Saturday, February 11, 2017

Technology Enhanced Social Emotional Learning Activities

Identifying Emotions Apps

The following is a list of apps that can help learners identify feelings.  

Moody Monster Manor

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Moody Monster Manor features twenty cartoon monsters that represent emotions that children commonly experience. Some of the Moody Monsters that children will meet in the manor include Ecstatic Ed, Worried Wanda, Sad Sal, and Sorry Simon. Children can also create their own Moody Monsters to represent how they’re feeling.

Emotions from I Can Do Apps

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The Emotions from I Can Do app focuses on helping individuals identify different facial expressions using real faces and test their understanding of emotions.

The Feelings Book App

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The Feelings App is based upon the Feelings Book (Rubin & Laurent, 2000). It is designed to provide an easy to use format for fostering the "Three "E's"
  • Emotional Identification
  • Emotional Understanding
  • Emotional Regulation

Moody Me - Mood Diary and Tracker

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Track your mood with the Moody Me mood tracker app to find out what makes you feel good. Log your mood and note what affects it.. Take pictures of what makes you happy and play them back for an instant lift. Or see what makes you sad so you can better manage your mood.

emotionary

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Emotionary is a dictionary of emotions and funny feelings. No fuss, no random unrelated meanings. Just a quick and easy way to expand your emotional vocabulary and express yourself better in social media. With over 70 expressive full-sized emoticons, and hundreds of feelings to choose from, now’s the time to get the emotionary app and start sharing.

Positive Penguins

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The four Positive Penguins take you on an interactive journey to help you understand that feelings arise from your thinking and if you challenge your negative thoughts successfully you may be able to see things in a more realistic and even optimistic way.



Try these apps as an additional delivery mode for implementing SEL into your district, school, and/or personal SEL curriculum with classrooms, small groups, and/or individuals!
#SELforallstudents #SELcounselor #schoolcounselor #SELconsultant
Kristine Kilgour, M.Ed., LPSC, LPCC                                                                                                                       School Counselor, Mediator, SEL Consultant                                                                                                       selcounselor@gmail.com                                                                                                                                         970-775-2441

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Helping Students Build Self Respect



If you have students who have difficulty in recognizing the good in themselves, the worksheet below might be just what you need! 




This worksheet is, quite simply, a list of 58 positive traits to use during individual, small group, or large group counseling sessions. 

Try getting creative with this one...have students make a collage, art piece, poem, or anything else you, or your students, can think of.  You can also simply encourage your students to circle their own positive traits to begin building self-esteem. 

Ask the students to share a story about some times they have displayed these traits; or, you can just let them take the list home to keep as a reminder of their own positive qualities. 

Kristine Kilgour, M.Ed., LPSC
School Counselor & Mediator
rfhscounselor@gmail.com


Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Ten Cool Online Tools For School Counselors & Educational Consultants

As School Counselors, Educational Consultants, and Coaches, we are always trying to find ways to reach the kids we work with.  One of my favorite ways is by engaging students through technology.   


Below are some of  the Cool Tools I have used in the counseling process: 

  1. Glogster is a free, online learning tool with many uses that allows you to create a digital, interactive poster.  Glogster allows its users to be creative, and engaging; and it excites learners, espeically those who like technology based leaning and/or fun.  Glogster is internet based, and allows you create a free teacher account that can be saved on Glogster, and shown anywhere.  My students have created glogs using Glogster as part of classroom guidance lessons, in small group counseling, and with individual counseling. I have also used Glogster glogs to parent and school based newsletters
  2. Mp3 Cutter
    1. With the free services provided by the "Mp3 cut" website, the mp3 cutting process has become much more simple, fast, and convenient to use. To get started, press the "Upload mp3" button, choose the desired file, and wait until the file is uploaded and ready for processing. As soon as the file is available for editing (which depends on the speed of your Internet connection), the track will become pink slightly below the indicated button, and the play button will become red. Now, you are able crop mp3. You will see two sliders, which indicate the beginning and the end of the song fragment. When you're ready, press the “Cut mp3 and Download” button. The download will start immediately. Save the file and use it in any of your presentations. Don’t forget the copyright rules of no more than 10%, or 30 seconds, maximum length.
  3. Pinterest is a content sharing service that allows members to “pin” images, videos, and other objects to a pinboard.  Imagine the old cork board that we used to pin up pictures, notes, or memories.  This is a digital version that allows you to save lots of ideas and organize them into multiple cork boards. I save a lot of ideas by category; and, then when it is time to develop a lesson, I have a bank of visual ideas that I can quickly see and remember. Pinterest can also be used by students you're working with in creating dream boards, inspirational quote boards, and more! In the past, I have allowed students to create their own topic specific boards through my Pinterest account. The student names the board without using his/her name; so confidentiality isn't an issue.
  1. Edmodo
    1. Edmodo provides a safe, and easy, online format for you to connect and collaborate, share content, post polls, calendars, and much more.  Emondo looks and acts like Facebook, but is much more secure, and was created specifically for giving educators a way to collaborate, communicate, with students, parents, and one another.  To access any content on Edmodo, a group has to be created. Then, an assigned pin number is used for others to join the group.  I have used Edmodo to create groups for the counselors in my previous district, peer mediators, parents, and other specific student groups.  Edmodo offers a way to request, and share, information.  Another way I have used Edmodo that has proven extremely successful has been through the creation of small groups for students to participate in discussion about the current topic.  With Edmodo, content can be shared, giving a parent access to information their child is working on and posting.  With Edmodo, you also have the ability to share files stored in a library, share a calendar with meeting dates or assignments, or create quizzes and polls.
  2. Blogger With Blogger, anyone can create their own personal content sharing website, or blog, and can write about anything.  The user can write as frequently, or infrequently, as he or she chooses. Bloggers can add pictures, videos, links, and comments to their blog posts. With Blogger, posts can be kept private, or can be made public, helping counselors easily use this writing format for almost anything without having to worry about confidentiality.
  3. Smart Notebook Express
    1. SMART Notebook is a collaborative learning software.  With Smart Notebook Express, you are able to view, save, and interact with SMART Notebook files online, at no charge.
  4. Tagxedo turns words into a visually stunning word cloud. Words individually sized appropriately to highlight the frequencies of occurrence within the body of text. With Tagxedo, you can make your word clouds into different shapes, using different colors and save them as a picture to use later. Tagxedo is great for individual counseling, small group counseling, and even large group counseling.
  5. Storybird uses short, art-inspired stories users make to share, read, and print. Your counseling participants can read them like books, play them like games, and even send them like greeting cards. Storybird is a fun way for students to share what they have learned.

  1. Prezi
    1. Prezi is a cloud based presentation software and storytelling tool for exploring and sharing ideas on a virtual canvas. Prezi is distinguished by its zooming features, which enables users to zoom in and out of their presentation media. Prezi allows you to insert images, videos, and hyperlinks to websites, which allows the user to take Powerpoints to the next level
  2. YouTube has many videos that can teach, motivate, or reinforce lessons and counseling sessions.  Make sure you watch each video all the way through before sharing with children.  Some videos may be edited and replaced with inappropriate material.



Additional Techology Tools:
iPad Apps
Nearpod - allows teacher to control student’s iPads, very interactive & engaging
Prezi - zooming presentations
Doceri - control your desktop from your iPad
Socrative Teacher - students can answer quizzes from their iPad
TeacherKit - allows you to create groups/classes, pics of students, keep attendance
Noteshelf (not free) - great for keeping notes organized
iMovie (not free) - great for students to teach/share with others
Stop Go! -young childrens’ timer
Spin the Bottle - Great for selecting students sitting in a group circle
Stick Pick (not free) - for picking students
Sock Puppets - great for younger kids to make puppet plays
Moody Monster - great for younger kids to understand feelings
Fluid - helps students calm down and relax
Scribble Press - create a digital book
Educreations - interactive whiteboard for the iPad
Word Salad - create word clouds on the iPad



Kristine Kilgour, M.Ed., LPSC
School Counselor & Supreme Court Approved Mediator

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Make Time For Mindfulness

Take a moment to be mindful


Image: Canstock
Mindfulness is the practice of purposely focusing your attention on the present moment, such as how the air smells and feels as you walk your dog, or how a bite of bread tastes with dinner. The ultimate goal is to help shift your thoughts away from your usual preoccupations toward an appreciation of the moment and a larger perspective on life.
Scientific examination of mindfulness shows that it can improve both physical and psychological symptoms, improve learning, and create positive changes in health, attitudes, and behaviors.
Here are two mindfulness exercises that you can try on your own.
Basic mindfulness meditation
  1. Sit on a straight-backed chair or cross-legged on the floor.
  2. Focus on an aspect of your breathing, such as the sensation of air flowing into your nostrils and out of your mouth, or your belly rising and falling as you inhale and exhale.
  3. Once you've narrowed your concentration in this way, begin to widen your focus. Become aware of sounds, sensations, and ideas.
  4. Embrace and consider each thought or sensation without judging it as good or bad. If your mind starts to race, return your focus to your breathing. Then expand your awareness again.
Mindfulness in everyday moments
A less formal approach to mindfulness can also help you stay in the present, and to fully participate in your life. You can choose any task or moment to practice informal mindfulness, whether you are eating, showering, walking, or playing with a child. With practice, this sense of awareness will become more natural.
  1. Start by bringing your attention to the sensations in your body.
  2. Breathe in through your nose, allowing the air to move downward into your lower belly. Let your abdomen expand fully. Then breathe out through your mouth. Notice the sensations of each inhalation and exhalation.
  3. Proceed with the task at hand slowly and with full deliberation.
  4. Engage your senses fully. Notice each sight, touch, and sound so that you savor every sensation.
  5. When you notice that your mind has wandered from what you are doing, gently bring your attention back to the sensations of the moment.

Kristine Kilgour, M.Ed., LPSC
School Counselor & Mediator

Sunday, March 22, 2015

FLOW: A Brain Break By GoNoodle

Flow by GoNoode- SavvySchoolCounselor.comI was thrilled to learn about a great brain break website called Go Noodle.  This site offers a variety of awesome, free brain breaks to use with children.  Included is their newest brain break, FLOW, which focuses on student mindfulness and stress release.  After creating my free account and checking out Flow, I was excited as I thought of the great ways to use this tool in my school counseling program.
End-of-Year Testing time is a great opportunity to use FLOW.  Many students, especially third graders who are testing for the first time, experience some anxiety about doing well on their tests.  FLOW includes meaning activities to assist students with managing stress and maintaining the confidence they need to be successful.  It can also be an excellent tool to use with individual students who come to your office feeling angry or worried.  The activities in FLOW can be used for whole class lessons, small group sessions or individual counseling.
Here’s how you can get started:
Create an account. (It’s FREE!)  You will be asked to enter the following information:
Create An Account
Once you complete this step, you will have access to the free brain breaks.  You will need to create a class or you may use the demo class.  Simply click on the purple “+New Class” button, name your class and add the number of people in the class.
FlowClass
 Once your class is added to the list, you may click your class link and select a classroom champ avatar.  The longer you and your students use GoNoodle, the bigger your class champ will become.
Classroom Champ
start screen2




Click the green PLAY button to enter the brain break menu.  Click on the FLOW link, and you are ready to begin!
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Once you have entered FLOW, you may select a grade level.  I tried it using both Kindergarten and 5th grade, and I did not see a difference in the videos.  You will select one of the two categories (Attitude or Stress) to begin.
Grade Level Selection
Category Selection





The background sounds in all of the activities are very relaxing.  Students have the option of closing their eyes or keeping them open and watching the screen.  The screen gives visuals of everything being described throughout the activity.
The ATTITUDE option includes two activities:  Chin Up and Weather the Storm.
Chin Up talks students through shifting their moods.  This is an excellent activity for students needing to calm down whether they are angry or worried.  It is a very relaxing activity which includes head tilting and raising and lowering of the chin.
Weather the Storm is a great visual for students who are going through a difficult time.  During the activity, the students watch as a small tree weathers a storm but remains strong and standing when the storm passes. (Love it!)
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The STRESS option also includes two activities:  Bring it Down and On & Off.
Bring it Down is great for helping students to bring down stress.  Students imagine a balloon high in the sky.  They imagine slowly pulling the string on the balloon until they can hold the balloon between their hands.  Finally, they imagine letting it go as they watch it fly away in the air.
On & Off involves managing stress by making parts of the body tense and then letting go to relax.  Students will turn on the energy in their toes, legs, hands, arms and whole body.  When the energy is ON, the screen brightens up almost like the sun is in the center.  When students turn their energy off, the screen becomes dark.
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I am so excited to learn about this great tool to use in school counseling.  There are other great games you can try like “To the Maximo” where students perform stretches and poses to help with relaxation as well.
If you’d like to TRY OUT FLOW, you may follow any of the links in this post to get started or click on "TRY OUT FLOW" above.
GoNoodle- New brain break FLOW- SavvySchoolCounselor.com

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Interest Inventories In The Classroom

Interest Inventories In The Classroom & School Counselor's Office

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Rather than choosing rewards for your students, ASK them what they are motivated by. Some children are able to verbalize this, while others need options.

The interest inventory above is one example.




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At Intervention Central, you can find "Jackpot!" This is a simple program that allows you to create your own interest inventory.

The reward categories include:
Academic Activities
Adult Attention
Edible Items
Escape
Non-Academic Activities
Peer Attention
Tangible Items


Kristine Kilgour, M.Ed., LPSC
School Counselor, Education Consultant, Mediator
512-704-5265


















Thursday, September 5, 2013

Noisy Classroom? Read These Tips...



One day, in front 36 riotous sophomores, I clutched my chest and dropped to my knees like Sergeant Elias at the end of Platoon. Instantly, dead silence and open mouths replaced classroom Armageddon. Standing up like nothing had happened, I said, "Thanks for your attention -- let's talk about love poems."
I never used that stunt again. After all, should a real emergency occur, it would be better if students call 911 rather than post my motionless body on YouTube. I've thought this through.
Most teachers use silencing methods, such as flicking the lights, ringing a call bell (see Teacher Tipster's charming video on the subject), raising two fingers, saying "Attention, class," or using Harry Wong's Give Me 5 -- a command for students to:
  1. Focus their eyes on the speaker
  2. Be quiet
  3. Be still
  4. Empty their hands
  5. Listen.
There is also the "three fingers" version, which stands for stop, look, and listen. Fortunately, none of these involve medical hoaxes.
Lesser known techniques are described below and categorized by grade bands:

How to Quiet Kindergarten and Early Elementary School Children

Novelty successfully captures young students' attention, such as the sound of a wind chime or rain stick. Beth O., in Cornerstone for Teachers, tells her students, "Pop a marshmallow in." Next she puffs up her cheeks, and the kids follow suit. It's hard to speak with an imaginary marshmallow filling your mouth.
An equally imaginative approach involves filling an empty Windex bottle with lavender mineral oil, then relabeling the bottle "Quiet Spray." Or you can blow magic "hush-bubbles" for a similar impact.
Teaching Chick places quiet critters on every desk. If a child becomes noisy, she moves the critter to the edge of his or her desk. "If I see them talking again, I will take their quiet critter." Kids still possessing their critters at the end of an activity get their name added to a reward chart.
If you want to go electronic, check out Traffic Light by ICT Magic, which is simply a stoplight for talkers. Other digital methods include the Super Sound BoxClass Dojo, or the Too Noisy App -- an Apple and Android tool that determines noise level and produces an auditory signal when voices become too loud.

Late Elementary and Middle Grade Attention Getters

Back when I taught middle school students, I would announce, "Silent 20," as a way to conclude an activity. If students returned to their seats and were completely quiet in 20 seconds, I advanced them one space on a giant facsimile of Game of Life. When they reached the last square (which took approximately one month), we held a popcorn party.
One of the best ways to maintain a quiet classroom is to catch students at the door before they enter. During these encounters, behavior management expert Rob Plevin recommends using "non-confrontational statements" and "informal chit-chat" to socialize kids into productive behaviors, as modeled inPlevin's video.
Two approaches for securing "100 percent attention" are modeled in a short video narrated by Teach Like a Champion author Doug Lemov -- a minimally invasive hand gesture and countdown technique ("I need two people. You know who you are. I need one person . . . ").
Another idea is to use a content "word of the week" to signal that it's time for silence. Examples: integer, renaissance, or circuit.

Quieting High School Students

Sometimes, rambunctious high school classrooms need a little longer to comply. In An ELT Notebook article, Rob Johnson recommends that teachers write the following instructions in bold letters on the chalkboard:
If you wish to continue talking during my lesson, I will have to take time off you at break. By the time I've written the title on the board you need to be sitting in silence. Anyone who is still talking after that will be kept behind for five minutes.
The strategy always, always works, says Johnson, because it gives students adequate warning.
Another technique, playing classical music (Bach, not Mahler) on low volume when learners enter the room, sets a professional tone. I played music with positive subliminal messages to ninth graders until they complained that it gave them headaches.

Call and Response

Below is a collection of catchy sayings that work as cues to be quiet, the first ones appropriate for early and middle grade students, and the later ones field tested to work with high school kids.
Teacher says . . . Students Respond with . . .
Holy . . . . . . macaroni.
1, 2, 3, eyes on me . . . . . . 1, 2, eyes on you.
I’m incredible . . . . . . like the Hulk. Grrrrrr. (Kids flex during the last sound)
Ayyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy . . . . . . macarena.
I get knocked down . . . . . . but I get up again, you're never going to keep me down.
Oh Mickey, you're so fine . . . . . . you're so fine, you blow my mind -- hey Mickey.
The only easy day . . . . . . was yesterday. (A Navy Seals slogan)

Implementation Suggestions

For maximum effect, teach your quiet signal and procedure, as demonstrated in these elementary and high school classroom videos. Next, have kids rehearse being noisy until you give the signal for silence. Don't accept anything less than 100 percent compliance. Then describe appropriate levels of noise for different contexts, such as when you're talking (zero noise) or during a writing workshop (quiet voices), etc.
If a rough class intimidates you (we've all been there), privately practice stating the following in an authoritative voice: "My words are important. Students will listen to me." Say it until you believe it. Finally, take comfort in the knowledge that, out of three million U.S. educators who taught today, two or three might have struggled to silence a rowdy class.
How do you get your students' attention?