40 research outputs found

    Promoting and marginalising young childrenโ€™s social and emotional experiences through SEL

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    This paper raises questions about social and emotional learning (SEL) as a facilitator of all childrenโ€™s social, emotional and behavioural skills. Drawing on qualitative data, in the form of group and individual interviews with a range of primary school and early years staff members across four case studies, the findings indicate that childrenโ€™s social and emotional behaviours linked to social class, gender and ethnicity were targeted through SEL, revealing a propensity for staff to endorse a normative model of experiences for young children. By clarifying some of the concerns around such monist approaches to SEL, I make the case for an agonistic model (Mouffe, 2005), that not only embraces difference and contestation, but uses them as a focus for learning
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