When I asked the question there was a long moment of silence as folks considered it. Slowly, people started to sit up, lean in and engage in the conversation in a new way. One educator asked me to clarify how her beliefs might shape learning outcomes and language in her classroom.
Earlier in the day she had mentioned how student choice and voice was really important to her. She believed that for learners to fully engage and take academic risks, they needed choice and voice in their learning environment. I asked her how she honored this belief in her task design, classroom language and cultural norms. She didn’t know. I asked her to use her most recent Hāpara Workspace as an artifact for reflection. Could she see her values represented in the Workspace?
Reviewing how Workspaces support values, beliefs and learning outcomes
I moved the conversation forward by asking teachers to partner up. They had to share a link to a Workspace they’d created and spend 20 minutes reviewing each other’s Workspaces. They would consider what values, beliefs and learning outcomes were supported by the Workspace.
After reviewing the Workspaces, teachers shared their reflections with the Workspace creator. Then they found another group and partnered with them to reflect on what they learned from the exercise. As we were reflecting as a large group, several teachers asked if we could pause the planned agenda. They wanted to have time to edit their Workspaces to match what they had learned from our conversation.
Adding SEL language into Workspace designs
When we came back as a group, I asked them if we could continue working together off script. They agreed. I felt that it would be important to meet the goals for the day if we included SEL language in the design of their Workspaces. If we were to really investigate ways to rebuild a learning community, we needed to incorporate social emotional learning into their Workspace design and language.
I asked them if we could review their Workspaces to include the three components from CASEL’s SEL-Focused Classroom:
- a supportive classroom climate
- integration of SEL into academic instruction
- explicit SEL instruction.
Round one: Examining SEL language to create a supportive classroom climate
First, we examined each Workspace card from the perspective of a supportive classroom climate.
A supportive classroom climate helps students to feel emotionally safe, part of a community of learners, motivated, and challenged. This type of environment creates a strong foundation for students to engage fully and take academic risks. This includes: community-building, belonging and emotional safety, and student-centered discipline. – CASEL 2021
During round one, teachers examined the SEL language they used to invite their learners into the Workspace. They also looked at how they were using their task design to create a learning community. How were students encouraged to take risks and demonstrate what they know, understand and can do?