Being Rejected or Left Out

·       Dealing with Losing or Not Attaining Desired Goals

·       Showing Understanding of Another’s Feelings/Empathy

·       Dealing with and Responding to Another Person’s Anger or Emotionality

·       Walking Away from a Fight/Conflict

·       Negotiating to Resolve Conflicts Peacefully and Productively

_ _ _ _ _

   Examples of (additional) skills that students in small cooperative or project-based groups need to learn and demonstrate include:

·       Listening to Peers with an Open Mind

·       Remaining On-Task

·       Doing Your Share

·       Taking Turns

·       Interacting Positively with Each Other

·       Ensuring that All Group Members Contribute

·       Problem-Solving and Compromising when needed

·       Setting goals

·       Asking Clear Questions

·       Identifying Roles for Group Members

·       Being a Good Leader/Follower

·       Checking  with Others for Consensus

·       Communicating Clearly/Asking for Clarification when needed

·       Awareness of Other Group Members’ Emotions

·       Verbalizing One’s own Challenges/Emotions

·       Knowing When and How to “Check Out” Others’ Emotions

·       Managing Time Effectively

·       Giving/Accepting Compliments

·       Standing Up for Your Position/Rights

·       Knowing When/How to Agree, Disagree, and Agree to Disagree

·       Dealing with Disappointment or Failure

[See MORE Skills in our Previous Blog:

What Social, Emotional, Attributional, and Behavioral Skills Do ALL Students Need from an SEL Initiative?

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What is the Science-to-Practice for Teaching Social Skills?

   As validated in research beginning with Bandura’s Social Learning Theory in 1977 and continuing through analyses by Harvard University’s Ecological Approaches to Social Emotional Learning (EASEL) Laboratory, there are five essential steps when successfully teaching students social skills.

   They are:

·       Teaching the steps and related behaviors/interactions of a desired social skill. 

·       Modeling the steps and the social skills language (or script). 

·       Roleplaying the steps and the script with students in a classroom- or school-related scene or scenario.

·       Providing Performance Feedback to the students relative to how accurately they are verbalizing the skill script and how successfully they are behaviorally demonstrating the new skill.

·       Transferring and Applying the skill and its steps as much as possible during the day to reinforce the teaching over time, in different settings, with different people, and in different situations.

_ _ _ _ _

   When Teaching and Modeling, teachers need to make sure that students:

·       Have the prerequisite skills to be successful

·       Are taught using language that they can understand

·       Are taught in simple steps that ensure success

·       Hear the social skills script as the social skills behavior is demonstrated

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   When Practicing or Roleplaying, teachers need to make sure that students:

·       Verbalize (or repeat or hear) the steps to a particular social skill as they demonstrate its appropriate behavior

·       Practice only the positive or appropriate social skill behavior

·       Receive ongoing and consistent practice opportunities

·       Use relevant practice situations that simulate the “emotional” intensity of the real situations so that they can fully master the social skill and be able to demonstrate them under conditions of emotionality

·       Practice the skills at a developmental level that they can handle

_ _ _ _ _

   When Giving Performance Feedback, teachers need to make sure that the feedback is:

·       Specific and descriptive

·       Focused on reinforcing students’ successful use of the social skill, or on correcting an inaccurate or incomplete social skills demonstration

·       Positive—emphasizing what was done well and what can be done well (or better) next time

_ _ _ _ _

   When Transferring or Applying Social Skills after Instruction, teachers need to make sure that they reinforce students’ prosocial skills steps and behavior when they:

·       Have successfully demonstrated an appropriate social skill

·       Have made a “bad” choice, demonstrating an inappropriate social skill

·       Are faced with a problem or situation but have not committed to, nor demonstrated, a prosocial skill

·       Must use the skill in situations that are somewhat different from those used when the skill was originally taught and practiced

[See RELATIVE INFORMATION in our Previous Blog:

The SEL Secret to Success: You Need to “Stop & Think” and “Make Good Choices” - Project ACHIEVE

_ _ _ _ _

What Conditions Help Schools to Effectively Implement a Social Skills Program?

   Harvard University’s EASEL Laboratory, among a select group of other researchers and practitioners have identified some critical school conditions that facilitate the implementation of a school-wide social skills initiative.

   They include:

·       Facilitate ownership and buy-in 

·       Ensure sufficient staff support, training, and coaching

·       Allocate the time needed to implement the program effectively and with fidelity

·       Extend social skills learning and application beyond the classroom into the common areas of the school

·       Provide opportunities for students and staff to apply and transfer social skills and strategies to real-life situations

_ _ _ _ _

   Some additional “common characteristics” noted are that the school-wide initiative:

·       Establishes and maintains safe and positive settings and interactions for children and adults

·       Supports the development of high-quality relationships between children and adults

·       Is developmentally, demographically, and culturally sensitive, relevant, and engaging for children

·       Provides opportunities for direct skill building, feedback, mastery, and application

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Summary

   This Blog began by encouraging districts and schools to address their school safety and discipline, classroom management and engagement, and student behavior and self-control needs by focusing on observable and measurable student outcomes. . . rather than pre-packaged and marketed programs that change their labels to appear “new and improved.”

   We specifically provided the history, research, and questionable (if not, poor and unsustained) outcomes from the PBIS and SEL frameworks.

   From a psychological research-to-practice perspective, we emphasized that schools anchor themselves on the following goal:

   The developmentally-sensitive and differentiated teaching of students’ behaviorally-observable interpersonal, social problem-solving, conflict prevention and resolution, and emotional awareness, control, communication, and coping skills. . . across the multi-tiered continuum of student needs and challenges.

   To accomplish this, we detailed the needed science-to-practice components, social skills, instructional approach, and school and staff implementation characteristics needed for school success.

   Schools do not have the time, the staff, or the resources to waste on approaches that will not work, that delay needed services and supports to students, and/or that could exacerbate existing problems.

   As in the title of this Blog, why would districts and schools implement “SEL programs” that don’t improve students’ collaboration and interactions in classrooms and across other settings in their schools?

   Why are we hanging onto frameworks that have never objectively demonstrated consistent (across 90 or more percent of the implementing schools), sustained (more than three years), and multi-tiered success (i.e., PBIS).

   And why are schools “doing SEL” based on meta-analytic research that does not causally validate specific universal SEL practices, that is being used to advance the interests of an independent—even if non-profit—company (i.e., CASEL), and that reflects over 40 different frameworks with leaders who have widely different definitions of “SEL”?

   We can and must “get back to the psychological basics.” We can and must do better in this important area supporting education.

_ _ _ _ _

   As we begin this “next stretch” of the school year, I hope that the thoughts above, and the resources provided (both our FREE Monograph or Papers, and our past Blogs) are helpful to you.

   Significantly, we are only half-way through the school year. There is plenty of time to make the mid-course corrections needed to make this an incredibly successful school year.

   If I can help you in any way, please do not hesitate to contact me—especially in the areas discussed above.

   I am currently the “National Consultant” on three five-year federal School Climate Transformation Grants—which have me in the participating school districts approximately 40 days per year. So. . . I am partnering in these school discipline areas all of the time.

   If you are already thinking about next year, know that I help many schools and districts to map out their futures—for example, in the areas of (a) school improvement, (b) multi-tiered (including, special education) services and supports, and (c) interventions for challenging students.

   Feel free to contact me to begin this process.

Best,

Howie

[CLICK HERE to read this Blog on the Project ACHIEVE Webpage]