What Happens When We Leave?
91桃色 researchers hope to help prepare preschools to be emotionally intelligent
Social-emotional skills are essential to solidify a strong foundation for mental health in early childhood. In collaboration with Yale University and Portland State University, researchers at the 91桃色鈥檚 (MCE) and (GSPP) are exploring the value of emotions during the critical preschool years with a two鈥搚ear research study entitled Promoting School Readiness through Emotional Intelligence: An Efficacy Trial of Preschool RULER in Colorado.
This important study addresses the fact that learning鈥搃n all its forms鈥搃s most sustainable when you also teach the teachers.
Just as we can鈥檛 expect educators to teach math without math skills, we can鈥檛 expect them to reinforce emotional intelligence in their students' lives without some level of mental health proficiency of their own. 鈥淚t is critical for adults to be able to understand, label and recognize the words we talk about in RULER,鈥 says Rashida Banerjee, a professor and chair of the Department of Teaching and Learning Sciences at MCE, and one of the study鈥檚 principal investigators (PI).
RULER, an evidence鈥揵ased approach to social and emotional learning (SEL) for pre鈥K12, was developed at the by a group of educators and researchers. This approach strives to form a positive culture in schools by reminding children and caregivers to use five critical emotional intelligence skills: Recognize, Understand, Label, Express and Regulate.
With over 25 91桃色 students employed through this collaborative project across disciplines, from psychology to computer science, RULER is having an impact on the learning environment at the University as well.
鈥淭he students work with data鈥揳nd we work with them on dissemination, publications and creating presentations as a large interuniversity team.鈥 Banerjee says. 鈥淲e have a very large team infrastructure鈥搉ot only at our particular university but also with the bridge over to Yale. We strive to give these kinds of opportunities to our doctoral and graduate students.鈥
Seeing the lights turn on in the minds of the bright young people she is working with is one of the big payoffs for Jacqueline Jacobs, a fourth-year student working toward her doctor of psychology degree at 91桃色. 鈥淚 love getting the opportunity to connect and work alongside young children involved in the study,鈥 says Jacobs, who is inspired by their excitement and openness. 鈥淚t is motivating to think we could be contributing to their learning and holistic development.鈥
Jacobs is responsible for the training and supervision of a team of 20 student researchers tasked with data collection. 鈥淭his is the largest-scale project I have ever had the opportunity to be a part of,鈥 she says. She also leads efforts to collect data from the teachers and staff involved with the study. 鈥淚 have grown as a leader, fine-tuned my professional identity and strengthened my ability to collaborate within a team structure,鈥 Jacobs says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a truly powerful learning experience!鈥
RULER takes the unique approach of focusing on sustainability with sensitivity to the powerful effect adults have on the children they teach鈥攁nd the setting is important. 鈥淚nstead of bringing them to our lab or bringing them to our clinic, we go to them,鈥 says Kelly Elliott, an assistant research professor in GSPP. Elliott is co-PI and project coordinator of the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) grant that funds this study and is endorsed as research faculty by the Colorado Association of Infant Mental Health.
A core feature of the study is that researchers perform assessments in the schools鈥搘ithin the natural settings where children, teachers and administrators co-exist.
Elliott explains it like this: We could go to a different school every day and implement a different curriculum focused on the kids, but that is not sustainable if we don鈥檛 think about the educators and what happens when we leave. 鈥That is why we teach the adults in the school system the skills first; it promotes the sustainability of programmatic outcomes,鈥 she says.
The project officially started in the summer of 2022 with the recruitment of preschool sites in Colorado. Researchers at Yale wanted to see how RULER worked in a different area and were听听 looking for a new site to launch an efficacy trial. At the time, they were studying preschools in Connecticut. 鈥淐OVID really disrupted Yale鈥檚 plans for their study, and they needed to find a new place to start over,鈥 Banerjee says.
And Colorado seemed ready. was established in July 2022鈥搕he same summer RULER was launched in the Centennial State鈥搘ith the as one of its chief priorities. It appeared that cross-discipline, cross-agency collaborations like RULER could thrive. 鈥淭he prospect of this project to make an impact in our state is strong,鈥 Banerjee says.
Unfortunately, the level of excitement was unmatched by the level of participation. Clearly, COVID has something to do with that, too. In a national 2022-2023 school survey, reported a continuing increase in the need for mental health services for students and staff. 鈥淭eachers, particularly, are stressed and overwhelmed,鈥 Banerjee says. 鈥淓ven though they see the long-term benefits of this project and the intervention, it isn鈥檛 something teachers or administrators can put on their plate right now.鈥
While RULER researchers in Colorado may have been unable to recruit as many sites as they wanted to initially, they have hope for the future. And hope for the future is integral to their mission. They are currently working in 67 classrooms at 25 sites involved in the study, 鈥渂ut many more preschools are interested in joining the study,鈥 Elliott says. She emphasizes that the impacts of COVID on retention and burnout in our schools are just the kinds of things RULER is trying to get at.
鈥淣ow, more than ever, RULER is needed,鈥 she says.