The Impact of SEL and Mindfulness in Schools
In recent years, schools and communities have experienced significant challenges: increased complexity of need, rising concerns around mental health, and greater demands on services have created ongoing pressure for both staff and young people. Many are navigating uncertainty, heightened expectations, and more complex day to day experiences, with young people often feeling this most acutely.
Across schools globally, leaders, teachers and students continue to respond to these challenges. Wellbeing has rightly moved higher up the agenda, with growing recognition that effective education depends on supporting both emotional and academic development.
At the same time, wider pressures continue to affect the workforce. Stretched budgets, recruitment and retention issues, and ongoing workload demands are leading many educators to reassess their roles. This movement within the workforce risks the loss of experienced, skilled and committed staff, with clear implications for consistency, relationships and outcomes for young people.
SEL and mindfulness as keys to success
So, how do we stem the flow of superb practitioners, as well as ensuring that students are being given every opportunity to thrive and fulfil their potential in all areas? With wellbeing now centre stage, perhaps it is time to consider a broader, more holistic approach to teaching and learning, and prioritise social and emotional learning and mindfulness. The question is: what do these terms mean in practice, and why are such approaches pivotal to both wellbeing and academic outcomes across our school communities?
What is Social and Emotional Learning?
According to the EEF, social and emotional learning, or SEL, '…seeks to improve pupils' decision-making skills, their interactions with others and their self-management of emotions, rather than focusing directly on the academic and cognitive elements of learning.'
Most SEL teaching focuses on the development of 5 core competencies: self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decision-making. While, at first glance, these may seem to have very little connection with academic performance and achievement, they are in fact the bedrock of creating effective, competent and resilient learners.
The skills and competencies delivered by a high-quality SEL approach equip individuals with the tools they need to succeed, not only academically but also personally. When students are explicitly taught techniques, through well-constructed and planned activities, to recognise their emotions, establish and maintain healthy relationships, and make positive, constructive choices, they become far more effective at handling the day-to-day pressures of life within and beyond the classroom.
Where does mindfulness fit in?
Although they are often grouped together, social and emotional learning (SEL) and mindfulness are two different, though complementary, practices. Indeed, when taught together and fully integrated into classroom life, the impact that they can have on an individual and the people around them is magnified.
Put simply, SEL is an 'outside-in' approach where we explicitly teach a skill (for example, recognising emotions using a feelings wheel, or writing a gratitude list), allow time for practice and then move onto the next skill. Mindfulness, on the other hand, is an 'inside-out' approach, that focuses predominantly on one of the SEL competencies (self-awareness) and helps individuals to be fully present and aware of their inner thoughts and feelings.
Through supporting students to raise their awareness of and connection between feelings, thoughts and behaviour, using techniques such as deep breathing, a good mindfulness practice enables them to regulate their emotions and quieten their mind. Skills such as these can be especially helpful when faced with a triggering or difficult situation. Because they are paying attention to their feelings, students can practise the 'pause': rather than reacting in any given circumstance, they can step back, pause, and choose a more appropriate response.
By integrating both disciplines into daily classroom life, we vastly increase the likelihood of young people developing and embedding skills around self-awareness, self-management, relationship-building and decision-making – all of which have the power to positively impact academic performance.
Benefits for all
Schools are complex ecosystems, where different stakeholders – leaders, teachers and students – coexist and interact on a daily basis. Every single member of a school community, therefore, stands to benefit from an environment that supports SEL and mindfulness. So how do we foster this culture of social and emotional awareness in our schools?
- Building strong relationships
Understanding, compassion and empathy are key characteristics of any effective learning environment, so to successfully develop a practice where both SEL and
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