Teaching
Conflict Resolution and other Social and Emotional Skills
in Elementary School Physical Education
written by Laura
Zavatto, StageCoach Elementary, Selden NY
Fall
is a time for creating a sense of community with your students
so that the rest of the school year goes along smoothly. Programs
for "Social Emotional Learning" (SEL) and "Character
Education" focus on creating positive environments so
that no matter what unit you teach your students will benefit
in ways beyond the basic acquisition of physical skills. As
physical educators, we are ideally positioned to foster a
climate for learning via SEL and good character building.
Collaborative for Academic, Social & Emotional Learning
(CASEL) is one organization that "works to advance the
science and evidence-based practice of social and emotional
learning." Their scientifically rigorous studies of adolescents
between ages 5 – 18 show that SEL programs:
- Are effective in both school and after-school settings
and for students with and without behavioral and emotional
problems.
- Are effective for racially and
ethnically diverse students from urban, rural, and suburban
settings across the K-12 grade range.
- Improve students' social-emotional
skills, attitudes about self and others, connection to school,
and positive social behavior. They also reduce conduct problems
and emotional distress.
- Improve students' achievement
test scores by 11 percentile points.
For more information, go to www.casel.org.
The following are also some excellent publications available
specifically for physical educators for team building and
character education:
- Adventures in Peacemaking (W. Kreidler &
L.Furlong, Project Adventure)
- Adventure Curriculum for Physical
Education: Elementary & Secondary (J. Panicucci
& N. Stratton-Constable, Project Adventure)
- QuickSilver (K. Rohnke
& S. Butler, Project Adventure)
- Silver Bullets (K. Rohnke,
Project Adventure)
- Character Education (D.
Glover & L.A. Anderson, Human Kinetics)
- Team Building Through Physical
Challenges (D. Glover & D. Midura, Human Kinetics)
- More Team Building Challenges
(D. Midura & D. Glover, Human Kinetics)
- The New Games Book (The
New Games Foundation)
- More New Games (The New
Games Foundation)
- Best New Games (D. LeFevre)
I use a combination of these invaluable resources and have
found terrific success in creating a sense of community within
my classes. Here's an example of how I do it with my 3rd –
5th grade students.
After a couple of weeks of rules, procedures, listening games,
and other basic managerial-type activities, I start with a
game I created called "Peacemakers" (adapted from
the activity "The Peaceable Being" from Adventures
in Peacemaking). In preparation I made 25 blue cards with
the same script on each card (see below) and another 25 cards
with different scenarios (this is enough for a double class
and I have several!). All of the cards are laminated.
The Blue Card scripts read:
1. Tell the person what you didn't like.
2. Tell them how it made you feel.
3. Give the person a chance to talk to find out why he/she
did what he/she did to you.
4. How can you make peace?
5. Shake hands (or fist bump) and smile or simply agree to
disagree and walk away w/o further incident.
The other cards are yellow and have different actions
on them. They could be physical or verbal. Samples include:
1. Say, "Your team stinks!"
2. Say, "Loser!"
3. Gently bump into your partner as you pretend to walk past
him/her.
4. Stick out your tongue at your partner.
Cones are scattered around the gym and one blue card and one
random yellow card are placed next to each cone. Using music,
the students are asked to do various locomotor skills throughout
the gym space. When the music stops, the students pair up
at a cone. When each student has a partner, each student picks
up a card (either the blue card or the yellow card) and the
person with the yellow card begins to act out the scene. The
person with the blue card reacts with the given script mentioned
above.
I stress in the beginning that there is a lot of acting in
this game and many students love that. I keep one set of blanks
(one yellow and one blue) at one cone and that’s the
"bullying" cone where I go and do a pretend bullying
scene. There’s a lot of laughter and many students feel
really silly doing this with me but the conversations at the
closure of class make it all worthwhile. Students often share
with me their own real life experiences and as time allows,
we talk about these experiences with the whole group.
Throughout the school year I reinforce the blue script as
the real life scenes inevitably play out within the class.
The conflict resolution results are pretty amazing no matter
what unit we are working on. If a student is having a problem
with another student I say, "Remember the game Peacemakers
that we played in the beginning of the year?" I then
send them to a poster displayed on the gym wall and they follow
the script once more. They know what to do since we "played"
the game and in this way my class keeps running smoothly and
the conflict is usually resolved fairly quickly. Occasionally
I have to act as mediator if the two students cannot resolve
their differences, but for the most part the conflict resolution
skills learned previously are used effectively.
Following this activity, I spend about two to three weeks
(4 – 6 classes as I only see my students twice a week
for 40 min. per session) on basic group challenge activities
and vary the games depending on the grade level and maturity.
The Adventure Curriculum for Physical Education is a great
guide for starters. As you get comfortable with the material,
the scope and sequence of what you can do is endless. And
if the weather permits, there are many activities that can
be done outside.
In closing, in addition to the books mentioned above, I highly
recommend any Project Adventure course. They are invaluable
and well worth the time, effort and expense. Go to www.pa.org
for more information.
(Laura Zavatto has been teaching physical education (K-12
& Adapted PE) for over 25 years, for the last 17 years
at Stagecoach Elementary School in Middle Country Central
SD. She is a graduate of Adelphi and Columbia Universities
and an avid blue-water sailor who from 1989-1995 logged over
32,000 sea miles and visited 34 countries with her husband
onboard their 42' sailboat "PAL." Laura enjoys photography,
stained-glass work, braiding rugs, tennis, kayaking, cooking
(vegetarian meals in particular), gardening (particularly
my own heirloom vegetable varieties that I start from seed
every year), writing, reading the classics, traveling, spending
quality time with family and friends and making unique artsy
crafts.)
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