This month in SEL: President Biden releases $81 billion to support state efforts to reintegrate students to in-person learning, how to lessen the burden on educators during the pandemic, the Inside SEL team introduces a new partnership with the first identity-based university ratings service… and more!
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President Biden Announces Delivery of $81 Billion to Aid States in Reopening
Earlier this month, President Biden and Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona outlined steps that the Biden-Harris Administration is taking to help schools safely and quickly reopen and meet the needs of all students.
One key element of these plans was the release of $81 billion of American Rescue Plan (ARP) funds to all 50 states to support their efforts to get students back in the classroom safely for in person learning, keep schools open once students are back, and address the academic, social, emotional, and mental health needs of all students.
Secretary Cardona also announced the launch of a new Summer Learning & Enrichment Collaborative, a partnership between the Department and the Council of Chief State School Officers and the National Governors Association, to help states use ARP funding to develop high-quality summer learning and enrichment programs for all students, with a focus on addressing the needs of student groups disproportionately affected by COVID-19.
Turnaround for Children Publishes Science and Equity-Driven Tools for Whole Child School Redesign
To both address the acute academic needs of students today and help to catalyze ongoing growth and social-emotional development, Turnaround for Children recently released a new set of science and equity-driven tools for whole child school redesign.
Use these resources to help prioritize relationships, meet students’ needs in personalized well, facilitate academic growth, and tap into their strengths, interests and talents.
The Role of SEL in Reintegrating to In-Person Learning
While reopening and transition plans will take shape differently in every district around the country, it’s clear that social-emotional learning (SEL) must be prioritized due to the impacts of the pandemic.
Social-emotional learning can foster a safe, supportive, and equitable environment that grounds students. It can also create the conditions for students to be able to access academic learning when they’re back in the physical classroom.
This piece offers six principles to ensure that SEL takes a front seat in the transition to in-person learning.
Caring for Educators During the Pandemic
Educators play a critical role in our communities, but lately—and increasingly— they are burdened with responsibilities more appropriate for other members of the community, such as counselors, social workers, nurses and community organizers. This juggling act is particularly salient in under-resourced communities, where grappling with these issues can be a daily struggle.
Since the onset of the pandemic nearly a year ago, educators have been tasked with addressing new, multi-layered challenges due to the primary and secondary trauma associated with COVID-19. Evidence suggests those responsibilities are taking an emotional toll on these critical members of our communities.
By attending to adults’ social and emotional needs while taking a community-wide approach, researchers from the Trauma Sensitive Pedagogy (TSP) project outline how we can reduce the burden on our educators.
Inside SEL Partners with Spotlight—the first identity based university ratings service
Our team at Inside SEL is honored to announce a new partnership with Spotlight, an organization focused on measuring college experiences through the lens of identity. Their mission: to empower people of marginalized populations to make identity-informed life decisions, especially when it comes to choosing a college.
Spotlight’s vision is a community, no matter how big or small, where voices are truly heard and equity is a reality. To realize this vision, it will take all of us, and we hope you will join us in the fight for equity.
To all of our readers in higher education or who have colleagues in higher education – please share Spotlight’s survey widely with college students using the link below. To learn how you can get involved, click here or follow Spotlight on Instagram.
Other Headlines:
- Fix Systems, Not Students: 5 Key Insights for Engaging in Equity Work
- PROOF POINTS: Four new studies bolster the case for project-based learning
- Where are all children in the whole-child movement?
- “Radical Care” to Let Black Boys Thrive
- Using telehealth to support student wellness, academic achievement
- In poor districts, pandemic overwhelms school counselors
- A New SEL Program Finds Its ‘Way’ to Schools, Survival and $1.5M in Seed Funding