More and more research is being conducted on the benefits of transformative social emotional learning (TSEL) programming in schools as our nation faces unprecedented levels of anxiety, depression, and mental illness in students and staff. TSEL has the potential to transform the culture and climate of a school building in major ways. While the term might be common, there is quite a bit of misunderstanding as to what it actually is and how best to implement it in schools. In the school setting, it is a philosophy for how we teach students and adults to understand and manage emotions; support mental health and behavior issues; and promote belonging, equity, and access. It is a way of providing Tier 1 support for students in a time when school counselors are stretched thin. TSEL is NOT an easy fix that can be implemented after one book study.
TSEL has been a topic of discussion among school leaders for decades. It's not a new idea being floated to counteract the emotional toll of the pandemic, but current events—including COVID-19 and racial tensions—have hastened the need to implement programming that aids students and staff in mental wellness and to create safe, nurturing spaces that acknowledge their lived experiences and histories to help students access learning.
TSEL can also be used as a preventative approach to lessen the number of bullying incidents and discipline referrals in schools. It is a means of teaching the skills necessary to regulate and understand emotions, create healthy relationships, and manage stress and promote mental wellness. It is part of a holistic, whole-child approach to education that creates the best circumstances for learning to take place. This type of approach is even more important now as our students and staff are under tremendous amounts of pressure and schools are being scrutinized like never before.
Imagine a school environment that prioritizes relationships, acceptance, mindfulness, social responsibility, and decision-making skills. This is the type of environment that promotes learning, because when students' physical, mental, and emotional needs are met, they can focus on academic growth. TSEL is an ongoing learning process for all stakeholders, bringing together school staff, students, families, and community members in meaningful ways that promote learning.
In Schoolwide Collaboration for Transformative Social Emotional Learning, Kristy Hill, Abbie Harriman, and Amy Grosso provide information for systemically implementing TSEL in schools. School librarians are crucial leaders in this endeavor.
More and more librarians are embracing their roles as leaders in the school. School librarians are trained to curate quality resources; provide relevant, real-time, and learner-driven programming; and to prepare professional development opportunities for staff that reflect the needs and goals of the school and community. Librarians wishing to promote TSEL can begin by analyzing the existing collection and collection development practices, intentionally adding TSEL to library programming, incorporating TSEL into makerspaces, identifying areas of need outside of the library (such as professional development); and finding opportunities to support the community.
Many companies that supply books and other collection materials have begun tagging materials with social emotional learning (SEL) categories and have even designed collection analysis tools for identifying areas where collections would benefit from additional materials.
In Schoolwide Collaboration for Transformative Social Emotional Learning, we broke TSEL skills into five major categories: Mindfulness and Self-Awareness, Emotional Regulation, Social Responsibility, Building and Managing Relationships, and Decision-Making and Citizenship (Hill, et al 2021). These categories can help guide the librarian when setting goals for collection development.
As librarians and school districts are faced with an increasing number of book challenges and efforts to ban books, many of the books being challenged represent students and families that have been traditionally underrepresented in school library collections. But, belonging and inclusion are supported when school librarians, professionally trained to curate high quality materials for their libraries, advocate for a diverse collection that meets the needs of all patrons.
In addition to adding library materials to support TSEL, librarians can also create kits that aid teachers and other school staff in teaching the TSEL skills that support the learning taking place. Curating lists of materials for teachers makes it easier for teachers to find quality literature that connects to what is being taught. Librarians can also support this process by including ideas for extending the learning with the use of electronic resources such as databases and mobile apps.
It's also helpful to have kits for students to check out from the library. Create kits that help students understand TSEL topics like anxiety, grief, worry, and mindfulness. Include literature (both fiction and nonfiction), materials for products they can create (such as worry dolls), or instructions for exercises they can practice (like mindful breathing).
Librarians can implement programming that includes family and community members. Invite local wellness experts or practitioners to speak at an evening event or host a STEAM night that includes make-and-take creations that support TSEL. Keep resource lists on hand to share with family and community members that include information on how to detect warning signs of depression, how to address trauma, and how to connect with online and community resources that support students' mental wellness. Collaborate with the school counselor to make these resources as comprehensive as possible and to identify areas of need within the school and community.
There is much research that shows the effectiveness of integrating the arts into academic learning to support student success. Consider including a compassionate makerspace program or station that helps students explore and identify emotions. Often, just working with their hands and having an opportunity to create is all students need to center their minds, find their focus, and deal with complicated emotions. Pair books from one of the five categories of TSEL skills mentioned earlier with a make-and-take activity or an activity that requires focus, such as building with binder clips, popsicle sticks, and clothespins. Not all TSEL programming needs to be explicitly taught. Sometimes, just having materials available, especially when intentionally paired with literature, is just what students need to guide their own understanding.
School librarians can collaborate with administrators to identify areas of need for professional learning and help locate resources and experts that can guide the learning for the staff. This might include locating mindfulness experts within the community to come in and train staff on using mindfulness techniques in the classroom or finding a local yoga instructor who might come in once or twice a week to offer classes for staff members after school.
Librarians can also help curate a professional collection that helps the adults in the building address their own TSEL needs. A staff that is regulated, able to deal with stress in healthy, constructive ways, and that feels connected to peers and students will be in a much better place to instruct students in both TSEL and academics.
Schools that prioritize TSEL programming will see a decrease in absences and discipline referrals and an increase in student achievement, family and community support, and an overall improvement in climate and culture as staff and students experience more positive relationships at school. Likewise, school librarians will notice an increase in teacher collaboration and circulation statistics when students are excited about being at school and learning and when they can identify with the materials and programming the library has to offer.
Libraries that support students' mental wellness and creativity will understandably seem more relevant to students—even to those who have not historically patronized the library often.
Preserving passionate educators is another benefit of schoolwide implementation of TSEL programming. Librarians and other educators will be energized by the positive, supportive, and inclusive school environment.
Denham, Susanne A., and Chavaughn Brown. "Plays Nice With Others": Social–Emotional Learning and Academic Success." Early Education and Development 21, no. 5 (2010): 652-680, https://doi.org/10.1080/10409289.2010.497450
Goodman, K. A. "Conceptualising SEL in the Cross-Cultural Spaces of Primary Schools in Aotearoa New Zealand." New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies 56, no. 2 (Nov. 2021): 285–99. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40841-021-00213-4
Jagers, Robert J., Deborah Rivas-Drake, and Brittney Williams. "Transformative Social and Emotional Learning (SEL): Toward SEL in Service of Educational Equity and Excellence." Educational Psychologist 54, no. 3 (2019): 162-184. https://doi.org/10.1080/00461520.2019.1623032
The following excerpt adapted from Schoolwide Collaboration for Transformative Social Emotional Learning is one example of how TSEL can be implemented in the library. The book contains enough lessons for schools to implement one each week of the school year.
COMPASSION
A compassionate person considers the sufferings of others as their own. It is an extension of empathy. It not only places us in someone else's shoes but also asks how we can help alleviate the suffering of others. Having the skill of compassion helps students be more sensitive and caring. It teaches them to look beyond tolerance and acceptance to empathy and celebration. It helps students start to think about how they can make the world around them better.
- Compassion—awareness of others' suffering and a desire to help
- Empathy—ability to understand and share the feelings of others
- Kindness—a step beyond being nice; it involves being considerate and generous
- Tolerance—accepting another's ideals and beliefs
- Suffering—experiencing pain, distress, or hardship
- Communicate about suffering in the world (at an appropriate level for the students' age) and how others are helping.
- Expand students' worldview by introducing them to and connecting them with other cultures.
- Collaborate with a librarian in another country and set up a pen pal program with students
- Talk about children in the world who are showing compassion and making a difference.
- Caring for a class plant or pet can help teach compassion.
Elementary Activity:
Have students come up with a list of ten random acts of kindness that they can do in their school, community, or homes. Explain that we are able to show compassion in some way, every day. Write down the list on a poster board and challenge the students to do as many of these random acts of kindness as they can in one week. Ensure that every act is equitable for all students (e.g., giving money to someone or buying lunch for someone would not be possible for all students). Discuss how having compassion helps us create a kinder, better world.
Secondary Activity:
Have students research an issue that may be directly impacting their community (homelessness, an underfunded humane society, lack of food pantry resources, etc.). Talk about how these issues affect the community. Discuss empathy and have students imagine they are someone who may need help. Have the students get in groups of three or four to create a compassion plan. Tell the students to come up with a plan to present to the school's administration to address a community need. Explain that empathy is imagining and feeling what it is like to be in someone else's place and compassion takes action to help alleviate some of the suffering of others. Have students create a brochure or electronic presentation of their plan. Hold an anonymous vote to choose the top plan to take to the school's administration for approval.
Act It Out:
Students work in small groups and choose a scenario to demonstrate compassion by acting it out. Possible scenarios:
- You notice someone sitting alone in the cafeteria.
- During PE class, one of your peers shoots the basketball, misses, and falls onto the court. They appear to be really embarrassed.
- A friend tells you their grandparent died.
Poetry:
Students choose a cause they care about that brings out their compassionate side. This could be the care of animals, being an upstander, or showing compassion at home. Once students identify a topic that evokes compassion for them, they can write a poem of any type. Encourage creativity here…students may choose to write a shape poem, free verse, or even song lyrics. Ask them to express how they have compassion for their chosen topic.
- Adrian Simcox Does Not Have a Horse by Corinna Luykin, Dial Books for Young Readers, 2018.
- The Smallest Girl in the Smallest Grade by Justin Roberts, G. P. Putnam, 2014.
- Last Stop on Market Street by Matt de la Peña, BIR Publishing, 2016.
- 14 Cows for America by Carmen Agra Deedy, Peachtree, 2009.
- Thank You, Omu by Oge Mora, Little Brown Books for Young Readers, 2020.
- What's Given from the Heart by Pat McKissack, Schwartz & Wade Books, 2019.
- Mother Teresa by Emma E. Haldy, Cherry Lake, 2017.
- Mother Teresa by Barbara Kramer, National Geographic, 2019.
- Mother Teresa: Angel of the Slums by Lewis Helfand, Campfire, 2013.
- Teaching Empathy: A Blueprint for Caring, Compassion, and Community by David Levine, Solution Tree, 2005.
- Compassionate Conversations: How to Speak and Listen from the Heart by Diane Musho Hamilton, Random House, 2020.
MLA Citation
Hill, Kristy. "Libraries and Schoolwide Transformative Social Emotional Learning." School Library Connection, April 2022, schoollibraryconnection.com/Content/Article/2275036.
Entry ID: 2275036