1 / 51

Becoming a Smarter educator: Empowering yourself with emotional intelligence

Becoming a Smarter educator: Empowering yourself with emotional intelligence. By Joyce A. DeVoss , Ph.D. Northern Arizona University. Overall GOAL.

Télécharger la présentation

Becoming a Smarter educator: Empowering yourself with emotional intelligence

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Becoming a Smarter educator: Empowering yourself with emotional intelligence • By • Joyce A. DeVoss, Ph.D. • Northern Arizona University

  2. Overall GOAL • To promote social interest in the school setting by integrating Adlerian and emotional intelligence components into the everyday school community . • “The striving for completion is life-long, and it can be utilized to correct an individual’s emotional-social mistakes and direct his or her daily activity in a more useful way.” (Adler)

  3. Educational Objectives • PARTICIPANTS WILL LEARN: • Components of the Six Seconds Emotional Intelligence (EQ) Model, including eight competencies that enhance social interest in the classroom and educational community. • How to incorporate EQ education into classroom lessons to build a sense of community and how to model the eight Six Seconds emotional intelligence competencies in the classroom and the school.

  4. WHAT IS EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE?

  5. Emotional Intelligence • Emotional intelligence is the “capacity for recognizing our own feelings and those of others, for motivating ourselves and for managing emotions well in ourselves and in our relationships”(Goleman,1998).

  6. Emotional intelligence (eq) • Emotional intelligence is the ability to perceive emotions, to access and generate emotions so as to assist thought, to understand emotions and emotional knowledge, and to reflectively regulate emotions so as to promote emotional and intellectual growth (Mayer & Salovey, 1997).

  7. Emotional intelligence (eq) • Emotional intelligence (EQ) is the ability to use emotions effectively and productively” • (Six Seconds, 2011).

  8. Relevant Adlerian Concepts • All behavior is purposeful. We utilize our emotions to support our goals. • People behave in ways to feel more superior and less inferior, to be successful. Our emotions are internal feedback that can help us in our striving. • People behave in ways to become the fictionalized ideal person they desire. Emotions are part of the journey. • Understanding one’s relationship to others is a step in understanding oneself. Emotional literacy is a requisite for social interest.

  9. Additional Adlerian Concepts continued • People need to be educated to value and exhibit social interest, concern for others. (relates to Noble Goal competency) • Unsolved problems of an individual often become problems of society. We need learn to Apply Consequential Thinking. • Life style analysis is an assessment of a person’s habitual responses to frustration, responsibility and need for initiative. (Recognizing Patterns competency)

  10. WHY DO ADLERIANS CARE ABOUT EQ? • “The educational ideal must assure usefulness to the community.” (Adler) • EQ competencies translate into specific social-interest enhancing behaviors that can be taught to students in • K-12 classrooms. • The desired outcome is a classroom in which respect, responsibility, caring ,cooperation, courage and encouragement are valued and an atmosphere in which students and staff thrive.

  11. Emotional Intelligence and learning • Emotional processes are important to student learning (Pellitteri, 2006). • Teachers identified a SEL curriculum to be highly effectively in improving classroom relationships and academic performance. (Freedman, 2003). • Learning deficits are often associated with poor self-concept, lack of motivation and social conflict (Hallahan & Kauffman, 1997). • In order to be “smarter” educators, teachers, counselors and other school personnel must understand how emotions influence cognition, motivation and social interaction.

  12. THE SIX SECONDS MODEL OF Emotional intelligence

  13. The Eight emotional intelligence competencies of the six seconds model

  14. Know yourself1. Enhance Emotional Literacy – the ability to recognize, identify, and accurately name feelings in self and others.2. Recognizing patterns – attending to cues from self and others noting recurring cues or ways of expression, reflecting on those patterns for understanding.

  15. Know yourself • Enhance Emotional Literacy – the ability to recognize, identify, and accurately name feelings in self and others. • Lesson: Mini Tales

  16. KNOW YOURSELF 2. RECOGNIZING PATTERNS Patterns at Work in our lives: name a pattern that you followed today that made your life easier and tell how it helped you.

  17. RECOGNIZING PATTERNS Now, let’s practice recognizing patterns in the following video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9fsNeyD5Ak4&feature=channel

  18. CHOOSE YOURSELF - the how • 3. Apply Consequential Thinking - examining • consequences of our choices and analyzing • interaction between cause and effect. Key • to managing impulses and acting • intentionally, not reacting. • Navigate Emotions - tapping emotional energy and information and selecting the most productive response.

  19. Choose yourself (contd) • 5. Engage Intrinsic Motivation – tapping and • developing our inner motivations through the • feelings we associate with particular values. • 6. Exercise Optimism - blending thinking and • feeling to shift our beliefs and attitudes to • become more proactive

  20. Choose yourself • Apply Consequential Thinking • Lesson: The Ripple Effect

  21. CHOOSE YOURSELF • Navigate Emotions • Lesson: Six ways to Peel a Banana: Challenges

  22. Choose Yourself • Intrinsic Motivation • Lesson: The Wooden Bowl

  23. What are your motivators?

  24. Choose yourself • Engage Optimism • Optimism is a learned, left brain, cognitive skill that often benefits from considering and practicing framing and reframing. Optimism is a choice. • Lesson: Our stories and symbols of overcoming

  25. Dr. Martin Seligman---My Hero

  26. Permanent Pervasive Powerless P P P I T E Temporary Isolated Effort Possible

  27. Happiest People(Dr. Sonja Lyubomirsky) • Devote a great amount of time to family and friends • Are comfortable expressing gratitude • Are often the first to lend a helping hand • Savor life’s pleasures and try to live in the present moment • Physical exercise is a weekly or daily exercise • Deeply involved in lifelong goals and ambitions • Practice optimism • Have the coping mechanisms to deal with challenges

  28. “No pessimist ever discovered the secrets of the stars, or sailed to an uncharted land, or opened a new heaven to the human spirit.” – Helen Keller (1880 - 1968)

  29. Strategies to Promote Optimism • Classroom talk about positives of day and how they can meet the challenges • Awareness of positives of relationships • Remembrances—more positive than negative • Make cartoons and use “bubbles” with prosocial and encouraging statements • Model how to problem solve adversities

  30. Give yourself • 7. Increase Empathy - Recognizing and appropriately responding to others’ emotions • 8. Pursue Noble Goals – Connecting your daily choices with your overarching sense of purpose

  31. Give yourself • Increase Empathy • Lesson: In Another’s Shoes

  32. Give Yourself • 8. Pursue noble goals • Lesson: Babema Story

  33. Summary of Goals of eq Student Interventions • One goal is to improve the social-emotional functioning, social interest and connectedness of students. • A related goal is to increase students’ motivation to learn and experience success and sense of competence and contribution.

  34. Additional Student EQ interventions • Interventions that facilitate verbal expression of emotions and needs in a socially appropriate manner. • Interventions that help students access emotional memory to help in decision making and problem solving. • Interventions that help students learn to regulate emotions, moderate intensity and tolerate emotional states depending on cues in the social environment.

  35. Additional Examples of eqInterventions • Use of feelings faces charts, photographs, pantomime games, mood graphs. • Role play games, brief film clips, stories, teachable moments associated with events • Early recollections accessing emotional memories, earliest recollections and how the student felt and what made them feel that way. • Think Good, Feel Good activities to tolerate and moderate intensity of emotions and goal setting activities.

  36. Mood Graphs

  37. GOALS-Self, Behaviors, Academic, Family, Friends

  38. Additional eq Interventions • Cooperative learning activities to develop social interest and ESI in all students and to prevent peer rejection and promote healthy problem solving and conflict resolution. • Promote understanding of major themes and ideas and ”deeper” messages rather than details. • Identify emotional responses to material and discuss relevance and meaning to student. • Read, write and share activities that reinforce emotional and social learning.

  39. Additional eq interventions • Peer tutoring to promote encouraging learning experiences among peers. • Democratic classroom meetings with agenda developed by everyone, consensus building, and group problem solving.

  40. Examples • Have students who are having trouble in a subject, ie., spelling or reading, tutor younger students in earlier grades, and report to the teacher and younger student what the student is doing correctly.

  41. Share! Care! Understand!LISTEN!

  42. Team work and cooperation

  43. Conclusions • It is the educator’s emotional responses to students that has a major impact on students’ behavior in the classroom (Stuhlman & Pianta, 2002). Teachers can develop unique EQ strategies to help each student develop a positive approach to learning and the courage to be imperfect. • The teacher-student relationship is reciprocal. Each one’s emotional responses affects the other’s emotional responses. • Students make self attributions based on the teacher’s affective response to them, ie., sympathy to failure can lead to discouragement (Gredler, 1997)

  44. More Conclusions • Students gain sense of competence when they have successful learning experiences that are personally relevant and have affective connections for them. • EQ interventions require that educators are aware of the emotional dynamics within students, the school environment and the learning experience.

  45. Just a Few More Conclusions • Facilitating positive emotions within the school learning community, classroom and peer groups will improve quality of students’ social interactions as well as sense of belonging. • Students who regulate their emotional reactions are likely to improve motivation to learn. • Consider every academic task and social interaction an opportunity to facilitate social and emotional awareness in students.

  46. References Bruck, A. (2009). Educating Children for Cooperation & Contribution: Vol II. Bellingham, WA: The Classical Adlerian Translation Project. Doty, G. (2001). Fostering Emotional Intelligence in K-8 Students. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press. Goleman, D. (2006). Social intelligence. New York: Bantam. Goleman, D. (1995). Emotional intelligence. New York: Bantam. Gredler, M.E. (1997) Learning and instruction: Theory into practice. 3rd ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Merrill. Mayer, J. D. & Salovey, P. (1997). What is emotional intelligence? In P. Salovey & D. J. Sluyter (Eds.) Emotional development and emotional intelligence. (3-31). New York: Harper Collins. McConnell Franklin, A. (2009). Choose to Change. Pellitteri, J. (2006). Emotionally intelligent inteventions for students with reading disabilities. Reading and Writing Quarterly, 22, 155-171. Stallard, P. (2002). Think good, feel good. NY: Wiley & Sons Stuhlman & Pianta, (2002). Teachers narratives about their relationships with children. Associations with behavior in classrooms. School Psychology Review, 31(20), 148-163. • http://www.6seconds.org

More Related