A second grader is crying because a partner grabbed the markers. A fourth grader gives up during math after one wrong answer. At home, a child says “fine” through clenched teeth, then falls apart over homework five minutes later. Adults can usually spot the feeling before the child can name it. The harder part is knowing what to teach in that moment, and what to practice later so the next moment goes better.
Strong SEL in elementary school grows through routines children can repeat, language they can use, and practice during calm parts of the day. Posters, one-off lessons, and vague reminders to “use your words” rarely hold up when a child is frustrated, embarrassed, left out, or overwhelmed. Kids need skills taught the same way we teach reading or math. Brief modeling. Clear scripts. Guided practice. A chance to try again.
That is the approach in this guide. Each strategy is set up as a mini lesson plan you can use right away, with sample teacher language, differentiation ideas, simple ways to check whether the skill is sticking, and home-connection activities that help families carry the same language across settings. The goal is not to add one more program to an already full day. The goal is to give teachers and parents a practical toolkit for ordinary moments, because ordinary moments are where SEL habits are built.
Some strategies will click quickly. Others take longer, especially for children with limited language, sensory needs, trauma histories, or big stress outside school. Start small and stay consistent. If you want one simple practice to begin with, a kid-friendly belly breathing routine for elementary students is an easy entry point. Use what fits your classroom, your child, and the moment in front of you.
1. Mindfulness and Deep Breathing Techniques
The fastest way to lose kids with mindfulness is to make it too long, too abstract, or too quiet. Elementary students usually do better with brief, concrete practice they can feel in their bodies. Start with one minute. Keep both feet on the floor or let kids sit on a carpet square.
A simple script works well: “Put one hand on your belly. Smell the flower through your nose. Blow out the candle through your mouth.” For younger students, use props like a pinwheel, a Hoberman sphere, or even an imaginary birthday cake. For older elementary students, name the purpose clearly: “We're slowing our bodies down so our brains can think.”
Mini lesson plan
Teach during a calm part of the day, not right after a conflict. Try this sequence:
- Teacher prompt: “Let's practice belly breathing before we need it.”
- Model first: Take one exaggerated breath so students can see your shoulders stay soft and your belly expand.
- Student practice: Three slow rounds together.
- Reflection question: “Did your body feel faster, slower, or the same?”
If you want a kid-friendly variation, this belly breathing technique gives teachers and families another easy routine to reinforce.
Practical rule: Don't ask a dysregulated child to “go be mindful” alone if they haven't practiced the skill with support first.
Assessment should stay simple. Notice whether students can begin the breathing cue within a few seconds, whether they need visual modeling, and whether they return to task more smoothly afterward. You're looking for growing independence, not perfection.
Some children won't like closing their eyes or sitting still. That's fine. Let them stare at a spot on the wall, trace a finger, squeeze a fidget, or breathe while standing. Neurodivergent students often respond better when breathing is paired with rhythm, visuals, or sensory grounding instead of verbal processing alone. Recent analysis has also highlighted that standard SEL strategies can miss many neurodivergent learners without differentiation (EdSurge reporting on differentiated SEL).
Show students what it can look like in action:
For home connection, send one sentence families can reuse: “When your body feels too fast, smell the flower and blow out the candle three times with me.”
2. Social-Emotional Learning Check-In Circles
The class comes in loud from recess. One student is close to tears, two are still arguing about the game, and several others are ready to move on. A check-in circle helps the teacher read the room fast and gives students a predictable way to settle without asking everyone to tell a long personal story.
The goal is simple. Build emotional awareness, listening habits, and classroom trust in a format young children can manage. Keep early circles to five minutes. Short, steady practice works better than an occasional long discussion.
Start with clear agreements and teach them like any other classroom routine. Say the rules out loud, post them, and practice them.
Mini lesson plan
Objective: Students identify their current emotional state, listen while peers share, and use one safe participation option.
Materials: A talking piece, visual mood scale, and optional support such as a feelings chart for kids for students who need help choosing words.
Teacher script for norms:
- “One person talks at a time.”
- “We listen to understand.”
- “You may pass.”
- “Private things stay private unless someone is unsafe.”
Routine:
- Opening cue: “Show with your fingers how big your feeling is today, from low to high.”
- Share round: “Say one feeling word,” or “Name one thing you need to have a good day.”
- Listening support: Pass a smooth stone, stuffed animal, or another object that signals whose turn it is.
- Closing line: “Thank you for checking in. We are ready for our next job.”
Here is what good facilitation sounds like in real time. A teacher asks, “What feeling came back with you after recess?” One student says, “Annoyed.” Another says, “Excited.” A third says, “Pass.” The teacher answers each one with the same calm response: “Thanks for letting us know.” That consistency matters. Students learn that naming a feeling will not turn into a lecture, a joke, or a public problem-solving session.
Passing is participation. Listening is a real SEL skill.
There are trade-offs. If circles run too long, children lose focus and the routine starts to feel performative. If a teacher pushes for details, students stop trusting the space. If the class never moves beyond surface answers, the circle becomes a script with no real connection. The fix is structure. Keep the prompt narrow, protect the right to pass, and save individual follow-up for later if a child shares something that needs care.
Different learners need different entry points. Some students do better pointing to a number, color, or face than speaking to the group. English learners benefit from sentence frames such as “I feel ___ because ___.” Neurodivergent students may prefer to hold the talking piece without making eye contact, answer from their seat, or preview the prompt before the circle begins. Those adjustments keep the routine accessible without lowering the expectation that everyone participates in some form.
Assessment should stay light and useful. Keep a roster and note who shares easily, who always passes, who can use feeling words independently, and who needs a prompt or visual. Do not grade openness. Look for growth in comfort, vocabulary, turn-taking, and respectful listening.
For home connection, give families a version they can use in two minutes at dinner, in the car, or at bedtime. “Rose, thorn, and help” works well. Rose is something good, thorn is something hard, and help is one thing the child needs tomorrow. That keeps the skill connected across school and home without turning family time into another lesson.
3. Emotion Recognition and Labeling
A student rips an eraser in half before math and says, “I'm fine.” That answer does not give a teacher or parent much to work with. Children need a larger feelings vocabulary because the support for “frustrated,” “embarrassed,” “overwhelmed,” and “left out” is not the same.
Post a visual where students can reach it and use it without asking permission. A feelings wheel, body cue chart, or simple 1 to 5 intensity scale gives children a way in before they have the words. This feelings chart for kids works well in classrooms, counseling spaces, and at home.
Mini lesson plan
Start with a brief, low-pressure practice round during read-aloud or morning work. Show a character illustration or pause during a picture book and ask, “What is this character feeling?” Then follow with the question that builds the essential skill: “What clues helped you decide that?” Students learn to read facial expression, posture, tone, and context instead of guessing.
Use a script that stays specific and gives the child room to correct you:
- Teacher says: “I notice your fists are tight and your face is scrunched. You might be frustrated or angry. Do either of those fit, or do you want a different word?”
- Student response options: Point to a chart, hold up an emotion card, circle a word, or choose between two options.
- Repair cue: “Your feeling is okay. I still need you to keep your body safe.”
That last line matters. Labeling feelings should lower shame, not remove limits.
A strong classroom routine ties the feeling word to the next support step. Before independent writing, ask students to pick one card that matches how they feel about the task: “ready,” “stuck,” “worried,” or “confident.” Then respond in a way that fits the label. A student who picks “stuck” gets a sentence starter. A student who picks “worried” gets a quick rehearsal with a partner. A student who picks “confident” can begin right away or model how they got started.
Differentiation and home connection
Some children can name feelings aloud. Others need another path first. Keep the task the same, but vary the way students show what they know.
- Visual choice: Emotion cards, a color scale, sticky notes, or a magnet on a feelings board
- Body mapping: “Where do you feel it?” Students point to their chest, stomach, jaw, or hands
- Word bank support: Offer a small set of choices such as “disappointed,” “nervous,” “left out,” and “proud”
- Creative response: Draw the feeling, choose a color for it, or show its intensity with blocks
Assessment can stay simple. Listen for whether students move from broad labels like “bad” or “good” to more precise words, and whether they can connect the feeling to a clue or trigger. That growth shows up in classroom behavior too. Students who can say “I'm embarrassed” are easier to help than students who can only show it by shutting down or acting out.
At home, adults can model the skill in one sentence and keep it natural: “I'm disappointed our plan changed, so I'm taking a minute to calm down.” That teaches naming, cause, and regulation in a way children can copy. If a child resists the question “How do you feel?”, offer choices instead: “Do you feel irritated, worried, sad, or something else?” That usually gets a more honest answer.
4. Peer Support and Buddy Systems
The bell rings. One student freezes at the doorway, another rushes ahead, and a third notices both before any adult can step in. That moment is where a well-taught buddy system earns its place. Children often accept support from another child faster than they accept it from an adult, but only when the role is clear and small enough to succeed.
Good pairings are based on fit, not convenience. Match a student who stays calm in routines with a peer who benefits from a steady model. Use cross-age pairs for reading, arrival, or lunch support. Be careful with students who like to take charge. A helpful child can slip into controlling if the job is too open-ended.
A mini-lesson plan for teaching buddy support
Start with one purpose. Arrival, transitions, partner work, or recess re-entry all work well. Do not ask buddies to handle every hard moment in the day.
Teach the role in a short lesson:
- Name the job: “A buddy helps a classmate feel included, started, or settled.”
- Model the first move: “I can sit with you, walk with you, or help you find the first step.”
- Teach one check-in question: “Do you want help, company, or space?”
- Set the limit: “If your buddy is unsafe, crying hard, or too upset to talk, get an adult right away.”
A simple script keeps the support concrete. I usually teach children to offer two choices, not five. Too many options can create pressure for both students.
Student script:
- “Want to do this together or next to each other?”
- “Do you want help getting started or should I get the teacher?”
- “I'm going to stay with you while you pick.”
One first grader with arrival anxiety might meet the same fourth grade buddy each morning for five minutes. They unpack, check the visual schedule, and walk to the classroom door. In an upper elementary class, a “kindness lab partner” can work during science or centers. One student notices who needs materials. The other practices a phrase such as, “Want me to hold your spot?” If you want routines that build the trust behind these pairings, these relationship-building activities for elementary students fit well before you launch a buddy system.
A buddy is a bridge between a child and the next successful step.
Differentiation matters here. Some students can support a peer verbally. Others do better with a visual cue card, a checklist, or one assigned task such as greeting, walking together, or reading directions aloud. Rotate roles often enough that support does not harden into status. The goal is connection and practice, not creating a permanent helper and a permanent helped child.
Assessment should stay observable. Watch for whether the paired student enters activities with less hesitation, whether transitions take less adult prompting, and whether the buddy uses the taught language instead of giving orders. If you see dependence, resentment, or a power imbalance, change the pairing quickly and reteach the role.
At home, keep the same structure light and brief. Siblings can share a bedtime check-in, help each other gather materials for homework, or practice one support question such as, “Do you want company or quiet?” That teaches children that support is a skill they can practice, not a trait that only some kids have.
5. Conflict Resolution and Problem-Solving Scripts
Two students are arguing over a marker. One says, “She always ruins everything.” The other is already crying. In that moment, “Use your words” does not give either child enough to work with. Children do better when the language is already taught, posted, practiced, and coached.
Conflict scripts work best as a mini-lesson, not a rescue tool adults pull out for the first time during a meltdown. Teach the routine during a calm part of the day. Then use the same words often enough that children can reach for them under stress.
Mini lesson plan
Start with a short model. Use puppets, a quick role-play, or a common classroom problem such as line order, game rules, or interrupted play. Keep the first examples low stakes so students can focus on the language instead of the emotion.
Post a script children can see and repeat:
- Step 1: “I didn't like it when…”
- Step 2: “I felt…”
- Step 3: “Next time, please…”
- Step 4: “What can we do now?”
Then teach the listening part. After one child speaks, the other child says, “I heard you say…” and repeats the message before giving their own side. That one step slows the exchange and cuts down on arguing about who gets to talk first.
A teacher script can sound like this:
- “Tell what happened, not what kind of person they are.”
- “Say the action.”
- “Now say what you need next time.”
- “Can the other person repeat that back?”
One practical trade-off matters here. Adults often want a quick apology because the room is busy and the schedule is tight. A rushed apology usually ends the noise, but it does not teach repair. A short coached exchange teaches more, even if it takes an extra two minutes.
Differentiation tips
Some students need a visual card with sentence starters. Some need picture icons for feel, want, and next step. Some need to rehearse with an adult before talking to a peer. For students with language delays or high anxiety, accept shorter responses such as “I felt mad” or “Stop please,” then build toward the full script over time.
Keep the boundary clear. Peer scripts are for everyday conflicts. Hitting, threats, repeated targeting, or anything involving fear goes straight to an adult.
Classroom climate also matters. Scripts work better in rooms where children already practice connection, turn-taking, and respectful listening. These relationship-building activities for elementary students support that foundation and make conflict coaching easier.
Assessment and home connection
Assessment should stay observable. Watch for whether students describe actions instead of using labels, whether they can repeat what they heard, and whether they suggest a realistic repair such as returning an item, restarting a game, or making space at the table. If the same pair keeps getting stuck, reteach with adult support instead of assuming the script failed.
At home, use the same four steps during sibling conflict so children hear one shared language across settings. Parents do not need a long family meeting. A note on the fridge and one coached practice round is enough to start.
This skill also grows through shared values outside school. Families who want more on reflection, kindness, and community-driven personal development can use those ideas to reinforce repair and responsibility after conflict.
6. Growth Mindset Development and Effort Recognition
A student stares at a page, grips the pencil, and says, “I can't do this.” That moment matters. If the adult replies with vague praise or rushes in with the answer, the child learns that struggle means stop. If the adult teaches the next move, the child learns that struggle is part of learning.
Growth mindset in elementary school works best as a short, repeatable lesson, not a poster on the wall. Children need direct instruction in what effort looks like. They also need feedback tied to actions they can repeat, such as revising, asking for help, checking an example, slowing down, or trying a second strategy.
Mini lesson plan
Use a task students recently completed. Show two anonymous samples, or describe two different ways students approached the same challenge. Ask, “Who kept learning when the work got hard? What did that student do?” Keep the discussion focused on visible behaviors, not personality labels.
Sample teacher language:
- Before work: “Today, notice what you do when something feels hard.”
- During struggle: “Pause. What is one strategy you can try next?”
- Afterward: “What helped you make progress?”
- During reflection: “What will you do next time you get stuck?”
One math example makes this concrete. A student misses the first fraction problem and says, “I'm bad at fractions.” The teacher says, “You are still learning fractions. Show me where your strategy stopped working.” That response protects the child's sense of self while still holding the line on thinking and revision.
The trade-off is real. Adults want to encourage children, and trait praise sounds warm and fast. It also pushes some students to protect the label instead of taking risks. Process feedback takes longer in the moment, but it gives children language they can use again on their own.
“Not yet” helps only when students also know what to try next.
That is the piece many classrooms miss. “Good effort” is not enough if the child is still stuck. Name the effort, then teach the next step: look at the model, break the task into smaller parts, ask a partner one specific question, or take a short reset and return with a plan.
Differentiation matters here. Younger students often need sentence stems such as “I tried ___” and “Next I will ___.” Older elementary students can compare strategies and explain why one worked better. Students with language or processing needs may do better with a visual chart that lists options for “When I'm stuck.”
Assessment should stay observable. Listen for whether students describe strategies instead of fixed traits, whether they can name a next step after a setback, and whether they return to a task with less adult rescue over time. If a child keeps repeating “I can't” without trying a strategy, reteach the routine explicitly. Do not assume the mindset language has sunk in just because the class has heard it before.
Home connection can stay simple. Send home one sentence frame parents can use: “I noticed you kept going by ___.” Families can also ask, “What did you do when it got hard?” instead of “Did you get it right?” For children who struggle socially after mistakes, these perspective-taking activities for kids can help them see that everyone hits frustration and uses support differently.
The same principle carries outside school. Growth usually comes from repetition, support, reflection, and chances to try again. That is also a core idea in community-driven personal development, which gives families another way to reinforce effort over labels.
7. Empathy Development Through Perspective-Taking Activities
A fourth grader sees two classmates whispering, then assumes, “They're talking about me.” By lunch, feelings are hurt, alliances are forming, and the original situation may have had nothing to do with that child at all. Perspective-taking lessons help students slow that chain reaction before it becomes social damage.
Empathy instruction works best when adults teach it as a skill, not a personality trait. The goal is simple. Help children consider more than one possible explanation, notice another person's feelings, and choose a respectful response.
A mini-lesson teachers can use right away
Use a short scenario from class, a read-aloud, a photograph, or a common recess conflict. Then walk students through this sequence:
What happened?
Ask for observable facts only. “I saw Maya turn away” is usable. “Maya was being mean” is an interpretation.What might each person be thinking or feeling?
Push for at least two possibilities per person. Through this, empathy grows.What could someone do next that helps, not harms?
Keep the response concrete. Check in. Give space. Ask a question. Invite someone in.
A teacher script can sound like this: “We do not know the whole story yet. Let's name what we saw, then come up with two possible reasons before we decide what it meant.” That script protects students from rushing to blame while still leaving room to address hurtful behavior clearly.
If students get stuck, offer sentence stems:
- “One possibility is ___.”
- “Another reason could be ___.”
- “If I were in that situation, I might feel ___.”
- “A respectful next step would be ___.”
For ready-to-use prompts, these perspective-taking activities for kids fit well into morning meeting, reading discussions, or small-group SEL practice.
Differentiation that keeps the lesson accessible
Some children can discuss perspective easily. Others need the thinking made visible.
- For younger students: Use picture cards with facial expressions and thought bubbles.
- For language support: Preteach feeling words such as frustrated, left out, nervous, relieved, and embarrassed.
- For students who need movement: Run a short role-play and switch parts so each child acts both sides.
- For students with rigid thinking: Limit the task to two possible explanations first. Build from there.
There is a real trade-off here. Open discussion builds rich thinking, but it can also drift into gossip or public guessing about classmates. Keep scenarios general or fictional when trust is still developing. If you use a real conflict, stay focused on behaviors and repair, not on putting one child on display.
What to look for during assessment
Assessment should stay practical and observable.
Listen for whether students can separate facts from assumptions. Notice whether they can name more than one possible feeling or motive. Watch what happens later in the day. A child who asks, “Are you okay?” or says, “Maybe that's not what they meant,” is showing transfer.
If students keep collapsing every situation into “they were mean,” reteach with simpler examples. They may need more modeling before they can handle peer conflict well.
Home connection
Families can practice this skill during ordinary moments. A useful prompt is, “What are two possible reasons your brother got quiet?” Follow it with, “What would be a respectful way to check in?” Books, TV scenes, and sibling conflicts all give adults a natural practice space.
That is how empathy becomes usable. Children learn to pause, consider, and respond with more care.
8. Self-Care Routines and Wellness Practices
Self-care in elementary settings shouldn't mean spa language or reward-based “treat yourself” messages. It means teaching children how to notice needs and respond with healthy routines. Hunger, fatigue, overstimulation, loneliness, and lack of movement all show up as behavior.
That makes self-care one of the most practical SEL strategies for elementary students. It belongs in classroom systems and family routines, not just counseling conversations.
A student-friendly wellness routine
Build a short daily reset menu children can choose from:
- Body care: Water, snack, stretch, bathroom break, slower breathing.
- Brain care: Quiet corner, headphones, one task at a time, visual checklist.
- Heart care: Check in with an adult, sit by a trusted friend, draw feelings, listen to calm music.
A real example from school: after lunch, a teacher gives students two minutes to choose one reset. One child stretches. Another draws. Another puts on headphones and looks at a visual schedule. Those two minutes often prevent fifteen minutes of dysregulation later.
The underserved gap in many schools is what happens when universal SEL isn't enough. Evidence highlighted in recent literature shows that a meaningful share of elementary students need targeted support beyond whole-class instruction, while many schools still lack universal screening and clear tiered intervention systems (tiered SEL intervention discussion). In practice, that means some students need individual wellness plans, not just general class reminders.
Children don't need the same regulation tools. They need access to the right tool.
Assessment and home connection
Self-care is easy to overtalk and undertool. Assess it by checking whether a child can identify a need and choose a matching support with less prompting over time. “I need movement” is progress. “I'm too buzzy to read right now, so I'm doing wall pushes first” is even better.
For families, keep the home version concrete. Make a short card for homework time: drink water, clear the space, choose a focus song or quiet, do ten jumps, start with the smallest task. Respect culture, sensory needs, and trauma histories. What calms one child may irritate another, so choice matters.
Elementary SEL: 8-Strategy Comparison
| Strategy | Implementation complexity | Resource requirements | Expected outcomes | Ideal use cases | Key advantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mindfulness and Deep Breathing Techniques | Low, simple practices but needs consistency | Minimal, time, brief scripts or audio, optional props | Improved self-regulation, focus, reduced physiological stress | Transitions, moments of stress, short whole-class routines | Low-cost, immediately deployable, inclusive |
| SEL Check-In Circles | Moderate, requires routines and facilitation skill | Time block, facilitator training, talking piece/props | Stronger community, emotional expression, early identification of concerns | Morning meetings, community-building, post-conflict circle | Builds belonging, peer support, relational trust |
| Emotion Recognition and Labeling | Moderate, needs explicit instruction and repetition | Visual aids (charts/wheels), lessons, regular practice | Greater emotional vocabulary, self-awareness, improved communication | Read-alouds, mood check-ins, anxiety management | Reduces mislabeling of emotions and enhances empathy |
| Peer Support and Buddy Systems | Moderate, requires careful matching and monitoring | Time for pairing/training, supervision, scheduling | Increased belonging, leadership, academic and social support | Cross-grade mentoring, literacy buddies, new-student onboarding | Low-cost, scalable, leverages peer influence |
| Conflict Resolution and Problem-Solving Scripts | High, needs training, practice, consistent application | Teacher training, role-play time, visual scripts, mediation supports | Fewer discipline incidents, improved negotiation and perspective-taking | Post-conflict repair, mediation programs, social skills lessons | Promotes restorative culture and student agency |
| Growth Mindset Development and Effort Recognition | Moderate, requires consistent adult messaging and modeling | Lessons, ongoing language shifts, reflection tools | Greater persistence, resilience, improved academic effort | Goal-setting, feedback moments, challenge-based tasks | Increases motivation and reduces performance anxiety |
| Empathy Development Through Perspective-Taking Activities | Moderate, needs planning and diverse materials | Literature, role-play scenarios, community connections | Increased empathy, reduced bullying, cultural competency | Character analysis, service projects, bias-reduction lessons | Strengthens prosocial behavior and inclusion |
| Self-Care Routines and Wellness Practices | Moderate, requires family buy-in and scheduling | Access to basic needs supports, time, family collaboration | Improved wellbeing, attention, long-term resilience | Daily routines, stress prevention, students with chronic stress | Holistic benefits for physical and emotional health |
Putting SEL into Practice Every Day
Integrating social-emotional learning isn't about adding another task to an already crowded schedule. It's about changing the way adults respond to ordinary moments that already happen every day. A tense transition, a sibling argument, a child who's frozen at the start of an assignment, a class that comes in noisy from recess. Those are all SEL teaching moments when you have a routine ready.
That's why the strongest SEL implementation usually looks small from the outside. It looks like a teacher pausing for three breaths before math. It looks like a counselor teaching one conflict script and making sure every adult uses the same words. It looks like a parent replacing “Calm down” with “Your body looks fast. Want breathing, movement, or quiet?” Children build emotional skills through repetition, not through one powerful conversation.
If you're deciding where to begin, choose one strategy from this list that solves a problem you're dealing with right now. If mornings are chaotic, start with a check-in circle or brief breathing routine. If classmates keep getting stuck in the same arguments, post one conflict script and practice it during calm time. If a child melts down because they can't name what they feel, use a feelings chart every day for one minute before work begins.
Consistency matters more than variety at first. Adults sometimes abandon SEL routines because the first week feels awkward or scripted. That's normal. Children need repetition before a strategy becomes automatic, especially when they're upset. A short routine done daily will usually help more than a creative activity done once a month.
It also helps to stay honest about trade-offs. Universal strategies are valuable, but they won't fit every child in the same way. Some students need visual supports instead of verbal discussion. Some need movement instead of seated reflection. Some need tier-two or tier-three support because whole-class lessons aren't enough. Good SEL practice isn't rigid. It's responsive.
For school leaders, this means protecting time for relationship routines and giving staff shared language. For teachers, it means teaching the skill before expecting the behavior. For families, it means using the same simple phrases often enough that children can borrow them when they need them most.
At Soul Shoppe, we believe these tools can change the feel of a classroom and the feel of a home. Children learn that feelings are manageable, relationships can be repaired, and asking for help is a strength. When adults practice these SEL strategies for elementary students with steadiness and care, they aren't just reducing conflict in the moment. They're helping kids build skills for school, friendship, and life.
Soul Shoppe helps schools, educators, and families turn SEL from a good intention into daily practice. Explore Soul Shoppe for programs, workshops, and practical tools that build connection, safety, empathy, and shared language for self-regulation, communication, and conflict resolution.
