Whole Child and Social Emotional Practices

Social-emotional learning (SEL) is an umbrella term that refers to the wide array of skills and mindsets that are vital for success in school and beyond. These skills and mindsets include, but are not limited to, self-awareness, relationship building, goal setting, conflict resolution, and community building. This work is a component of a whole child approach, honoring the humanity of educators and students alike, and creating environments of belonging and connection. ANet supports educators with their own SEL journey as well as helps to ensure academic conditions are built in a way that allows students to thrive.  The resources below are a starting point for building a toolkit of holistic and equitable student support. To dig deeper, reach out to your ANet coach.

Whole Child Learning Resources

Put District-Level Structures in Place

  • Framework with several activities for creating and maintaining a successful SEL foundation across a district.

    Tips for Implementation: If you’re new to SEL work, try the questionnaire to evaluate needs in your district and get paired with recommended activities.

    Go to Resource

Whole Child Learning Resources

Put School-Level Structures in Place

  • An action guide for school leadership teams that includes research, equity connections, guiding questions, vignettes, and suggested action steps.

    Tips for Implementation: Leaders, when designing Professional Learning experiences, refer to this guide for headlines of research and equity implications to ground the vision.

    Go to Resource

Whole Child Learning Resources

Develop a Holistic Mindset

  • Short article to help reground in the facts of SEL.

    Tips for Implementation: This article could be used as pre-work to a PLC, or the opening of a staff conference or professional learning session. Ask staff to share their thinking around SEL and use this article as a place to discuss widely held misconceptions.

    Go to Resource

Whole Child Learning Resources

Explore Universal Design for Learning

  • Framework to improve teaching and learning based on the science of how humans learn.

    Tips for Implementation: Use these guidelines as you analyze lesson plans or student work. Ask yourself: “How do our lesson plans value students’ humanity? Does the student work exemplify expert learners who are motivated, knowledgeable, and strategic? How did the design of the lesson or unit lead to these examples of student work?”

    Go to Resource

Whole Child Learning Resources

Plan and Teach with Intention

  • Videos and profiles of three schools currently implementing SEL practices.

    Tips for Implementation: Review these examples prior to analyzing data as a reminder of how SEL can be integrated alongside academics, and how student humanity and identity is at the heart of making academic shifts.

    Go to Resource

Disclaimer: Many of these links take you to external organizations. It is your responsibility to ensure you comply with any copyright or permissions restrictions before using these materials.

Designing for EVERY Student

Our role as educators is to support each other toward accomplishing educational equity. Asking and answering the question “why does equitable instruction in math/literacy and all content areas matter to me/my students?” is important to build a vision of excellence and actively advance instruction toward that vision. These definitions are designed to support in that work.

To engage in building a vision of equity with your team, explore our Equitable Instruction Infographic and Equitable Instruction Definitions to learn more.

Educational Equity

A guarantee that educators engage ALL students with meaningful support that they need to reach and exceed a common standard through high-quality instruction.

Institutional Equity

Leadership, practices and culture that guarantee educators engage ALL students with meaningful support they need to meet and exceed a common standard through high-quality instruction.