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Subject: FW: Social-Skills
Programs Found to Yield Gains in Academic Subjects
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http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2007/12/19/16social.h27.html?print=1
207 Studies Analyzed
Includes correction(s):
Social-Skills
Programs Found to Yield Gains in Academic Subjects
A forthcoming research review
offers some counterintuitive advice for educators: Take time out of the
curriculum to teach students to manage their emotions and to practice empathy,
caring, and cooperation—and their academic achievement could improve in
the bargain.
The new findings, discussed last
week at a national forum here on social and emotional learning, are based on a
not-yet-published analysis of 207 studies of school-based programs designed to
foster children’s social and emotional skills.
“In the past, when people
would say, ‘You’re taking away from academic time for these
programs,’ we would say, ‘Well, it’s not going to hurt
learning,’ ” said Roger P. Weissberg, the president of the Collaborative for Academic,
Social, and Emotional Learning, or CASEL, the Chicago-based group that
sponsored the four-year study. “What we find now is that when you have
these programs, academics improve.”
The results come at what some see
as a critical juncture in the movement to promote social and emotional
learning. Research findings in education and other fields, such as brain
science, seem to be converging on the benefits of such instruction, and
programs based on the concept have a small but growing presence in schools.
One state, Illinois, has set down
standards for teaching the subject. Another, New York, is developing voluntary
guidelines for teaching students social and emotional skills. Lessons in social
and emotional learning are also taught in some districts, from New Haven,
Conn., to Anchorage, Alaska.
Some advocates of social and
emotional learning contend that one roadblock to more widespread implementation
of their programs is the federal No Child Left Behind Act, which has put new
pressure on schools to raise test scores in core subjects and narrowed the
curricular focus in some schools.
But the nearly 6-year-old law also
calls on educators to employ “scientifically based” educational
practices, and leaders of the movement for social and emotional learning hope
the new findings will give their programs a more solid footing in schools
nationwide.
“This research confirms what
a lot of us have been saying for years,” said Dr. James P. Comer, the
Yale University psychologist best known for developing the Comer School
Development Project, a model for improving the social, emotional, and academic
outcomes of urban schoolchildren. “It’s almost counterintuitive for
some people to believe that it’s about how you treat kids.”
207 Studies Analyzed
For their analysis, the CASEL
researchers sifted through 700 studies on a broad range of school-based
programs aimed at honing students’ social and emotional skills. Such
programs might include, for instance, character education lessons, anti-bullying
efforts, drug-abuse-prevention programs, or conflict-resolution training.
Out of that hodgepodge, the
researchers culled 207 studies that met their criteria for inclusion in the
analysis. The studies had to involve typical students ages 5 to 18, and use a
control group of students, so that any gains could be compared against those
that students might be expected to make under normal circumstances.
Just under half the studies also
went a step further and randomly assigned students to either the experimental
or the comparison group.
Strong Effects Found
Illinois Social and Emotional Learning Standards
The state has adopted standards for
the social and emotional skills that K-12 students should be taught.
GOAL 1: Develop
selfawareness and self-management skills to achieve school and life success.
(A) Identify and manage one’s
emotions and behavior
(B) Recognize personal qualities and external supports
(C) Demonstrate skills related to achieving personal and academic goals
GOAL 2: Use
social-awareness and interpersonal skills to establish and maintain positive
relationships.
(A) Recognize the feelings and
perspectives of others
(B) Recognize individual and group similarities and differences
(C) Use communication and social skills to interact effectively with others
(D) Demonstrate an ability to prevent, manage, and resolve interpersonal
conflicts in constructive ways
GOAL 3:
Demonstrate decisionmaking skills and responsible behaviors in personal,
school, and community contexts.
(A) Consider ethical, safety, and
societal factors in making decisions
(B) Apply decisionmaking skills to deal with academic and social situations
(C) Contribute to the well-being of one’s school and community
SOURCE:
Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning
Across the board, the researchers
found, the programs did what they were supposed to do: After the lessons, the
students in the experimental groups were better behaved, more positive, and
less anxious than their control-group peers. The program students had also,
apparently, gotten smarter, as measured by their grades and test scores.
As a group, those students scored
11 percentile points higher than the comparison-group students on a measure
known as an “improvement index.” The term, borrowed from federal
education researchers, refers to the difference between the mean percentile
rank for the intervention group and that of the control group.
“The impact here is almost
twice that of studies on class-size improvements,” said Mr. Weissberg,
who is also a professor of psychology and education at the University of
Illinois at Chicago. He was a co-author of the report with Joseph A. Durlak, a
Loyola University of Chicago psychologist, and other researchers.
CASEL is scheduled to publish the
report in early 2008. Mr. Weissberg shared the findings at the Dec. 10 meeting
in New York, which was aimed at charting a future course for the 13-year-old
organization and the movement it helps promote.
“When kids are disaffected
or they’re not motivated and engaged, improving academic test scores is a
real challenge,” Mr. Weissberg added, “and that can’t be done
unless you address students’ social, emotional, and cognitive
needs.”
Some Skeptical
The analysis also showed that the
good effects persisted six months or more after students took part in the
programs, although to a lesser degree. And the lessons were even more effective
when they were provided by teachers, rather the program developers or
researchers, Mr. Weissberg said.
Some experts, however, continue to
caution that such findings should be viewed with a dose of skepticism because
since they have yet to be published in a peer-reviewed academic journal.
“I have always been a bit
skeptical of in-house studies, because it’s often the case that the
people who do the evaluations have a stake in the outcome turning out a certain
way,” said Kevin R. Murphy, a professor of psychology, information
sciences, and technology at Pennsylvania State University in University Park,
Pa.
A critic of the theory of
“emotional intelligence,” Mr. Murphy was not part of the CASEL
meeting. “That’s not to say these programs can’t work,”
he added. “But this is an area where the claims often run ahead of the evidence.”
But Richard J. Davidson, a professor
of psychology and psychiatry at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, noted that
the findings dovetail with his own work on emotion and the brain’s
structure and function. While studies have long shown that negative emotions,
such as anxiety and fear, can interfere with learning, Mr. Davidson, who was
named one of the world’s most influential people by Time
magazine in 2006, has documented that in people who undergo regular training in
meditation or other practices akin to social and emotional learning, the brain
circuitry actually changes.
“Social and emotional
learning likely produces beneficial changes in the brain,” Mr. Davidson
told conference-goers here.
Though research is needed to
better document the mechanics of such transformations, he said, “qualities
such as patience, calmness, cooperation, and kindness should really now best be
regarded as skills that can be trained.”
‘Not an Easy Sell’
Policymakers and educators at the
K-12 level, though, can be reluctant to incorporate such teachings into the
curriculum, said Carol S. Comeau, the superintendent of schools in Anchorage.
Lessons in social and emotional learning have been part of the regular
instructional program across that 48,500-student district since 2004.
“It was not an easy
sell,” Ms. Comeau said. “Some members of our school board thought
it was really about self-esteem and helping kids feel good about
themselves.”
Test scores have risen
districtwide since the changes have been incorporated. And now an ongoing study
by the Washington-based American Institutes for Research suggests that some of
that improvement could be due to the lessons.
Since 2005, David Osher, the lead
researcher on the AIR study, has surveyed staff members and students across the
district in grades 5-12 on measures of school climate—factors, in other
words, such as the extent to which students feel safe and cared for in schools,
whether parents are involved in schools, and the pervasiveness of student drug
and alcohol use.
“When the school climate and
school connections measures go up,” Mr. Osher said, he has found that
“students’ performance on statewide tests in reading, mathematics,
and writing also goes up.”
Coverage of
education research is supported in part by a grant from the Spencer Foundation.
Vol.