For those who cannot attend the live webinar on March 20, a recording of the webinar will be available for a week following the live webinar.
In today’s world of virtual, hybrid, and in-person learning, our students’ have struggled with the challenges of self regulation. Yet their personal abilities to appropriately manage their affect, behaviors, and cognition (ABCs) are essential in achieving school success. Self-regulation for learning is the ability to effectively balance the ABCs to pursue worthy academic goals. Students who under-perform or struggle to achieve may lack the coordination between their feelings (affect), essential learning strategies (behaviors), and meta-cognitive thought processes (cognition). Join this interactive virtual webinar to learn a holistic approach to assisting all students in gaining greater social/emotional well-being, managing behaviors, and acquiring valuable thinking tools to be successful in school and beyond.
As an educator, you know what you want for your students. You want them to seek out challenges, ask for help, resist distraction, and see mistakes as chances to try again. In other words, you want kids to be self-regulated learners. Self-regulation for learning (SRL) is the ability to effectively balance affect (how you feel), behaviors (what you do), and cognition (how to think) (ABCs) to pursue worthy academic goals. Teaching students to balance these three elements builds motivation, resilience, and college and career readiness. In this interactive session learn doable, evidence-based practices to help students engage in learning, build confidence, set and manage goals, develop habits of thinking, do effective home study, and reflect on their learning. You will hear real stories of students who achieved success through SRL skills. You will be provided a framework for both classroom practices and schoolwide implementation. Discover how schools have used this whole child approach to assisting students in gaining greater social/emotional well-being, developing scholarly behaviors, and acquiring valuable thinking tools to be successful in school and beyond.