SEL in ACTION
Learn more about our
Applied Social Emotional Learning Programs offering direct student support
LevelUp SEL Lunch
LevelUp SEL Improv
Level Up SEL Classroom
please contact using at this link
SEL In ACTION Workshop Topics
Emotional Literacy
Building Healthy Relationships
Elevating Digital Citizenship: Best Practices of Media Use
Self Awareness & Building a Personal Reflection Process
Conversational Skills 101
Becoming an Upstander: Combatting Bullying
Establishing and Maintaining a Growth Mindset
Racial Identity Exploration and Development
Program Overview
SEL In Action workshops are delivered by our professional staff of social workers, educators and teaching artists. We incorporate improvisation and hands on learning into each workshop. Sessions are delivered in-person by the half day or full day.
Program Objectives
Engaging SEL In Action fosters authentic school, family, and community relations.
Programs help to develop learning environments that feature collaboration, meaningful curriculum, opportunities for experiential learning and ongoing evaluation and reflection.
Learn More About Our Current Collaborators
Partnership News
An Unwavering Commitment To Culturally Responsive
Sustaining Education & Social Emotional Learning
By Dawn Brooks-DeCosta and Ife Lenard
NYU | STEINHARDT
The Metropolitan Center for Research on Equity and the Transformation of Schools
TMH and TMALS partnership is recognized by the Voices in Urban Education Journal as effective SEL in the classroom! Academic analysis of both the SEL and CR-SE practices at the urban NYC Thurgood Marshall Academy Lower School (TMALS), and their partnership with the Meeting House Afterschool social skill building program demonstrated that the process of providing social-emotional supports with a culturally responsive lens was beneficial and successful among students.
Congratulations to the authors, Dawn Brookes-DeCosta and Ife Lenard. They suggest that without a culturally responsive-sustaining lens, social and emotional support may lack the trust and connection needed to help students, unless it is in the context of acknowledging their unique identities and cultures.