We live in a world of words.
Words are a fundamental building block of learning and living. And now, with a 24-hour news cycle, attention-grabbing advertisements, and ever-present video screens, words are bombarding us at a higher frequency and intensity than ever before. We are in need of healthy ways to help ourselves and our students process and digest the deluge of word-stimuli around us.
In schools, mindfulness “corners” offer a space for students to slow down and assess the way they respond to various stimuli. Mindfulness can be the magic ticket to improve student mental health for many teachers yearning for calm and regulated behavior. Mindfulness exercises, such as breathing and meditation, can be effective tools to pull students out of an initial fight-or-flight response and into a rest-and-digest state of mind. But then what?
As Brooklyn Kids Academy Preschool Director, Allie Lopez, says, “Breathing work helps our children calm down, but doesn’t necessarily help them understand what they feel or why. At times it works like a band aid, addressing a short-term need, without equipping children with the long-term skills required to regulate better the next time.”
Oftentimes, well-intentioned mindful practices aren’t enough for PreK-2 students to make the necessary leap from the first phase of an emotional intervention to the next phase of emotional understanding. We’re missing an opportunity to go further and help kids become emotional detectives, answering vital questions like, “Why do I feel this way? What clues did my body give me to let me know? Do I know how to move forward? Can I learn something new to help me next time?” For this, we need to add a crucial component: .