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This book examines the global movement of putting more emphasis on
students' social and emotional development in education. It
provides some order in the unstructured multitude of desirable
socio-emotional educational objectives and ambitions that have
resulted from this movement and builds on a careful conceptual
analysis. It starts out by examining the roots of the movement and
discusses different emphases. Next it makes use of instructional
and psychological constructs and theories to arrive at meaningful
categorizations of major domains and types of social-emotional
"skills". One of the key assumptions is that social and emotional
attributes are malleable by means of educational interventions. The
book reviews available research evidence for this assumption,
taking into account psychological studies and meta-analyses. It
then creates new evidence based on a new meta-analysis, which
concentrated on the effects of educational interventions on skills
associated with the conscientiousness factor of the Big5 taxonomy.
In the final chapter, the book discusses the implications for
educational policy and practice; a discussion in which attention is
given to political and ethical questions about the desirability of
treating social and emotional attributes as educational goals.
This book examines the global movement of putting more emphasis on
students' social and emotional development in education. It
provides some order in the unstructured multitude of desirable
socio-emotional educational objectives and ambitions that have
resulted from this movement and builds on a careful conceptual
analysis. It starts out by examining the roots of the movement and
discusses different emphases. Next it makes use of instructional
and psychological constructs and theories to arrive at meaningful
categorizations of major domains and types of social-emotional
"skills". One of the key assumptions is that social and emotional
attributes are malleable by means of educational interventions. The
book reviews available research evidence for this assumption,
taking into account psychological studies and meta-analyses. It
then creates new evidence based on a new meta-analysis, which
concentrated on the effects of educational interventions on skills
associated with the conscientiousness factor of the Big5 taxonomy.
In the final chapter, the book discusses the implications for
educational policy and practice; a discussion in which attention is
given to political and ethical questions about the desirability of
treating social and emotional attributes as educational goals.
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