Saturday, April 16, 2022

Schools Must Use Effective Practices to Screen and then Validate Students’ Mental Health Status (Part I)

YES: Teachers Should Help Screen Students for Social, Emotional, and Behavioral Challenges

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NO: That’s NOT Where the Screening Process Ends

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

Dear Colleagues,

Introduction

  For a variety of Pandemic and Not-Pandemic reasons, students across the country are demonstrating more social, emotional, and behavioral challenges this year than ever before.

   As such, teachers have—appropriately—needed to consciously integrate social, emotional, and behavioral training and discussion into many of their school days.

   Moreover, mental health professionals (counselors, school psychologists, and social workers) have needed to provide more strategic (Tier II) and intensive (Tier III) services to students in-need—including many more threat, suicide, self-injury, and other, related assessments.

   Finally, administrators have needed to balance their responses to an increasing number of office referrals—making the difficult differentiation between “discipline” problems and “social, emotional, or mental health” problems.

   Given this, states and districts have re-emphasized the importance of an informal and formal behavioral health screening continuum that—within a school—begins in the classroom with general education teachers.

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Training Teachers to be Mental Health Screeners

   This month, an Education Week article (April 4, 2022; “With Students in Turmoil, Teachers Train in Mental Health”) discussed how some states and districts are handling the increase in students’ social-emotional needs.

[CLICK HERE to Read the Original Article]

   The article highlights include the following:

·     Students are exhibiting more social, emotional, and behavioral upsets in school: increased childhood depression, anxiety, panic attacks, eating disorders, fights, and thoughts of suicide.

·     These upsets appear to be more pronounced for low-income students who concomitantly have/are experiencing additional stresses related to where and how they live.

·     The national shortage of counselors, school psychologists, and other mental health professionals has decreased the availability of school-based intervention and support—requiring community mental health referrals that parents and students sometimes ignore, and that also involve long waiting lines.

·     Some states and districts are using professional development funding to train teachers to identify the warning signs of students’ mental health problems and/or involvement in substance abuse. 

·     One course, “Youth Mental Health First Aid,” was highlighted in the article, but this course is not easy to access by individual educators. It is typically sponsored by school districts; it covers only a limited number of possible mental health challenges; and it does not provide individualized instruction for specific local or regional challenges, nor on-site consultation or coaching to facilitate implementation.

·     In California, which began offering the “Youth Mental Health First Aid” course in 2014, only 8,000 teachers, administrators, and school staff out of a possible 600,000 K-12 staff have been trained.

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   The implications here include:

·     Districts and schools need to write (or update their) comprehensive Multi-Tiered Mental Health Needs Assessment, Screening, Implementation, and Evaluation Plan.

·     This development, implementation, and evaluation of this Plan should involve the ongoing participation of the District’s mental health staff, as well as community-based mental health agency and service representatives.

·     The Plan should include resources and trainings like the “Youth Mental Health First Aid” course, but it should not be dependent on any single course to fully prepare teachers and other staff in this important area. 

·     Any social, emotional, or mental health professional development should include “Case Study” practice, ongoing consultation and coaching, and an explicit screening process so that students in need are accurately identified in objective, data-based, and timely ways. 

·     All of the implementation processes should be overseen by each school’s Multi-Tiered Services (Child Study, or Student Assistance) Team which (a) includes the best trained academic and social, emotional, behavioral assessment and intervention specialists in or available to the school; and (b) meets on a regular basis to address the needs of students in the school who are exhibiting academic and/or behavioral challenges.

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Ten Essential Practices in an Effective Mental Health Screening-to-Services Process

   A sound and effective mental health screening-to-services process is important to differentiate between (a) students having minor, moderate, or significant social, emotional, and behavioral challenges versus (b) students demonstrating concerns that are more momentary, transient, developmentally expected, or situational in nature.

   While general education teachers often are the first educators to identify student behavior that is concerning, an effective mental health screening-to-services process requires the use of what are called “multiple-gated steps.”

   This process also involves the use of (a) multiple assessment approaches or tools; (b) completed by multiple raters (including the student him or herself); and (c) that assess student behavior across multiple settings. As with any data-based process, it is important that the ratings, observations, and data are reliable, and that the results are valid.

   In Part I of this two-part Blog series, we will describe the ten essential practices to guide a school’s effective mental health screening-to-services process.

   In our next Part II, we will describe the six ways to collect social, emotional, and behavioral student data in the most reliable and valid ways.

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   The ten essential practices to guide a school’s effective mental health screening-to-services process include the following:

   Practice 1.  Multiple gating procedures need to be used during all social, emotional, and behavioral universal screening activities so that the screening results are based on (a) reliable and valid data that (b) factor in false-positive and false-negative student outcomes.

   Too many screening procedures go from screening to intervention—without considering whether the initially-derived results are accurate. Part of this process is determining if the screening procedures have “identified” students who actually do not have significant problems (i.e., “false-positive” results), or have not identified students who actually do have problems (i.e., “false-negative” results).

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   Practice 2.  After including false-negative and eliminating false-positive students, identified students (who have been “red-flagged” by a screening procedure) receive additional diagnostic or functional assessments to determine their strengths, weaknesses, social-emotional knowledge and skill gaps, and the underlying reasons for those gaps.

   When screening procedures do not exist or are not accurate, Practices 5 and 6 below should occur with all students who are demonstrating social, emotional, or behavioral concerns in any school setting. 

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   Practice 3.  When screening students for social, emotional, or behavioral challenges, the potential impact of a student’s academic status should be considered as part of the diagnostic or functional assessment. This “catches” students who are demonstrating behavioral problems due to academic frustration or skill deficits.

   While it may target ways to help students effectively control, decrease, or communicate their frustration, intervention plans here must address the root cause of the problem: remediating students’ academic deficiencies so that the sources of their frustration is moderated or eliminated.

   Part of the diagnostic assessment should also differentiate current problems that are Pandemic-specific or related, and problems that existed before the Pandemic began in early 2020.

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   Practice 4.  All students should be taught—from preschool through high school—social, emotional, and behavioral skills as an explicit part of the school’s formal Social-Emotional Learning/Positive Behavioral Support System. 

   These skills should be taught through an articulated, scaffolded, and systematic scope and sequence curriculum map—by general education teachers at the Tier I level—using methods grounded in social learning theory. The social, emotional, and behavioral skills taught should be applied to facilitate students’ academic engagement and self-management, and their ability to interact collaboratively and prosocially in cooperative and project-based learning groups.

   Many students with social-emotional challenges have never been systematically taught social skills. These skill deficits typically are not present when schools implement an effective Tier I social skills curriculum.

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   Practice 5.  Before conducting diagnostic or functional assessments (see Practice 2 above), comprehensive reviews of identified students’ cumulative and other records/history are conducted, along with (a) student observations; (b) interviews with parents/guardians and previous teachers/intervention specialists; (c) assessments investigating the presence of medical, drug, or other physiologically-based issues; and (d) evaluations of previous interventions.

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   Practice 6.  Diagnostic or functional assessments should evaluate students and their past and present instructional settings. These assessments evaluate the quality of past and present instruction, the integrity of past and present curricula, and interventions that have already been attempted. This helps determine whether a student’s difficulties are due to teacher/instruction, curricular, or student-specific factors (or a combination thereof).

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   Practice 7.  Diagnostic or functional assessments to determine why a student is not making progress or is exhibiting concerns should occur prior to any student-directed academic or social, emotional, or behavioral interventions.

   These assessments should occur as soon as students with apparent behavioral challenges are screened and recognized (that is, during Tier I). These assessments should not be delayed until Tier III (unless the student’s case is immediately escalated to that level).

   Said a different way: The goal of the screening-to-services multiple-gated process is to (a) accurately identify the students with significant social, emotional, or behavioral needs; (b) determine the depth, breadth, and root causes of their challenges; (c) link the assessment results to high probability of success services, supports, and interventions; and (d) reduce or eliminate the original challenges as soon, quickly, and efficiently as possible.

   When interventions are attempted prematurely and in the absence of the functional assessment (that some schools delay until Tier III), they typically have a low probability of success, and when they fail, they often exacerbate the problem and make it more resistant to change.

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   Practice 8.  Early intervention and early intervening services should be provided as soon as needed by students. Tier III intensive services should be provided as soon as needed by students.

   Students who are “failing” in Tier I, should not be required to receive (and fail in) Tier II services, in order to “qualify” to receive Tier III services or supports. If students who are struggling in the general education classroom need immediate Tier III services, supports, or interventions, they should immediately receive these through the multi-tiered, multiple-gated process.

   Multi-tiered service delivery should occur on a needs-based and intensity-driven basis.

   Critically, early intervention, Tier I services may include—based on the diagnostic or functional assessment results—the use of assistive supports, the remediation of specific social-emotional skill gaps, accommodations within the instructional setting and process, and curricular modifications as needed. 

   General education teachers and support staff need to be skilled in (a) the different strategies that may be needed within these service and support areas (i.e., remediation, accommodation, and modification), and (b) how to strategically choose these different strategies based on diagnostic or functional assessment results. A school’s mental health staff may need to directly consult with and coach general education teachers in these areas.

   Tier II and III services include strategic or intensive interventions (a) that are still implemented in a student’s general education classroom, and/or (b) that involve social, emotional, attributional, behavioral, or mental health interventions taught individually or in small groups that are then generalized to students’ 24/7 school and personal lives.

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   Practice 9.  When (Tier I, II, or III) interventions do not work, the diagnostic or functional assessment process should be reinitiated, and it should be determined whether (a) the student’s problem was identified accurately, or has changed; (b) the assessment results correctly determined the underlying reasons for the problem; (c) the correct instructional or intervention approaches were selected; (d) the correct instructional or intervention approaches were implemented with the integrity and intensity needed; and/or (e) the student needs additional, different, or reprioritized services, supports, strategies, or interventions.

   That is, it should not immediately be assumed—without validation—that the interventions should have worked, and did not work because the student has a more significant problem that will require more intensive and specialized services (although, based on data, that may be the case).

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   Practice 10.  The “tiers” in a school’s multi-tiered system of supports reflect the intensity of services, supports, strategies, or interventions needed by one or more students.

   The tiers are not defined by the percentage of students receiving specific intensities or services, nor do they reflect the organization (i.e., small group or individual), delivery setting or place, or expertise of the primary providers of those services.

   Instead, individual school’s Tier II and Tier III services and supports vary from school to school as they reflect the mental health and related services personnel, skills, expertise, and resources within each school.

   For example, if the schools in one district each have their own highly-skilled full-time counselor, school psychologist, and social worker, those schools will be able to provide some social, emotional, or behavioral services and supports at the Tier II level.

   If a different district has the same number of schools but only one school psychologist and one social worker for the entire district, the more strategic or intensive services and supports needed by their students may have to be delivered by a local community mental health agency—something most schools would classify as a “Tier III” service.

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Summary

   At this point, there is no debate that many more students are demonstrating social, emotional, behavioral, and/or mental health difficulties in our schools. . . for a variety of reasons.

   Given this, some districts and schools are training their general education teachers to recognize the “early warning indicators” of such difficulties, and others are being encouraged to formally screen all of their students for these difficulties—often by the authors, publishers, or companies that have developed on-line assessment programs.

   Unfortunately, for many schools this is the end of the process.

   That is, they are collecting their data, assuming it is accurate, and putting the “identified” students into, sometimes generic, intervention groups or categories that are either unnecessary or have limited prospects for success.

   Moreover, as they are using their screening strategies or programs to identify students in social-emotional need, they are not validating (a) whether the students actually have the challenges (false-positives); (b) they are missing students who legitimately have challenges (false-negatives); and (c) they are not completing root cause analyses or functional assessments to connect the reasons underlying the students’ challenges with high-probability-of-success strategic or intensive services, supports, or interventions.

   This Blog (Part I of a two-part series) discusses the screening-to-services multiple-gating process that all schools should be using to identify and serve students with social, emotional, behavioral, and mental health challenges. The discussion is framed in ten effective practices that will help schools to avoid faulty decisions, unethical practices, and interventions that may make some students’ challenges worse or more resistant to change.

   In the next Part II, we will describe the six ways to collect social, emotional, and behavioral student data in the most reliable, valid, and intervention-related ways.

   What we are suggesting is nothing less than what a good medical doctor, mechanic, or electrician does when providing sound services. While doctors certainly screen their patients for a variety of possible illnesses, it is only through a data-based functional assessment process that they both validate any illnesses or medical problems that emerge from the screening, and begin to link the problems to medical treatments and/or solutions.

   As a school psychologist who works in many schools across the country—often for up to forty days per year and five years at a time, I understand the increase, diversity, and intensity of the student-related social, emotional, behavioral, and mental health issues that schools are experiencing.

   But I also understand that some of the “quick fixes” that are being used—especially in the absence of the sound, multi-tiered practices discussed in this Blog—are doing a disservice to everyone. . . students, staff, schools, systems, and communities.

   Use your mental health professionals. . . . do your research. . . . develop your plans and processes. . . . and let’s get this right the first time!

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   As always, I appreciate everyone who reads this bi-monthly Blog and thinks about the issues or recommendations that we share.

   As the school year winds down and we evaluate our students’ progress this year and needs for next year, if I can help you in any way please reach out by looking at the resources on our Website: www.projectachieve.info), or by calling me for a free one-hour consultation conference call to clarify your needs and directions.

   I am currently completing a number of Needs Assessments and Resource Analyses for different school districts in the areas of (a) school improvement, (b) social-emotional learning/positive behavioral discipline and classroom management systems, and (c) multi-tiered (special education) services and supports.

   The results are a research-to-practice Action Plan and implementation blueprint that helps many districts to reach their student, staff, and school goals and outcomes for the next three to five years.

   Please feel free to reach out if you would like to begin this process.

Best,

Howie

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

Saturday, March 26, 2022

Are Students Prepared When Personality and Power Control, Misrepresent, or Lie About the Truth?

Students Understand Social “Reality” Only When They Can Socially Analyze Multiple Realities

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

If I were to summarize in one sentence the single most important principle I have learned in the field of interpersonal relations, it would be this:  Seek first to understand, then to be understood.         

Dr. Stephen R. Covey

Dear Colleagues,

Introduction

   My biggest fear in writing this Blog is that some of you may not read past the first few paragraphs.

   I hope that you will. . . in fact, I hope you will read the entire Blog and honestly reflect on its message. . .

   But I will understand (but not reinforce) why some of you won’t.

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   I am a BIG “Survivor” fan!

   Truth be told, I even applied for Season 3 (I still even have my Audition Tape, and. . . . no. . . I will not post it on my website).

   While the current Survivor season is a handful of episodes in, the first two episodes highlighted Jackson Fox who is the first openly transgender cast member (but not the first such cast member) in Survivor’s 42 seasons.

   Significantly, virtually no one looking at or interacting with Jackson would know that he is transgender. Nonetheless, in Episode 2, he consciously decided to share this fact and his transformation story with the members of his “Tribe” (see the video below).


   Jackson didn’t make it very far as he was “pulled” from the “game” because the Producers were afraid that the physical (lack of water, sleep, food, athletic challenges) and emotional (personal and social stress) demands of Survivor would trigger an assortment of unsafe side effects related to the Lithium he had been taking for anxiety and to help him sleep.

   But this is not the issue. Instead, there are two “reality-related” issues here—for us as people, parents, and (educational) professionals.

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Issue #1: Our Interpretation and Reactions to Our Life Realities Impact Our Social Success

   The first issue is how some of Fox’s cast members reacted to his descriptive gender transformation story on Episode 2 (watched by over 5 million viewers), and whether those who were morally, religiously, or just personally distressed or appalled by him might have let those emotions undermine their game strategy—thereby sacrificing their chance to become the “Sole Survivor” and the winner of the $1 million dollars.

   Survivor Host Jeff Probst calls Survivor the greatest social experiment on TV today. Indeed, many are the times when the real-life personalities, beliefs, and relationships of the cast members dominate the contrived nature of the game.

   This is evident as:

·       Cast members’ attitudes toward age or gender, race or sexual orientation, socioeconomic status or job title, and/or physical stature or attractiveness. . . mix with

·       The physical and emotional demands of living on an isolated island with limited provisions, periodic group and individual high-stakes contests, and a series of unpredictable game changes and challenges (e.g., reconfiguring, merging, or relocating the cast in and out of their different “tribes”) . . . and

·       The emotional demands of maintaining one’s personal and ethical standards while having cameras recording their every move while vying (lying) to win $1 million.

   They don’t call this “reality TV” for nothing.

   Significantly, if you watch Survivor, it is predictable how most cast members’ authentic personalities emerge under the stress of the “game,” and how the behaviors and emotions inherent in these personalities either facilitate or destabilize their interpersonal interactions with others.

   In the end, those cast members who are able to socially analyze and adapt flexibly to the different realities that Survivor throws at them are the ones who successfully navigate the game, learn and grow from it, and leave the “game” with a higher level of personal insight, perspective, appreciation. . . and, maybe, $1 million dollars.

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   And this is one of the points of this Blog. . .

   All of us are living a real-life game of Survivor.

   And how we reality-check and adapt flexibly to the different realities that:

·       We have recently experienced—for example, the Pandemic with its social isolation, unpredictability, and loss. . . and

·       We are experiencing right now—inflation and the economy, the Russian invasion of Ukraine, issues of race and gender identity, the continuing political landscape. . .

. . . will determine our personal and interpersonal success as individuals, within our families and friendships, and at work and in the community.

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Issue #2: Children Need to be Taught How to Understand and Respond to Life Realities

   The second issue, related to Fox’s presence and gender transformation story on Survivor, is that it was watched by countless children and adolescents—some of whom did not know or fully understand who a “transgender” person was/is.

   This issue relates to the many children and adolescents who—whether through Survivor or their family or social lives—have been exposed to the potential, if not the presence, of transgender and other LGBTQIA individuals, and who need a clear, developmentally-appropriate, factual understanding of who they are.

   And, honestly, with years of discussions, arguments, and court battles over transgender pronouns, bathrooms, participation in sports, and more. . . how many students are not aware of these transgender and LGBTQIA situations, even though they may not be knowledgeable regarding these students (see the video below)?

   As noted, our children and adolescents are exposed to, confronted by, and live with many social and other issues that occur during their day-to-day “realities.” Exposure to and interactions with transgender and LGBTQIA peers and adults are just one such issue.

   Simplistically, adults (teachers) have two polar opposite approaches to helping our children and adolescents navigate these issues:

·       Ignore and “protect” them from the issues and/or the diverse—and sometimes contradictory and contentious—opinions regarding them; or

·       Inform and instruct them regarding the issues and contradictions—giving them a developmentally-sensitive social problem-solving framework to use, over time, to make their own decisions.

   For me—as in the title of this Blog—students can only understand and reconcile the social “realities” in their lives (which extend to local, state, national, and international issues and events), when they can socially analyze and understand others’ similar and different social realities (note the Covey quote at the top of this Blog).

   And yet, there are some who want to restrict this educative approach.

   With all due respect to those who disagree, these issues need home-school-and-community discussions. . . because these issues transcend the home setting and parental discretion. We need to listen to and discuss these issues. They should not (as they already have) become lightning rods for arguments, insults, filibusters, politicization, and demagoguery.

   To wit:

·       While Florida Governor DeSantis recently signed the “Don’t Say Gay” bill, that will not eliminate discussions about LGBTQIA students and people. In fact, it will only mean that students will discuss these issues outside of their formal education and, perhaps, access and embrace information that is biased, inaccurate, or damaging.

·       If State Legislatures (or even individual principals or librarians) ban and remove certain school library books, students who want to read these books will still get them (can you spell “Amazon”?), and other students not exposed to them will not have the opportunity to debate their meaning and implications.

[Parenthetically, according to Goodreads, the Top Ten Most Banned Books are: “To Kill a Mockingbird,” “The Diary of a Young Girl,” “1984,” “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone,” “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,” “Carrie,” “The Lorax,” “Bridge to Terabithia,” “The Five People You Meet in Heaven,” and “Watership Down.”]

·       If the South Dakota and Louisiana State Departments of Education, for example, want to ignore the historical experts that they collaborated with in their respective states, and rewrite and sanitize their K-12 American History standards and content. . . avoiding a critical thinking and inquiry-based analysis of our country’s strengths and weaknesses . . . then students will be less prepared to understand contemporary race and other cultural issues, to succeed in a global economy and society, and/or to differentiate between reality and fake news.

   In summary, here are some of the relevant lessons:

·       Parents (and educators) cannot fully control everything that their children (and students) are exposed to;

·       Children are naturally curious, and they want to understand strange, unique, controversial, and enigmatic things in their social worlds;

·       Parents (and educators) cannot successfully sterilize or insulate their children’s (and students’) worlds to fully isolate them from information, topics, experiences, and circumstances that the adults deem “off-limits”; and

·       In the absence of the information and adult discussion, instruction, and guidance, some children (and students) will access the information anyways through peers, the internet, and/or social media... but they may get misinformation, and they may not have the skills to differentiate between fact and fiction.

   While a terrible analogy, controversial topics can be like COVID-19. We can sterilize, isolate, and protect ourselves to the extreme, but some children and adults still are exposed and fall prey to it.

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Preparing Students When Personality and Power Control, Misrepresent, or Lie about the Truth

   Over the past few years, an additional layer of instruction has become essential to prepare our students— as above—to differentiate between fact and especially fiction.

   Some of the fiction (e.g., fake news) occurs through the media and social media, and some of it is “controlled” by algorithms that are embedded in the social media apps that students are using on their computers and smartphones.

   Some of the fiction is benign. . .

   But some of the fiction is intentionally motivated to change, indoctrinate, or solidify specific attitudes, opinions, or behaviors in a new generation of eventual adults.

   In fact, some of this latter fiction has financial, commercial, political, antisocial, and malicious underpinnings, and some involves misinformation, disinformation, or flat-out lies.

   If students are not taught and do not master necessary social media literacy skills, then they become susceptible to these traps, and they can internalize the inaccurate messages while externalizing inappropriate or maladaptive behavior.

   Some recent examples of Fake News or Disinformation that could confuse students include:

·       Disinformation on the Russian Invasion of Ukraine.

A recent Education Week article (March 11, 2022; CLICK HERE) interviews Eisha Buch, the director of education programs for Common Sense Media, a nonprofit group that encourages the teaching of media literacy in schools. Buch notes how TikTok is being used to disseminate Russian propaganda through fabricated news, image, and video reports related to the invasion of Ukraine.

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·       Critical Race Theory (CRT)—what it is and is not.

This is a continuing political and educational issue that impacts students in multiple ways.

For example, many students have not been taught what CRT truly is. They do not understand the issues and implications involved if a teacher were to discuss certain racial topics that are disallowed in some states. And, when uninformed, they cannot gauge the accuracy of certain accounts addressing CRT and other race-related topics posted on the internet and social media... or discussed by their administrators and school boards.

We have discussed much of this in our December 4, 2021 Blog (CLICK HERE).

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·       Accounts of the Senate Confirmation Hearing of Supreme Court Justice nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson.

In a Forbes article (CLICK HERE), it was reported that, “Evaluators at the American Bar Association refuted Republican senators’ allegations that Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson had been lenient toward child pornography offenders, saying Thursday during her Senate confirmation hearing there’s ‘no evidence’ to support the claims, as they emphasized how well qualified she is to serve on the court.”

If students are unexposed to this evidence, their opinions of this important historical event may be based only on the original question-and-answer interactions between these senators and the Supreme Court nominee.

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   As noted above, given all of this, students need social media training so that they can differentiate between fact and fiction—especially when facts and information are misrepresented by those in power or those who wish to assert their power.

   Here, Eisha Buch—the Common Sense Media director referenced in the March 11, 2022 Education Week article above—suggests the following in response to a question asking her for the “top tips for spotting disinformation and what questions students should be asking themselves when they view content on social media”:

Look for unusual URLs or site names, including those that end in a “dot co.” Those are trying to appear like legitimate sites but they’re not. A second tip is to look for signs of low quality—words in all caps, headlines that have grammatical errors, bold claims that have no sources, or really sensationalized images—those are signs or clues that you should be skeptical of the source.

 

Check a website’s “About Us” section. Find out who supports the site or who is associated with it. If this doesn’t exist and it requires you to register before you can learn anything about the backers, then that should be a red flag and you should wonder why they aren’t being transparent up front.

 

Consider whether other credible mainstream news outlets are reporting the same news—corroborate the story. If they’re not, it doesn’t mean that it’s not true, but it does mean you should definitely dig deeper.

 

The last one, which is also a question to ask yourself, is to check your emotions: click bait and fake news strives for extreme reactions. If the news is making you feel really angry, it could be a sign that you should dig deeper and check multiple sources.

 

Consider the diversity of backgrounds of your students. Depending upon the news ... different kids may respond and react differently to what they are seeing and hearing, especially if they have differences in their family backgrounds or situations.

 

These are tips or strategies for spotting fake news or misinformation in articles. But to how we talked about in the beginning, how are young people finding this fake news? If it is on social media, it does become a little bit harder.

 

To me, that’s where it’s more about what are the questions you’re asking yourself. So, do you understand how the algorithm works? [For instance, some social media algorithms tend to flood users with information that tends to confirm their worldviews rather than question them, creating a sort of information echo chamber.] What am I seeing? What content is being served up to me? Why is this content being served up to me? And that, to me, goes back to the idea of, do you understand how the algorithm works?

 

And then being able to, of course, try to corroborate those stories. You can do reverse image searches to really see whether the images are fake or not. There are ways even through social media that you can do additional steps to check the credibility of what you’re seeing.

 

In terms of questions. Asking yourself, “what’s the difference between a theory and an actual conspiracy? Why is this so appealing to me?” Notice your gut reaction. Is there a motive behind the person or the source who is putting this information out there? Is there potentially an ulterior motive?

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Summary 

   Some might say that Survivor is not reality, but a manipulation of reality. And I believe that this is an accurate characterization.

   And yet, despite some of the contrived situations on Survivor, the cast members are tasked with physically surviving on a deserted island, they are emotionally invested and motivated to win the game, and their reactions and interactions on Survivor are real—and often representative of their interactions with others when they are home, at work, or socializing with friends.

   As a parallel and reflecting the “social experiment” nature of Survivor, it is interesting to recall:

·       Psychologist Stanley Milgram’s studies in the 1960s where he investigated how far people would go—relative to obedience and authority—to obey an order. His experiments involved instructing those participating in his studies to deliver increasingly high-voltage shocks to an actor in another room, who would scream and eventually go silent as the shocks became stronger.

While the shocks weren't real, the study participants were made to believe that they were, and some obeyed the study experimenter who exhorted them to increase the voltage and disregard the screams.

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·       Psychologist Philip Zimbardo’s 1971 Stanford University prison experiment. Designed to last two weeks and study the psychological impact of becoming a prison guard or prisoner, the experiment was discontinued after six days because many of the guards in the simulated prison became abusive, and the prisoners eventually engaged in a riot.

More specifically, as tensions began to escalate on Day Two, prisoners eventually barricaded themselves inside their cell, and the guards used fire extinguishers to break the riot, also implementing various psychological tactics as a way of regaining control.

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·       Psychologist Walter Mischel’s 1972 Marshmallow experiment investigating children’s ability to delay gratification. In this study, a child between 3 and 5 years old was brought into a room and presented with a reward, usually a marshmallow or some other desirable treat. The child was told that the researcher had to leave the room, but if they could leave the marshmallow alone until the researcher returned, the child would get two marshmallows instead of just the one they were presented with. If they couldn’t wait, they wouldn’t get the more desirable reward.

Years later, Mischel followed up with some of their original study participants. He discovered that those children who were able to delay gratification during the marshmallow test were rated significantly higher on cognitive ability, had higher SAT scores, and were more able to cope with stress and frustration as adolescents.

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   Regardless of your opinion of Survivor as a reflection of “real life,” it is real that Survivor highlighted the presence of a transgender cast member earlier this season.

   And this potentially did create a necessary teachable moment for both children and adults watching the episode.

   Finally, this does symbolically represent hundreds of similar circumstances where the media and social media introduce controversial topics—some which are true, and others which involve fake news— that children and adolescents need to understand and navigate in their own lives.

   Indeed, a study published yesterday (March 25, 2022) by Eisha Buch’s (again) Common Sense Media group found a 17% increase in screen use among teens and tweens during the (Pandemic) last two years.

   On average, daily screen use went up among tweens (ages 8 to 12) to five hours and 33 minutes from four hours and 44 minutes the two years prior, and to eight hours and 39 minutes from seven hours and 22 minutes for teens (ages 13 to 18).

   And so, our Conclusions are:

  • Students’ understanding, interpretations, and reactions to the information and issues that they are exposed to in the media and social media—including those related to politics, race and gender, socioeconomic status and inequity, past and present historical events, health and mental health—frame their realities and how they respond internally (e.g., emotionally, relative to self-esteem) and externally (e.g., interpersonally, relative to adults and peers).

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·       Adults need to understand that they cannot fully control everything that children and adolescents are exposed to, and that trying to artificially shield them from controversial, but prevalent, issues only means that that the children and adolescents will find a way to “self-educate,” and that some of this “education” may be inaccurate and harmful.

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·       Children and adolescents need to be explicitly and progressively taught social media literacy skills so that they can differentiate between fact and fiction, accurate news and fake news.

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   As always, I appreciate everyone who reads this bi-monthly Blog and thinks deeply about the issues or recommendations that we share.

   Even as the school year begins to wind down, and some are already thinking about next year, if I can help you in any way—in my different areas of expertise (see our Website: www.projectachieve.info), know that I am always happy to provide a free one-hour consultation conference call to help clarify your needs and directions on behalf of your students and colleagues.

Best,

Howie

 

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