Knowing yourself
Students start the year noticing their own feelings, what sets them off, and what they are good at. They learn to name a mood instead of just acting on it.
This is the stretch when students start running their own inner lives instead of just reacting. Students learn to name what they're feeling, notice what set it off, and pick a better next move when stress or pressure hits. They practice seeing a situation from someone else's side and working through disagreements without blowing up the friendship. By spring, students can talk through a conflict, ask for help when they need it, and explain how a choice affects other people.
Students start the year noticing their own feelings, what sets them off, and what they are good at. They learn to name a mood instead of just acting on it.
Students practice handling pressure from school, friends, and home. They work on calming down before reacting, staying organized, and setting small goals they can actually finish.
Students step outside their own view and consider what classmates are dealing with, including kids whose lives look different from theirs. They also learn which adults at school or home to turn to.
Students practice the day-to-day work of getting along: listening, speaking up clearly, splitting up group work, and patching things up after an argument without making it worse.
Students think through decisions before making them, especially the harder ones about friends, social media, and risk. They weigh what could go right, what could go wrong, and who else it affects.
Students examine their own emotions and values, notice how those feelings shape their choices, and take stock of what they are good at and where they still have room to grow.
Students practice recognizing when emotions or stress are getting in the way, then use strategies like slowing down or making a plan to stay on track with their goals.
Students practice seeing situations from someone else's point of view, including people whose lives look different from their own. They also learn to spot the people and resources around them at school, at home, and in their community who can help.
Students practice the skills that keep relationships healthy: listening well, working through disagreements, and asking for help or offering it when someone else is struggling.
Students practice making thoughtful choices by weighing what a decision could cost them or someone else. This standard covers real situations where getting along with others and looking out for yourself both matter.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| The abilities to understand one's own emotions, thoughts Grades 6-8 | Students examine their own emotions and values, notice how those feelings shape their choices, and take stock of what they are good at and where they still have room to grow. | IL-SEL.1.6-8 |
| The abilities to manage emotions, thoughts Grades 6-8 | Students practice recognizing when emotions or stress are getting in the way, then use strategies like slowing down or making a plan to stay on track with their goals. | IL-SEL.2.6-8 |
| The abilities to understand the perspectives of and empathise with others… Grades 6-8 | Students practice seeing situations from someone else's point of view, including people whose lives look different from their own. They also learn to spot the people and resources around them at school, at home, and in their community who can help. | IL-SEL.3.6-8 |
| The abilities to establish and maintain healthy and supportive relationships… Grades 6-8 | Students practice the skills that keep relationships healthy: listening well, working through disagreements, and asking for help or offering it when someone else is struggling. | IL-SEL.4.6-8 |
| The abilities to make caring and constructive choices about personal behavior… Grades 6-8 | Students practice making thoughtful choices by weighing what a decision could cost them or someone else. This standard covers real situations where getting along with others and looking out for yourself both matter. | IL-SEL.5.6-8 |
Students work on knowing themselves, managing stress, getting along with others, and making good choices when things get hard. The focus shifts from naming feelings to handling them in real situations like group projects, friendship drama, and pressure to fit in.
Notice the feeling out loud before jumping to fixes. Try a short walk, water, or a few minutes alone, then talk through what happened and what to try next time. Five quiet minutes after school often does more than a long conversation at bedtime.
Stop asking direct questions for a while. Sit nearby during a chore or a drive and talk about something small. Middle schoolers open up sideways, not face to face, and they need to trust that one rough day will not turn into a lecture.
Start the year with self-awareness and classroom norms, move into stress management and goal setting before the first big project, and bring in perspective-taking and conflict skills once friendships heat up. Save decision-making and personal responsibility for spring, when stakes feel higher.
Impulse control and repair after conflict. Students can name the right move in a calm conversation and still blurt, shove, or shut down in the moment. Plan to revisit these skills every quarter, not once in the fall.
Both. A short weekly block gives space to teach the language and practice the moves. The rest sticks when the same language shows up during group work, lab partners, writing conferences, and hallway conversations.
Listen first without taking sides or solving it. Ask what they want to happen next, then help them plan one sentence to say tomorrow. Stepping in to fix the friendship usually makes things worse and teaches students they cannot handle it.
Students can name what they are feeling, calm themselves down enough to think, see a situation from someone else's side, and make a choice they can explain afterward. They will not do this every time, but they can do it when it counts.