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Sunday, April 24, 2022

I'm Not Going To Defend SEL

Social and Emotional Learning is the new target of the GOP attempt to set multiple education brushfires in hopes of stampeding voters towards a Republican victory (as well as one more way for the authoritarian crowd to hammer home their central point of "Trust nobody except Beloved Leader"). The attacks range from overblown to intellectually dishonest to giant piles of bovine fecal matter to the odious, evil charges that the teaching profession is simply a haven for groomers. 

And there is irony in these attacks from the right, because SEL is just the latest packaging of what we used to call "soft skills," and some of the greatest push for getting these into schools has come from the business community ("Hey schools! Fix my meat widgets so they communicate and cooperate better!!")

All that said, I'm not going to be the one to defend SEL in the classroom.

Perhaps I should say "formal SEL instruction." SEL has always been in the classroom and always will be, because it's impossible for an adult teacher to lead a roomful of young humans through learning and education and all the bumps and interactions that come by putting so many human beings in one room--well, you can't navigate any of that without including SEL. "Don't interrupt" and "keep your hands to yourself" and every group project ever are part SEL. Everything a teacher imparts, directly or indirectly, about how to work with, talk to, and get along with other humans is SEL. 95% of all the "this teacher changed my life" stories are about SEL and not actual subject content. So it is impossible to remove SEL from a classroom.

But formal SEL is another thing.

As soon as we try to formalize SEL instruction, we run into all sorts of problems. Are we doing it to help people get a better job and better grades or to be a better human being? And if it's the latter, as it should be, who the heck is going to define what a better human being looks like? And is there just one definition? And if not (as is true), then exactly what sort of assessment are we going to use to measure the "effectiveness" of the program or the social and emotional learnedness of the students? And can you promise me that you aren't going to record all that data to build some sort of digital social and emotional swellness file on each student? Also, will the program require every teacher to have a trained counselor level of expertise? Every single one of these questions ought to stop the march toward formalized SEL instruction dead in its tracks. But it hasn't-not any of the times SEL, under various monikers has come trundling down the tracks.

We've been through this over and over and over again. If you were teaching in the 90s. you probably remember Outcome Based Education, which joined a desire to reduce all education outcomes to observable behaviors (you can thank OBE for "the student will be able to...") along with an intent to include "non-cognitive objectives" in the program. 

That agitated all manner of social conservatives, from Pat Robertson and Rush Limbaugh to the original Mom for Liberty, Phyllis Schafly rose up against objectives focused on things like self-esteem and "environmentally sound decisions." They saw overreach and an attempt to instill certain values in students, and they weren't having it. The backlash stomped OBE dead as any kind of widespread, adopted education policy.

Our current educational focus on standardized measurement and data generation makes this the worst possible era in which to attempt formal SEL instruction; there is no such things as a standardized version of a good human. Broad strokes (Treat others with respect, don't be an asshat) are great, but their application looks different on different human beings, and any attempt to measure these human social and emotional qualities with a standardized test is just silly (and probably will result in an assessment easily gamed by everyone who can see what answer they're "supposed" to give). 

At the same time, programs that aim to teach cooperation, tolerance and general getting along are always going to rub some people the wrong way. CASEL, the super-duper clearing house of all things SEL, has plenty of student goals like "fewer conduct problems" and "positive social behavior" which seem superficially unobjectionable, but when taken together seem kind of heavy on compliance. Tolerance seems great, but aren't there some things that shouldn't be tolerated? An awful lot of people would say yes, whether their Intolerable Thing is LGBTQ Stuff or Nazis. 

Formal SEL instruction can't help itself--it wants to codify and clean up the general messiness of human interactions, and some people will always squawk when it's their particular mess that gets ruled out of bounds. And right now, nobody has their squawkbox more warmed up than the CRT panic anti-LGBTQ crowd. 

SEL is a complicated topic for an era that hates nuance and complexity. Most of the current complaints about SEL are bunk, but they were entirely predictable because we've been here before, but that doesn't mean that there aren't reasons to be highly dubious about formal SEL instruction, but that doesn't mean that SEL isn't a crucial and important part of education, but that doesn't mean it can (or should) be easily standardized, codified or measured, but that doesn't mean teachers shouldn't be doing it. How do you do that? It's complicated. I wrote this five years ago:

How do you take SEL "content" and separate it from everything else, when your character is first and foremost the "How" of conducting all the other business in your life? How can you possibly split your life up so that "be ethical" is over here and "conduct daily business" is over there? Trying to develop character separate from conducting all the business is like trying to develop a Southern accent separate from speaking. It's like trying to practice swimming far from any water.

You don't get rid of bullying by running bullying programs one hour a week. You get rid of bullying by running a school that never tolerates-- or models-- bullying ever. If for one hour a week you talk about how bullying is bad, but the rest of the week you run a classroom where it's understood that some people deserve to be punished or hurt or made to feel small, your bullying program is a huge waste of time.

If you spend an hour a week talking about how to be a decent person, and the rest of the week behaving like a lousy person, you're wasting that hour. And if you spend the week being decent people, what do you need that hour of class for?

And, I would add now, you don't model character for young humans by engaging in lying and slander to score political points. If 2022 is, as some activists are promising, the year that SEL takes over for CRT as the object of panic du jour, good luck to us all. But just because you call out the throwing of poo, that doesn't mean you have to support the thing the poo's being thrown at.

9 comments:

  1. Great summary of the place of SEL in schools. I have seen only one SEL-type preogram that was able to do what it claimed: a yoga-based activity that actually did result in students being less reactive. Not a small thing in a classroom where students' self-regulation abilities were weak. Have also seen a classroom situation where students would manufacture small conflicts in order to derail a lesson so that a peace circle would replace it.

    On the other hand, as you note, teachesrs (and older students) who model respect and generosity go a long way towards showing younger students what good interpersonal dealings look like.

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    1. The trouble with yoga is that there are people who will say it's trying to indoctrinate students into a religion.

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  2. You made a more detailed and evidence-based argument on a theme that I've stated since SEL became a formal Michigan DOE objective.

    Formal SEL is also ineffective. At the high school level, kids see through any formal SEL activity immediately and half-heartedly participate.

    SEL, as you wrote, Occurs over time through meaningful and organic interactions that build trust and community. Not through CASEL's series of listed "activities."

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  3. "You don't get rid of bullying by running bullying programs one hour a week. You get rid of bullying by running a school that never tolerates-- or models-- bullying ever. If for one hour a week you talk about how bullying is bad, but the rest of the week you run a classroom where it's understood that some people deserve to be punished or hurt or made to feel small, your bullying program is a huge waste of time." Ding!Ding!Ding! Schools can't fully teach SEL because of the expectations for kids and the attitudes of teachers-valuing compliance above all else in order to be able to "manage" the classroom. There is so much adultism (aka oppression of children) and use of the tools of oppression at schools that it actually teaches that because one group has more power, they get to create the culture and give the other group fewer choices, less autonomy. Even SEL won't counter the cultural indoctrination that occurs in western schooling.

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    1. Hear hear !
      This is why my microschool is focused on child-led learning using the Agile Learning Centers model. People learn best when making their own decisions, and children are people, deserving of respect.

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    2. We sell students insultingly short in thinking that they won’t learn unless the subject is themselves or their personal interests. Mirrors are isolating.

      Young learners need windows, lots of windows – with as many different views as possible. Views that are as unfamiliar as they are eye opening. Views that are as unexpected as they are fascinating. Views that are as uncomfortable as they are enlightening. Views that, at their very best, will inspire individuality and the strongest driving force for authentic learning: human curiosity.

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  4. And from the conservative side, don't forget Bill Bennet and his character education program circa George H.W. Bush.

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  5. Too many students go through school convinced that they are "stupid" or that they "suck at math" or "no good in science" or . . . .

    We know that no one will ever be intellectually (or otherwise) stuck at age 8, or 12, or 16 yet we spend far too little time convincing them that they are a work in progress and that the most important word in their vocabulary should be, "yet".

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  6. This is why I love Conscious Discipline. It's not a set "curriculum" or program, but a way of life, a way of being, the fabric woven as the foundation of the school and/or classroom. It sees everyday interactions, especially moments of conflict, as teachable moments.
    It shifts perception from fear to love and changes everything.

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