Knowing yourself
Students start the year looking inward. They notice what they feel, what they care about, and what they are good at, and they begin to see how those things shape the choices they make at school and at home.
This is the stretch when students start running their own inner lives instead of just reacting. They learn to name what they're feeling, notice why, and pick a next move that fits the situation. Friendships get more complicated, so students practice listening across differences, sorting out conflicts, and asking for help without shame. By spring, students can talk through a hard moment, weigh the choice in front of them, and think about how it lands on the people around them.
Students start the year looking inward. They notice what they feel, what they care about, and what they are good at, and they begin to see how those things shape the choices they make at school and at home.
Students practice handling stress, frustration, and the urge to react. They learn small habits that help with homework, deadlines, and tough moments, like pausing before responding or breaking a big task into steps.
Students work on understanding people who think, live, or grew up differently. They practice listening, asking honest questions, and noticing the adults and friends they can turn to when something is hard.
Students focus on how to be a good friend, classmate, and teammate. They practice saying what they mean, working through disagreements without making them worse, and asking for help when they need it.
Students learn to slow down before a decision and think about who it affects. They weigh the upsides and the costs, including online choices, and consider how their actions land on the people around them.
Students learn to notice what they're feeling, recognize what they're good at, and understand how their emotions shape the choices they make.
Students practice recognizing their own emotions and reactions, then choosing how to respond. That includes staying calm under pressure, thinking before acting, and keeping schoolwork organized enough to hit their goals.
Students learn to see situations from other people's points of view, including people whose lives look different from their own. They also practice identifying who and what they can turn to for help at school, at home, and in their community.
Students practice the skills that keep friendships and group work healthy: listening well, handling disagreements without making things worse, and asking for help or stepping in when someone else needs it.
Students practice weighing the pros and cons of a choice before acting, thinking about how it affects themselves and the people around them. This applies to personal decisions and how students treat others in everyday situations.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| The abilities to understand one's own emotions, thoughts Grades 6-8 | Students learn to notice what they're feeling, recognize what they're good at, and understand how their emotions shape the choices they make. | MD-SEL.1.6-8 |
| The abilities to manage emotions, thoughts Grades 6-8 | Students practice recognizing their own emotions and reactions, then choosing how to respond. That includes staying calm under pressure, thinking before acting, and keeping schoolwork organized enough to hit their goals. | MD-SEL.2.6-8 |
| The abilities to understand the perspectives of and empathise with others… Grades 6-8 | Students learn to see situations from other people's points of view, including people whose lives look different from their own. They also practice identifying who and what they can turn to for help at school, at home, and in their community. | MD-SEL.3.6-8 |
| The abilities to establish and maintain healthy and supportive relationships… Grades 6-8 | Students practice the skills that keep friendships and group work healthy: listening well, handling disagreements without making things worse, and asking for help or stepping in when someone else needs it. | MD-SEL.4.6-8 |
| The abilities to make caring and constructive choices about personal behavior… Grades 6-8 | Students practice weighing the pros and cons of a choice before acting, thinking about how it affects themselves and the people around them. This applies to personal decisions and how students treat others in everyday situations. | MD-SEL.5.6-8 |
Students learn to name what they're feeling, handle stress, get along with people who are different from them, and think before they act. The five big areas are knowing yourself, managing yourself, understanding others, building relationships, and making good choices.
Ask what's on their plate before jumping in with advice. Help them break big things, like a project or a hard week, into smaller steps with a calendar or a list. A short walk, a snack, or ten quiet minutes often works better than a long talk.
Try side-by-side time instead of face-to-face questions. Driving, cooking, or walking the dog often loosens things up. Ask about one specific thing, like lunch or a class they like, instead of the open-ended how was your day.
Start the year with self-awareness and classroom norms so students can name feelings and set goals. Move into self-management and relationship skills by winter. Save the harder work on conflict, perspective-taking, and decision-making for spring, once trust is in place.
By spring, students should be able to name a strong feeling without acting on it, plan their own week, listen to a classmate they disagree with, and ask for help from a specific adult. They won't do it perfectly, but they should know what the moves are.
Impulse control, conflict resolution, and asking for help. Students this age often have the vocabulary but freeze in the moment. Short role-plays and class meetings after real incidents tend to move the needle more than standalone lessons.
Listen first and name what you hear, like that sounds lonely or that felt unfair. Then ask what they want to happen next before suggesting anything. Practice one sentence they could actually say to the friend tomorrow.
Use texts, news stories, and case studies where students have to argue from a perspective that isn't their own. Pair this with structured talk protocols so quieter students get airtime. Avoid putting any one student in the position of speaking for a group.