Abstract
AbstractAlthough social and emotional learning (SEL) benefits children and youth worldwide, classifying a program as SEL is insufficient to capture its variability of content. There is currently little to aid in identifying specific program content so that foci may be identified (e.g., self-management skills vs. social skills). This gap poses a difficulty for researchers attempting to address heterogeneity in SEL research and practitioners who want to select programs best suited for their contexts. This paper begins to address these concerns by extracting and contrasting ‘core components’ of interventions within an identified shortlist of 13 universal, elementary evidence-based programs through a distillation method using the often cited ‘five core competency’ model from CASEL (Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning). Results showed that CASEL’s core competencies are represented across short-listed programs. However, almost all programs had identifiable foci, targeting a subset of skills. Accordingly, the use of ‘core components’ is recommended as a method for offering more nuance in SEL classification for programs beyond the current study, with implications for program implementation and the design of future research in SEL evaluation.
Funder
Education Endowment Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education
Cited by
2 articles.
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