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Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) – Core Competencies, School-Based Programmes

Definition and Core Concept

This article defines Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) as the process through which children and adults acquire and apply knowledge, attitudes, and skills to manage emotions, set and achieve positive goals, feel and show empathy for others, establish and maintain positive relationships, and make responsible decisions. The Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning (CASEL) identifies five core competencies: self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decision-making. SEL is typically delivered through universal school-based programmes (standalone lessons or integrated into curricula), teacher professional development, and whole-school climate initiatives. Core features: (1) explicit instruction in emotion regulation and social skills, (2) opportunities for practice in real-life situations, (3) integration with academic content, (4) family and community involvement. The article addresses: stated objectives of SEL; key concepts including the five CASEL competencies, implementation fidelity, and theory of change; core mechanisms such as curriculum design, teacher training, and school climate; international comparisons and debated issues (effectiveness variability, measurement challenges, cultural appropriateness); summary and emerging trends (trauma-informed SEL, digital SEL, federal policies); and a Q&A section.

1. Specific Aims of This Article

This article describes SEL without claiming superiority of any specific programme. Objectives commonly cited: improving academic achievement, reducing emotional distress and behavioural problems, preventing bullying and violences, promoting positive school climate, and preparing students for workforce social demands. The article notes that SEL has been widely adopted in many countries (particularly US, UK, Australia, Singapore) with substantial government and philanthropic investment.

2. Foundational Conceptual Explanations

Key terminology:

  • CASEL five core competencies:Self-awareness: Identifying emotions, accurate self-perception, recognising strengthsSelf-management: Impulse control, stress management, self-motivation, goal-settingSocial awareness: Perspective-taking, empathy, appreciating diversityRelationship skills: Communication, cooperation, conflict resolution, seeking helpResponsible decision-making: Analysing situations, evaluating consequences, ethical responsibility
  • Implementation fidelity: Degree to which an SEL programme is delivered as designed (dosage, adherence, quality). Higher fidelity correlates with better outcomes.
  • Theory of change: SEL improves outcomes by enhancing protective factors (self-regulation, social competence) and reducing risk factors (aggression, emotional distress).

Meta-analytic evidence: Durlak et al. (2011, 2015) meta-analysis of 213 school-based SEL programmes (K-12, 270,000 students):

  • Compared to controls, SEL students showed: improved social-emotional skills (d=0.57), attitudes (d=0.23), prosocial behaviour (d=0.24), academic achievement (d=0.27), and reduced conduct problems (d=0.22), emotional distress (d=0.24).
  • Programmes with SAFE practices (Sequenced, Active, Focused, Explicit) had larger effects (d=0.32 vs 0.10 for non-SAFE).

3. Core Mechanisms and In-Depth Elaboration

Curriculum delivery models:

  • Standalone lessons (e.g., Second Step, PATHS, RULER): Weekly 30-50 minute lessons.
  • Integrated into academic content (e.g., literature discussion of character motives, social studies conflict analysis).
  • Whole-school climate approach (e.g., Responsive Classroom): SEL embedded in daily routines, discipline policies, adulst–student interactions.

Teacher training and support: Effective SEL requires teacher modelling of skills, positive classroom management, and ongoing coaching. Studies show 10-20 hours of initial training plus follow-up coaching yields stronger effects (d=0.34) than one-time workshops (d=0.12).

Measurement instruments:

  • Self-report questionnaires (e.g., DESSA, SSIS, PANAS) for older students.
  • Teacher rating scales (e.g., BASC-3, SDQ) for younger students.
  • Performance tasks (e.g., ability to label emotions in faces, social problem-solving scenarios).
  • Reliability ranges α=0.70-0.90. Validity correlations with external criteria moderate (r≈0.3-0.5).

4. Comprehensive Overview and Objective Discussion

International implementation:

Country/RegionAdoption levelCommon programmes
United StatesWidespread (all 50 states have SEL standards)Second Step, PATHS, RULER, Positive Action
United KingdomNational policy (PSHE curriculum includes SEL)SEAL, PATHS
AustraliaState-based (e.g., NSW Wellbeing Framework)KidsMatter, Friendly Schools
SingaporeNational (Character and Citizenship Education)MOE-developed SEL curriculum
FinlandIntegrated into curriculum (no standalone)Part of national core curriculum

Debated issues:

  1. Effectiveness variability: Meta-analyses show average positive effects, but individual studies range from d=-0.20 to d=+0.80. Fidelity, student demographics, and outcome measurement explain variance.
  2. Cultural appropriateness: Many SEL programmes developed in Western contexts (white, middle-class) may not align with collectivist cultures (e.g., “express your feelings” vs. group harmony). Adaptations show improved outcomes but less evidence.
  3. Who delivers SEL? Specialists (counsellors, SEL coaches) produce larger effects (d=0.37) than classroom teachers (d=0.22), but less scalable.
  4. Standardised testing pressure: Schools with high-stakes academics often reduce SEL time. Some evidence that SEL improves test scores (d=0.27), conflicting with zero-sum perception.

5. Summary and Future Trajectories

Summary: SEL programmes teach emotion regulation, social skills, and responsible decision-making. Meta-analyses show small to moderate positive effects on academic, behavioural, and emotional outcomes, with larger effects for higher-fidelity, SAFE programmes. Implementation and cultural adaptation remain challenges.

Emerging trends:

  • Trauma-informed SEL: Integrating understanding of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) into SEL. Pilot studies show improved outcomes for high-ACEs students.
  • Digital SEL: App-based delivery (e.g., ClassDojo, Zones of Regulation apps). Early RCTs show smaller effects than in-person (d≈0.1-0.2).
  • State and federal policies: US states (e.g., Illinois, Kansas) have SEL standards. Federal Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) allows SEL as school quality indicator.

6. Question-and-Answer Session

Q1: Does SEL reduce bullying?
A: Meta-analyses show SEL reduces bullying perpetration by approximately 20-30% (d≈0.22) and victimisation by 15-25% (d≈0.17). Effects smaller than targeted anti-bullying programmes but broader in scope.

Q2: What is the cost of SEL programmes?
A: Ranges from 10−50perstudentperyear(materials,minimaltraining)to10−50perstudentperyear(materials,minimaltraining)to150-300 (full curriculum, coaching, assessment). Cost-benefit analyses suggest 11returnper11returnper1 invested (reduced special education, mental health, crime).

Q3: Are SEL effects long-lasting?
A: Follow-up studies (1-3 years post-programme) show maintenance of skills (d≈0.15-0.25), but effects diminish over time without reinforcement. Booster sessions recommended annually.

Q4: Is SEL appropriate for high school students?
A: Yes, but programmes must be developmentally appropriate (e.g., career decision-making, romantic relationship skills). Effects are smaller than in elementary (d=0.15 vs 0.30). High school implementation is more challenging due to schedule constraints.

https://casel.org/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK554622/ (Durlak meta-analysis)
https://www.air.org/sites/default/files/2020-05/SEL-student-outcomes-brief-May-2020.pdf
https://www.rand.org/education/projects/measuring-social-and-emotional-learning.html

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