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School Climate & Safety

Social-Emotional Needs Entwined with Students鈥 Learning, Security

Research and schoolroom practice show a supportive environment can promote achievement鈥攁nd stress can be a hinderance
By Sarah D. Sparks 鈥 January 04, 2013 11 min read
Brander S. Suero, 16, walks past Central Park East High School after buying lunch in Harlem. The school is using a program that focuses on students' resilience and connection to other students as building blocks for success.
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Students鈥 ability to learn depends not just on the quality of their textbooks and teachers, but also on the comfort and safety they feel at school and the strength of their relationships with adults and peers there.

Most of education policymakers鈥 focus remains on ensuring schools are physically safe and disciplined: Forty-five states have anti-bullying policies, compared with only 24 states that have more comprehensive .

Mounting evidence from fields like neuroscience and cognitive psychology, as well as studies on such topics as school turnaround implementation, shows that an academically challenging yet supportive environment boosts both children鈥檚 learning and coping abilities. By contrast, high-stress environments in which and uncared for make it physically and emotionally harder for them to learn and more likely for them to act out or drop out.

As that research builds, more education officials at every level are taking notice. For example, the federal government has prioritized school climate programs in its $38.8 million grants for safe and supportive school environments, and two states鈥擮hio and Wisconsin鈥攈ave developed guidelines for districts on improving school life, according to the National School Climate Center, located in New York City.

Experts say that administrators who focus on using climate merely as a tool to raise test scores or to reduce bullying may set up their reform efforts to fail. Stand-alone programs targeting individual symptoms like bullying or poor attendance may not provide holistic support for students, and emerging research shows such a comprehensive approach is critical to improve school climate.

鈥淭here鈥檚 anti-bullying, which is sort of the top, the visible part of an iceberg, and those are the formal policies where we tell kids, 鈥極K, don鈥檛 bully each other,鈥 鈥 said Meagan O鈥橫alley, a research associate at WestEd who specializes in the research group鈥檚 middle-school-climate initiative in Los Alamitos, Calif. 鈥淏ut then under that, there鈥檚 everything else that happens in that school, the interactions between people every single day that create an atmosphere that鈥檚 either supportive of a bullying atmosphere or not. Programmatic interventions have to be one piece of a much larger body of work.鈥

have more aggressive responses to stress, along with poorer working memory and self-control, studies show. Building those skills in individual students can raise the tenor of the whole school.

鈥淎s much as we need to provide enriched experiences to promote healthy brain development,鈥 says Dr. Jack P. Shonkoff, the director of the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University, 鈥渨e also need to protect the brain from bad things happening to it. We all understand that in terms of screening for lead, because lead does bad things to a brain, mercury does bad things to a brain, 鈥 but toxic stress does bad things to a brain, too鈥攊t鈥檚 a different chemical doing it, but it鈥檚 still a big problem interfering with brain development.鈥

It鈥檚 easy to focus too much on the visible parts of the school climate iceberg and have school improvement efforts run aground on the massive issues below the surface.

Elvira Quintero, center, and Denise Siguencia, both 17, make posters with affirmative messages during a Girls Inc. leadership class at Central Park East.

Studies routinely show that students learn better when they feel safe, for example. Yet interventions that focus on visible signs of safety鈥metal detectors, wand searches, and so on鈥攈ave not been found to deter crime and actually can make students feel less safe at school. What does reduce bullying and make students feel safer? According to an analysis of the National Crime Victimization Survey, only one intervention: more adults visible and talking to students in the hallways, a mark of a climate with better adult-student relationships.

Likewise, students鈥 ability to delay gratification has been proven to be so linked to academic and social success that the Knowledge Is Power Program charter schools offer T-shirts for students bearing the mantra, 鈥淒on鈥檛 Eat the Marshmallow!鈥 That鈥檚 a reference to a famous study that used the sweet treat in .

A 2012 follow-up to Stanford University鈥檚 original 鈥渕arshmallow study,鈥 however, found that regardless of a student鈥檚 innate willpower, the child will wait four times longer for a treat when the child trusts the adult offering it to keep his or her word, and when the environment feels secure to the child.

Security and Self-Control

How can a school build a culture of trust and self-control with children from disadvantaged and unstable environments that often work against those characteristics?

At the Children鈥檚 Aid College Prep Charter School in the Bronx borough of New York City, it starts as a classic game of telephone, with a class of excited kindergartners passing a message around their circle in theatrically careful whispers.

As is typical, the phrase that starts out as 鈥渟top and think鈥 is comically garbled by the time it gets around the circle. But unlike in the traditional playground game, the school鈥檚 鈥渓ife coaches,鈥 Yvenide Andre and Patricia Li, take the students through multiple rounds, asking them to think about how to make the next round better: Listen to each other. Concentrate. Don鈥檛 say the phrase louder than needed.

Brander S. Suero, at back, is a peer leader in his AP English class at Central Park East High School. Earlier in high school, he struggled with his grades and behavior, but was tapped to take part in the College Summit peer-leadership program. Now he and other students who once seemed longshots for graduation work to help fellow students boost their performance.

鈥淚t鈥檚 all life skills: self-control, relating to other people, learning how to respond in the ways we want them to respond,鈥 Li explains.

The charter school, which was launched last fall, specifically recruits children from across the city who are homeless, in foster care, and in abject and concentrated poverty. It started with 132 children in kindergarten and 1st grade, and plans to add a grade each year up to 5th.

Drema Brown, the vice president of education for Children鈥檚 Aid, says the school was founded on the premise of acknowledging students鈥 challenges鈥攂ut then deliberately putting that aside.

鈥淲hen you approach these kids from the deficit model of 鈥榯hey have all these problems,鈥 that seeps into everything you do,鈥 Brown says. 鈥淲e look at it as promise; we make sure every adult in the building understands those vulnerable areas as opportunities to practice our skills as professionals, and not as problems.鈥

In addition to teachers, the school has full-time life coaches, like Andre and Li, who bridge social services and instruction. Teachers and life coaches are hired for their 鈥渃ommitment to not just delivering content but understanding the child in front of them,鈥 Brown says. Staff members receive continuing training, not just on ways to incorporate character curriculum or social skills into math class, but also on how to respect and respond to students who are acting out.

鈥淜now who they are before they come in,鈥 Principal Ife Lenard tells teachers. 鈥淒on鈥檛 find out about a student鈥檚 problems because of an incident of acting out in the hallway.鈥

Staff members like Andre and Li work with teachers to help students learn cognitive control and resiliency as well as social and emotional skills.

Elvira Quintero, left, who was known as shy and quiet earlier in her high school career, is also a College Summit peer leader. Working with her on a physics lab project are, from left, Kayla Perdomo, 17, Derick Estrella, 17, and Eric Hamilton, 16.

鈥淧eople talk about things like 鈥榗aring is sharing,鈥 but they don鈥檛 talk about what to do if someone doesn鈥檛 share,鈥 says Lenard, who also has a degree in clinical social work. 鈥淭here are so many good things that can happen between an adult and a child or group of children, but that has to be modeled.鈥

Each class in the school is named for a different high-profile college鈥擟olumbia, and Spelman and Yale, for example鈥攁nd even in kindergarten, children are talking about what they want to study when they go to the 鈥渂ig school.鈥

The administrators and researchers are building the path to college just a few steps ahead of the children. Stephanie M. Jones, an associate education professor at Harvard, and Robin T. Jacob, an assistant research scientist at the University of Michigan Institute of Social Research in Ann Arbor, have partnered with the school to test and develop , a whole-school-climate model so named for incorporating instruction in 鈥渟ocial, emotional, and cognitive understanding and regulation.鈥

鈥淓xecutive function and cognitive regulation are a set of building blocks for many of the other skills that are targeted by other social-and-emotional-learning programs,鈥 Jones says. Among those skills: concentrating on a task or transitioning smoothly from one to another; identifying one鈥檚 own and others鈥 emotions and social cues; and engaging in planning and conflict resolution.

鈥淚n aggregate,鈥 Jones says, 鈥渉aving a whole population of kids with those skills is going to change the nature of the set of interactions in the classroom, the climate of the school鈥攁nd it would play out in the lunchroom and playground as well.鈥

The approach already has shown promise in a pilot study of 5,000 children in kindergarten through 3rd grade at six schools in the 14,200-student Alhambra elementary district in Arizona. Students at schools using the SECURe model in combination with the Success For All literacy program were statistically significantly more self-controlled, less impulsive, and had greater attention spans than their peers at nonparticipating schools. Moreover, the SECURe students also showed some improvement in standardized math and reading tests compared with their peers.

During a life-skills class in October, Li and Andre discuss a picture book on the brain with the kindergarten classes. Though simplified for the kindergartners, the book talks about how children鈥檚 brains work, what decisionmaking and self-control are, and how students can think more clearly when 鈥渢aking care of their brain鈥 by sleeping and eating appropriately.

In addition to the telephone game, the kindergartners play a more advanced game of freeze, in which they dance and wriggle while music plays but then have to freeze and hold a particular position when it stops.

The game is a big hit鈥攑roducing some stillness but also massive giggle fits鈥攂ut Andre and Li press the students afterward on what they found hard about the game.

鈥淢y body danced like this, and it didn鈥檛 want to stop,鈥 says Jordan, a little boy with a curly Mohawk and a grin. A girl mentions having to stop and remember what to do next when the music stopped.

Policymakers are betting that students such as Brander S. Suero, left, and Alianny Holguin can benefit from an effort to create classroom conditions in which they are able to engage with each other.

The game offers a chance for discussion about how children might act without thinking, relating to a previous class about feelings and how students respond to arguments and other negative emotions.

Throughout the week, Li says, classroom teachers will refer to these lessons and use what the pupils know about their own thinking process to help them work through discipline issues or other problems in class.

Involving Students

In the area of school climate, far more than academics, teachers and students have the opportunity to solve problems as equals. While a student struggling in math may not be able to articulate his or her own misconceptions about algebra, Thomas L. Hanson, the director of San Francisco-based WestEd鈥檚 middle-school-climate project and a senior research associate with the group, and others say, teachers and particularly older students often agree on the main problems when they鈥檙e surveyed on school climate.

鈥淚n most of the strong school reform models, you see a focus on school leaders, educators, data, standards鈥攂ut you seldom see students as part of the reform strategy. The progress we can make with students on the sidelines is terribly limited,鈥 says J.B. Schramm, the founder of the Washington-based College Summit, which uses students to encourage one another to attend college.

鈥淪tudents are not vessels to be filled with knowledge at schools,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey can drive change.鈥

Hanson and O鈥橫alley of WestEd have seen that firsthand in 58 high schools and 15 middle schools in Arizona and California, which are implementing 鈥渓istening circles.鈥

Elvira Quintero works on a research exercise in the library at Central Park East. The school's peer-leadership program identifies students who can follow through on their own college-going aspirations and who can then influence fellow students to do the same.

Each such circle pulls in students from different social, racial, and interest groups from around the school to identify and solve problems related to campus climate. Adults sit outside the circle, in a 鈥渓isten only鈥 mode, Hanson says.

Being Assertive

Teachers and administrators have been surprised at how assertive students can be at those sessions, O鈥橫alley says. For example, she recalls students at one high school who complained about trash regularly piling up on campus. In response, they raised money to buy 30 new trash cans and held a bin-decorating contest around the school. The district superintendent, who happened to be sitting in on the circle, was impressed by the students鈥 initiative and agreed to pay to repaint the fading building in the school colors of green, white, and beige.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a very, very powerful experience for a lot of people,鈥 O鈥橫alley says. 鈥淪tudents want forums to express themselves about all things related to school. That鈥檚 pretty typical for adolescent development; they want to be heard and understood as individuals.鈥

Working Together

See Also

Read a related Quality Counts story: Student Peer Leadership Can Help Boost School Climate

Getting students to work together to identify and solve problems can also reduce tensions and bullying among students of different races, social classes, or sexual orientations, the WestEd researchers have found.

A focus on climate can be particularly important in , according to research by Amy Bellmore, an assistant professor of human development in the education department at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

鈥淲ithin a bully-victim dynamic, there鈥檚 an important notion of power: The bully is larger, more popular鈥攐r their group is represented to a larger degree,鈥 Bellmore says. 鈥淜ids are tuned in to the perspective of decisionmakers within their school environment.鈥

Schools that celebrate all the different student groups and encourage students from different backgrounds to work together show lower intergroup bullying and more friendships across groups, Bellmore has found. Moreover, she notes, students with friends from a wide variety of backgrounds learn more strategies for coping with stress, be it bullying or a pop quiz.

Bringing students together to improve their campus climate can also help them build their own confidence and resiliency, Schramm says. Students will take more ownership of their learning and their school climate, he says, if school adults listen, help them understand the issues, and enable them to set measurable goals.

鈥淏ut then you need to give them space,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f you prepare them but then manage them too tightly, they won鈥檛 take charge, because you鈥檙e in charge. If you skip either the preparation or the space, it won鈥檛 work.鈥

Coverage of school climate and student behavior and engagement is supported in part by grants from the Atlantic Philanthropies, the NoVo Foundation, the Raikes Foundation, and the California Endowment.

In March 2024, 澳门跑狗论坛 announced the end of the Quality Counts report after 25 years of serving as a comprehensive K-12 education scorecard. In response to new challenges and a shifting landscape, we are refocusing our efforts on research and analysis to better serve the K-12 community. For more information, please go here for the full context or learn more about the EdWeek Research Center.

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