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Social and emotional learning (SEL) plays a key role in children's academic readiness and success. Students with strong SEL skills participate more in the classroom, have more positive attitudes about and involvement with school, are more accepted by classmates, and are given more instruction and positive feedback by teachers. Without SEL skills, young children are more likely to dislike school and perform poorly on academic tasks, and later experience grade retention and dropout (Raver & Knitzer, 2002).
In the same way that assessment is important for understanding students' academic learning, it is also important for understanding students' social and emotional learning. A well-designed SEL program includes not only evidence-based curricula and instruction (along with support for teachers), but also clear goals and benchmarks (i.e., standards), and tools for universal and targeted screening and progress monitoring.
As children mature, the role of SEL changes in their daily lives. During early childhood, SEL skills are organized around positive engagement with people and the environment, managing emotions within social interactions, and remaining connected with adults while successfully moving into the world of peers. These tasks can be difficult to navigate: young children are often required to sit still or wait, attend, follow directions, approach group play, and get along with others both at school and outside of school.
SEL tasks then change radically for children entering middle childhood. As children become aware of a wider social network, they learn to navigate the sometimes-treacherous waters of peer inclusion, acceptance, and friendship. Managing how and when to show emotion becomes crucial, as does knowing with whom to share emotion-laden experiences and ideas.
Adolescents are expected to form closer relationships with peers; successfully negotiate a larger peer group and other challenges in the transition to middle and high school; come to understand the perspectives of others more clearly than ever before; achieve emotional independence from parents and other adults while maintaining relationships with them; establish clear gender identity and body acceptance; prepare for adulthood; and establish a personal value or ethical system and achieve socially responsible behavior.
In the academic realm, older children and adolescents are required to become much more independent in their engagement with ever more complex coursework, and to consider how their achievement is moving them toward independence. SEL is therefore integral to a child's development from preschool through adolescence and is often related to his or her success in school.
Because SEL is so important, standards in this area are as crucial as those in any other area (and, I would argue, possibly more important). However, in the national arena, standards for SEL are few and unclear. Specifically, the Common Core State Standards, which are currently being adopted by 42 states, include an attempt at SEL-related skills within interpersonal and intrapersonal domains. The interpersonal domain includes teamwork, collaboration, and leadership. The intrapersonal domain includes intellectual openness, work ethic/conscientiousness, and positive self-evaluation. However, the NRC (2012) acknowledges that cognitive skills have been addressed more extensively than have interpersonal and intrapersonal skills, which have been covered more unevenly and have no assessment tools to benchmark students.
Since Common Core State Standards do not sufficiently or clearly address SEL needs, either in terms of standards or assessment, where does this leave the search for SEL assessment tools? It's useful to look at Dusenbury et al. (2015), which examines states' SEL standards. Several states have adopted excellent free-standing SEL standards (although not always across grade levels). The Illinois model is a good example of K-12 free-standing SEL standards (Illinois State Board of Education, 2006); here, each SEL standard for elementary, middle, and high school is organized around three goals that take in all the aspects of SEL:
Working with Kendziora and colleagues (2011), and after studying a wide range of tools, I have chosen to describe several assessment tools that fulfill many of the criteria important for effective SEL assessment. These tools are exemplary of quality SEL assessment for educational settings, and this is not an exhaustive list. For additional information about each tool, please refer to chapter 19 in the Handbook of Social and Emotional Learning.
For PreK evaluations, the Devereux Early Childhood Assessment, Second Edition (DECA) is a nationally-normed assessment that evaluates within-child protective factors associated with resiliency in preschool children. The assessment checklist can be completed by both parents and teachers, in either English or Spanish, and evaluates the presence of 27 positive behaviors common in preschool children (along with ten problem behaviors, which are not a focus here but potentially may be important in certain situations).
The Devereux Student Strengths Assessment and four-item accompanying screener, the DESSA-Mini, are behavior rating scales for elementary school-age children (K-8), completed by parents and/or teachers. The DESSA measures child strengths that map very directly onto the SEL skills described here. Specifically, it provides ratings on 72 items across eight scales, including:
A social-emotional composite score is also included, which is based on a combination of the eight scales. Web-based administration, scoring, and interpretation are available.
The Social-Emotional Assets and Resilience Scale (SEARS) for K-12 includes a screener, as well as 52- to 54-item Teacher (SEARS-T), Parent (SEARS-P), Child (SEARS-C), and Adolescent (SEARS-A) versions, and examines SEL from a conceptual framework that is close, but not identical, to that sketched here: responsibility, social competence, empathy, and self-regulation.
Given its level of comprehensiveness and focus on child strengths, the SEARS measures (although somewhat less conforming to the SEL model than the DESSA) provide useful information for intervention planning. They can also be applied to create student profiles for ongoing progress monitoring and subsequent prevention strategies.
The Social Skills Improvement System Rating Scales is a set of rating scales designed to assess children's social behavior and assist in the implementation of interventions, which is part of the whole system. This measure updates the widely used and positively evaluated Social Skills Rating Scales. Improvements include:
The system includes rating scales for teachers and parents covering the PreK-to-18-years age range, and self-report versions for students at the grade-school level and beyond.
The Behavioral and Emotional Rating Scale (BERS) and the Preschool BERS (PreBERS) are strength-based SEL instruments. Both show robust, replicable factor structures, as well as reliability and validity (i.e., both convergent and subgroup difference validity for Teacher, Parent, and Youth self-report versions; the publisher notes that school psychologists, as well as children's mental health, juvenile justice, and social service workers may also complete the BERS-2). A Spanish version is available for parent completion.
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