The Development of Teachers’ and Their Students’ Social and Emotional Learning During the “Learning to Be Project”-Training Course in Five European Countries
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Frontiers Research Foundation
Materia
Social and emotional learning Teacher training and development Social interaction skills Well-being Assessment Intervention
Date
2021-08-13Referencia bibliográfica
Berg M... [et al.] (2021) The Development of Teachers’ and Their Students’ Social and Emotional Learning During the “Learning to Be Project”-Training Course in Five European Countries. Front. Psychol. 12:705336. doi: [10.3389/fpsyg.2021.705336]
Sponsorship
Development of Practices and Methodologies for Assessing Social, Emotional and Health Skills within Education Systems 4120034; Erasmus+ KA3 program 582955-EPP-1-2016-2-LT-EPPKA3-PI-POLICY; Academy of Finland European Commission 308352; Finnish Strategic Research Council 327242Abstract
In recent years, the school curricula in many European countries have introduced social
and emotional learning (SEL). This calls for the teachers to have SEL competencies.
The present study evaluates teachers’ and their students’ readiness for SEL during
an intervention in five European countries. The participants were teachers (n = 402)
in five European countries; Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovenia, and Spain. The pre- and
post-measuring points for both the intervention and the comparison group were at
approximately the same time before and after the intervention. Comparison data
consisted of 159 teachers in the same countries. The training for the intervention group
lasted 16 h for the teachers and a maximum of 16 h for the principles and headmasters.
An additional 9 h of further monitoring took place. There were two student groups
participating in the study: the age group of 8–11 years (pre puberty) and the age
group of 12–15-years (adolescents). Students, whose teachers had participated in the
intervention, formed the intervention group (n = 2,552). Those students, whose teachers
did not participate in the intervention, formed the comparison group (n = 1,730). The
questionnaire data were collected at the beginning and at the end of the school year
for both age groups. The results indicated that there was a favorable development in
the intervention group in some of the measured skills among students, but the effects
were different for the two age groups. This study adds to both theoretical and practical
development of continuing teacher training about SEL and its possible role in reducing
problem behavior among the students.