Panorama Park Elementary 22-23

OUR CONTEXT


OUR LEARNERS

Social and emotional learning (SEL) is an integral part of education and human development. It is the process through which all young people and adults acquire and apply the knowledge, skills, and attitudes to develop healthy identities, manage emotions, achieve personal and collective goals, feel and show empathy for others, establish and maintain supportive relationships, and make responsible and caring decisions. The “CASEL Wheel” is a framework that addresses five core social and emotional competencies. These are broad, interrelated areas that support learning and development (Social Awareness, Social Awareness, Self-Management, Responsible Decisions Making, Relationships Skills). Circling them are four key settings where students live and grow. Our hope is for a school and home community partnership. These skills are embedded in all subject areas in BC's curriculum. Below, we celebrate our learners' successes and strengths in the areas of:

  • Self- Awareness
  • Social Awareness

Self- Awareness

Our learners understand that learning requires exploration of one's identity. 

Students were encouraged to explore the origin of their name.  As a class, they discussed: who gave them their name, if it meant something special, if there was a cultural significance and the importance of pronouncing it correctly. Students value diversity and interact ethically with others. They are inclusive in their language and behaviour. Students recognize that everyone has something to contribute. 

Our learners can calm themselves, focus their attention, and interact effectively with others by practicing calm down strategies.

Some of our primary classes have been focusing on different ways to calm their bodies. During circle time, they have talked about visualizing a happy place, looking for triggers when they feel sad or worried, and practicing various strategies in the classroom. They have practiced a range of breathing techniques such as breathing like a bee, whale, elephant, sniffing flowers, and so on. During their choice time, they have listened to soothing music and they have coloured peacefully in a calm environment. The class has practised asking for a break.  Students can take a sensory walk in the hallway when they ask for a break. The classes have discussed many ways for being calm, and students choose the one that worked best for them. 


In this video sample, one of our students identifies  self-calming strategies that helps her focus and reduce stress.

Our learners are able to demonstrate an awareness of their emotions. Our learners understand learning takes time and patience.

Every week, one of our intermediate classes begins their week by learning a new feeling word by sharing orally, visually, and in written form. This sets us up to help practise the word throughout the week. The feeling words give them a vocabulary word bank to use when we they need to express their feeling clearly to help advocate for themselves, solve our problems inside and outside the classroom and developing our well-being.

Students have their own feeling word journal which they use to create their own personal feeling dictionary. Students share their personal connection to the word which helps them build their comprehension of the vocabulary and build an application for the future. 

Our learners are aware of their external supports. 

 A SEL survey was administrated to our primary and intermediate students.  With the survey, students rated their perception of school climate, adult support, and sense of belonging. It was intended as an informal measure for individual classroom teachers to invite feedback from students and reflect on areas for growth.

Findings:

  • 89% of our primary students felt that they had friends at school
  •  90% of our intermediate students felt they had friends at school
  • 79% of our intermediate students felt that they work and play well with others who are different from them
  •  81% primary students felt people care about each other in their class.
  • 79% intermediate students felt they belong in their classroom and school community.

Social Awareness

Our learners are aware and respectful of others’ needs and feelings. They adjust their words and actions to care for their relationships. 


This student's reflection "we help hearts around the world" captures the essence of being aware of others needs and feelings. The reflection demonstrates that our learners understand that learning is a reciprocal relationship.

Our learners can identify and develop an appreciation for different perspective on issues. Our students can show empathy, disagree respectfully and create space for others to use their voices.

Students develop connections and a sense of wellness within their class communities when given opportunities and strategies to navigate peer conflicts. During story time and literature circles, students participate in discussions by listening, asking questions and rephrasing what they have heard. They learn language that helps them to solve and to navigate peer conflicts in a respectful manner. Anchor charts are provided to help reinforce strategies.

In one of our intermediate classes, every Monday, a student shares a picture book or an excerpt from a book on SEL. They make connections, ask questions, visualize and infer. This help students think about how they can apply different strategies in their everyday life to become a responsible individual that contributes positively to their community, peers and environment. Students are able to empathize with others and appreciate their perspectives, resolve problems peacefully and develop healthy relationships.

Our learners can collaborate and develop their ideas through cooperation and commit to the needed roles and responsibilities as members of a group.  Our students negotiate respectfully and follow through on a plan, strategies and actions as they share resources, time and space.

In teams, students designed and built a Rube Goldberg machine, going through the engineering process of identifying the problem, brainstorming for solutions, designing an improved prototype, building the new version and redesigning a product with improvement. 

Student's reflection:

 "The activity is all about making a machine that pulls down the screen.
The activity’s goal is pulling the screen down. The activity shows are learning by sharing ideas and talking to others."

Our learners can engage in informal and structured conversations in why they listen, contribute, develop an understanding and relationships, and learn to consider diverse perspectives.  Our learners are able to communicate by receiving and presenting information. 

In one of our kindergarten classes, the message for Pink Shirt Day was "together we can make a difference when we work together treat others with dignity and respect." On this day the class shared "The Smallest Girl in the Smallest Grade" by Justin Roberts. From this story the students easily connected to the fact that they are the smallest students in the smallest grade. Students were challenged to think about what they do to make their school a better place. 

Students were asked to create a poster that showed others in the school others what they do as individuals to make their school a better place in the hopes that others will learn from our example.  The children all hung their posters around the school to share their message with the school population.


Their message was then brought to life by using the Chatterpix app to turn themselves into a Panorama Park Love Monster. The “Love Monster” picture book series is by Rachel Bright. The series is all everyone needing love in their life and what things we can do to show love to others.

Our learners can demonstrate an understanding of others viewpoints. Our learners can demonstrate awareness and respect for individual difference and similarities.  

Our learners make their thinking visible by using many different strategies. The classroom teacher read the story "The Feather" by Phil Cummings and Phil Lesnie in which a migrating bird observes a variety of human struggle in the form of war and a natural disaster.  Both the bird and humans are searching for safety and comfort. The bird conveniently drops a single feather to each of the struggling characters offering hope and peace.

Students used their background knowledge and put the 'pieces of the puzzle' together to understand what the authors 'shows' us rather than 'tells' us to make meaning as they read. 

Our learners are able to display empathy for others. Our learners can defend human rights and advocate for issues.

Students brought stories to life by adding details and description to create interesting and engaging stories. They used sequencing vocabulary (first, next, after that, then, later, finally) to create clear, organized writing. Students created stories with unique characters, setting, plot, problem and solution. They were visually able to represent a vibrant setting by using a green screen technology to bring their story 'to life.'


As this student tells her story, she demonstrates her ability to influence and entertain others by making sense of her experiences. She demonstrates social awareness by being able to emphasize with the characters in the story and being able to appreciate their perspectives.

Our learners are able to contribute to our community. They are aware of of the impact of their decisions, actions, and footprint.

Some of our kindergarten students are learning about plants; what they need and how they grow. Learning and taking care of plants sparks curiosity, and understanding of how food and other living things grow, cause and effect and responsibility. 

Students in kindergarten to grade five discussed and brainstormed how to take care of our earth.

Student Reflection:

"I can help protect Turtle Island by riding my scooter to the park and turning off the water taps."

OUR FOCUS

Each and every day, among the variety of learning experiences presented to our learners, our educators focus on intentionally building connections to our students' cultures, languages, life experiences and stories to scaffold their learning. Our goal is to create trusting relationships and safe caring environments. Our educators get to know our learners by their stories, experiences, strengths, stretches, goals and curiosities. The focus is on self- awareness and social awareness.

Our team of educators provide our learners with these essential skills to set them up for success in today's rapidly changing world. To identify students’ overall strengths and areas for growth, we tracked self awareness in some of our intermediate cohorts of learners across subject areas. These cohorts include a diverse range of learners that are representative of our school’s population.

The SEL competencies we focused on in relation to “self/soical awareness” include:

Our students' learning goals include:

  • Increase opportunities for all students to reflect on their own self-awareness and continue to build an understanding of self by focusing on identifies (feelings, friendships, culture and community).
  • Support students by teaching them greater self-awareness  skills and strategies to effectively manage themselves and their learning (fidget tools, self-reg strategies, environmental supports).

Below are examples of our students’ classroom experiences as they relate to self awareness.

Increase opportunities for all students to reflect on their own self-awareness and continue to build an understanding of self by focusing on identifies (feelings, friendships, culture and community).

Our students took part in weekly sharing circles as a means of building a classroom community by fostering a climate of care and connection. Students identified values they wanted for the circle including listening, honesty, respect and…Weekly, they reflect and share out on various questions that explore their identity including who is your role model, childhood happy memories, naming skills and talents, what they value about their family, which superpowers you would like to have? Students developed their leadership by taking on various roles in the circle: they ring the chime, choose an opening/closing quote and pose questions for group. 

Support students by teaching them greater self-awareness  skills and strategies to effectively manage themselves and their learning (fidget tools, self-reg strategies, environmental supports).

Our students engaged in listening and reflecting to picture stories that focused on various themes. Strategic thinking techniques were modelled that revolved around core anchor picture books.  Students engaged in discussions, reflections and shared their thinking with their classmates. Students engaged in extensive hands-on activities that were designed to help them think more deeply, learn more widely, and develop a more powerful understanding of what it means to be a responsible and compassionate person.

Second Step and Mind Up provided opportunities for our students to engage in discussions around a new theme every week. For example, same or different feelings. For each day of the school week, students listened to a story, engaged in a discussion, skill practice activity or a book that related directly to the theme. Our students were involved and encouraged to participate.


OUR NEXT STEPS

Our learners are developing their SEL skills and capacities. In the focus area of self awareness, students demonstrated an increase in their ability to:

  • Support students by teaching them greater self-awareness  skills and strategies to effectively manage themselves and their learning (fidget tools, self-reg strategies, environmental supports).
  • Increase opportunities for all students to reflect on their own self-awareness and continue to build an understanding of self by focusing on identifies (feelings, friendships, culture and community). 

Increase opportunities for all students to reflect on their own self-awareness and continue to build an understanding of self by focusing on identifies (feelings, friendships, culture and community). 

Our students reflected on feelings, friendships, and community. They listened to anchor books on themes of friendship and made connections to their personal experiences. 

Student's Learning Goals:

  • Identifying friendship problems and considered strategies to resolve them
  • Name at least one solution to resolving a friendship problem

Students listened and discussed the story “Nerdy Bird Tweets” by Aaron Reynolds. After reading the story, they identified the friendship before the problem, explained the problem and and how it was resolved. Students then made connections to a friendship problem they had experienced.

Students created a class generated anchor chart which recorded ways to help solve friendship problems.

Student’s took part in weekly Sharing Circles.

Our students took part in weekly sharing circles as a means of building a classroom community by fostering a climate of care and connection. Students identified values they wanted for the circle including listening, honesty, respect, caring… Weekly, they reflected and shared out on various questions that explore their identity including who is your role model, childhood happy memories, naming skills and talents, what they value about their family, which superpowers you would like to have? Students developed their leadership by taking on various roles in the circle: they ring the chime, choose an opening/closing quote and pose questions for group.

In this example students reflect on friendship by responding to the following question prompt: “What is a friendship problem you have had and how did you resolve it?”



The following are examples of student’s experience of Sharing Circle and why it is important.

 

When asked to reflect on this experience and comment on what they learned, over 68% of our cohort demonstrated they were able to build on an understanding of self by focusing on identities, (feelings, friendships, culture and community) in comparison to less than 40% in the fall.

Support students by teaching them greater self-awareness  skills and strategies to effectively manage themselves and their learning (fidget tools, self-reg strategies, environmental supports).

Students engaged in conversations and discussions around concepts and themes, like empathy, skills for learning, emotion management, friendship skills and problem solving. They participated in class meetings, zone check ins, one on one discussions where students were encouraged to identify their feelings and strategies for managing emotions and own conflict.  Within the day students viewed and engaged how to process mistakes and set backs  in a positive way. 

When asked to reflect on this experience and comment on what they learned, over 68% of our cohort demonstrated they were able to identify their feelings and strategies to effectively manage themselves in comparison to less than 40% in the fall.





Moving Forward

In consultation with our team and our above evidence, advancing our learners skillsets in self-awareness and social awareness have been effective. Our students have progressed in their understanding of themselves and how this connects to their interactions with their peers, our school, and the surrounding community. As we continue with this work, we will build on it in the following ways.

Social - Awareness

  • Using conversational skills to identify, to develop and to understand the perspective of others during mathematical numbers talks (choral counting collections)
  • Create more opportunities for students to take ownership of their learning to develop, to understand and to demonstrate global citizens (agents of change)




Surrey Schools

Formed in 1906, the Surrey School District currently has the largest student enrolment in British Columbia and is one of the few growing districts in the province. It is governed by a publicly elected board of seven trustees.

The district serves the cities of Surrey and White Rock and the rural area of Barnston Island.

Surrey Schools
14033 - 92 Avenue Surrey,
British Columbia V3V 0B7
604-596-7733