Welcome!. Why Self-Regulation? What is needed in order to learn? Learning Physical Needs Met...

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Transcript of Welcome!. Why Self-Regulation? What is needed in order to learn? Learning Physical Needs Met...

Welcome!

Why Self-Regulation?What is needed in order to learn?

Learning

Physical Needs Met Cognitive Abilities

Social Skills Self-Regulation Skills

Opportunities

What is Self-Regulation?- Ability to control thoughts and actions to achieve personal goals and respond to environmental factors.

In a school setting: effective self-regulated learners stay on task, resist distractions, persist when tasks are difficult and respond to challenges appropriately.

What is Self-Regulation?

• Self-regulation is the ability to manage your– Energy levels

–Emotions– Behaviours – Attention

…in ways that are socially acceptable and help achieve positive goals, such as maintaining good relationships, learning and maintaining wellbeing.

Kramer show self-regulation!

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v3VCl3yBURs

CRE, Spring 2013

• 1=Emerging (with direct support); 2=Developing (with guided support); 3=Applying (with minimal support); 4=Extending

Managing powerful emotions

Accepting responsibility

Using language to resolve conflicts

1.00 1.50 2.00 2.50 3.00 3.50 4.00

All Students n=230

Average Rating

Car analogy

“My engine is running really fast, really slow or just right. Once I begin to understand my own arousal states I can learn to get to "Just Right" on my own.

Asleep, drowsy, hypoalert

Calm, alert, focused

Hyperalert, “flooded”

Four Key Practices to Enhance Children’s Self-Regulation

BE A DETECTIVE

– Try to figure out your child's stressors, what helps the child stay calm and alert, what leaves a child hypo-or hyper-aroused?

Asleep, drowsy, hypoalert

Calm, alert, focused

Hyperalert, “flooded”

EXERCISE

• For a child who wakes up irritable, exercise that works their deep muscles is very effective.

Asleep, drowsy, hypoalert

Calm, alert, focused

Hyperalert, “flooded”

PLAY• When play emerges from children's

interests it will engage their focus.• consider the perspectives of others

and figure out what they are thinking. • encourages communication about

wants and fosters connections between objects, people & ideas.

• is a challenge that children can take on which requires self-direction in order to maintain.

MindUP

Links cognitive neuroscience with mindful awareness and psychology:– Improve focus, concentration, and

academic performance– Reduce stress and anxiety– Handle peer-to-peer conflicts– Manage emotions and reactions– Develop greater empathy toward others– Choose optimism

• http://thehawnfoundation.org/mindup/mindup-curriculum/

MindUP

So far, our students have learned:– How their brain works and how being calm

and alert helps them to think and learn– How to do controlled breathing– How to be mindful with our senses

• http://thehawnfoundation.org/mindup/mindup-curriculum/

Belly Breathe

• http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=_mZbzDOpylA

References

• Canadian Self-Regulation Initiative– http://www.self-regulation.ca/

• MindUP Curriculum– http://thehawnfoundation.org/mindup/mindup-c

urriculum• CASEL Socio-Emotional Learning– http://www.casel.org/

• Canadian Consortium for Self-Regulated Learning– http://srlcanada.ca/