by Lynne Shallcross, Mindshift: https://ww2.kqed.org/mindshift/2015/12/17/why-emotional-intelligence-is-vital-to-keep-students-on-track/
Academic learning is usually in the spotlight at school, but
teaching elementary-age students “soft” skills like self-control and
social skills might help in keeping at-risk kids out of criminal trouble
in the future, a study finds.
Duke University researchers looked at a program called Fast Track,
which was started in the early 1990s for children who were identified
by their teachers and parents to be at high risk for developing
aggressive behavioral problems.
The students were randomized into two groups; half took part in the
intervention, which included a teacher-led curriculum, parent training
groups, academic tutoring and lessons in self-control and social skills. The program, which lasted from first grade through 10th grade, reduced delinquency, arrests and use of health and mental health
services as the students aged through adolescence and young adulthood,
as researchers explained in a separate study published earlier this year.
The academic skills that were taught
as part of Fast Track turned out to have less of an impact on crime and
delinquency rates than soft skills, which are associated with emotional
intelligence.
In the latest study, researchers looked at the “why” behind those
earlier findings. In looking at the data from nearly 900 students, the
researchers found that about a third of the impact on future crime
outcomes was due to the social and self-regulation skills the students
learned from ages 6 to 11.
The academic skills that were taught as part of Fast Track turned out
to have less of an impact on crime and delinquency rates than soft
skills, which are associated with emotional intelligence. Soft skills
might include teaching kids to work cooperatively in a group or teaching
them how to think about the long-term consequences when they make a
decision, whereas teaching physics is an example of a hard skill.
“The conclusion that we would make is that these [soft] skills should
be emphasized even more in our education system and in our system of
socializing children,” says Kenneth Dodge,
a professor of public policy and of psychology and neuroscience at Duke
who was a principal investigator in this study as well as in the
original Fast Track project. Parents should do all they can to promote
these skills with their children, Dodge says, as should education
policymakers.
“To the extent we can improve those skills, we can improve outcomes
in delinquency and juvenile crime,” says Dodge, who is also director of
Duke’s Center for Child and Family Policy. The study was published
Wednesday in the journal Child Development.
To Neil Bernstein, a
psychologist in Washington, D.C., who specializes in child and
adolescent behavior disorders, the researchers’ findings seem consistent
with he’s seen on the ground in working with children for more than 30
years. And while he says agrees with the importance of teaching
self-control and social skills, he would add empathy to the list, too.
“Empathy is what makes us aware of the feelings of others and when
you’re empathic, you’re much less likely to hurt someone else’s
feelings,” says Bernstein, who serves on the advisory board for the
Partnership for Drug-Free Kids and is the author of multiple books,
including How to Keep Your Teenager Out of Trouble and What to Do if You Can’t.
Being in tune with how someone else feels might also make adolescents
steer clear of bullying and other “behaviors of concern,” Bernstein
says.
Empathy was not one of the skills that were directly measured in this
study, according to Lucy Sorensen, a Ph.D. student at Duke and lead
author of the study. But there were several measures of “prosocial
behavior,” Sorensen says, defined as voluntary behavior intended to
benefit others.
While Bernstein thinks the study’s findings are meaningful and could
potentially serve as a model for schools, he says that collectively
getting a school system, teachers, parents and students all motivated
enough to take part in an intervention like Fast Track is challenging.
Several parts of the Fast Track study have been picked up successfully in other school settings,
Sorensen says, such as a social-emotional learning curriculum called
Promoting Alternative Thinking Strategies, or PATHS. Programs like Fast
Track need buy-in from school systems, teachers and parents, she says,
and that can be a tough sell. But she adds that it’s a strength of Fast
Track that the students get support both at school and at home.
“There’s a growing and new understanding of what it takes to be
successful as an adolescent and an adult,” Dodge says. “It used to be
that what we thought all it took was academic skills. Reading and math
are very important for tasks that require reading and math. Self-control
is important for life tasks that require self-control - that’s what
avoiding arrest and violent crime is all about.”
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