Course | 5 Critical Life Skills for Tweens, Teens, and Young Adults
Facilitator
Michelle Garcia Winner
Michelle Garcia Winner, MA, CCC-SLP, is the founder and CEO of Social Thinking and a globally recognized thought leader, author, speaker, and social-cognitive therapist. She is dedicated to helping people of all ages develop social-emotional learning, including those with social learning differences.
That Often Remain Untaught
Tweens, teens, and young adults are expected to naturally develop social and organizational competencies needed in school and across their lives. However, students with social learning and organized thinking differences (e.g., ADHD, twice exceptional, expressive receptive language, sensory processing, autism levels 1 and 2, etc.) may not intuitively learn these concepts and skills. This course will explore 5 critical life skills related to social-emotional learning and organized thinking that can and should be directly addressed and taught to students & clients ages 11-22 in our homes, schools, and clinics. We’ll also review a variety of explicit metacognitive frameworks and practical strategies for teaching and learning these critical social competencies.
120 minutes of instruction
This Course Explores
5 critical life skills tied to social, emotional, and academic learning and organized thinking for tweens, teens, and young adults
Explicit metacognitive tools and practical strategies
Tips on specific executive functions to foster the development of social learners’ competencies toward achieving their personal and social goals
Why learning to be comfortable with discomfort is an important anxiety management strategy
Description
For more than 25 years, we have focused our lens on adolescents and young adults, not only as their teachers but also actively as learners of what they are experiencing as they emerge into adulthood, as well across time living as adults. It is collectively agreed upon by different communities worldwide that children’s primary and secondary school endeavors are designed to prepare them for life beyond these school years. However, our experience is that too many students struggle immensely as they step out of high school and into an adult world of college, vocational, career, friendship, and family expectations that are vastly different and more sophisticated than what they experienced as children, tweens, and teens.
Clearly, there is a gap between what we value and teach based on our community’s academic standards and what competencies are required in adulthood, given it’s expected that by the time students emerge into young adulthood, they have firmly established many concepts and skills to function as independent adults.
This course explores 5 critical life skills that should be actively taught within our schools and homes, beginning a decade before students are expected to function as young adults. Neurotypically developing children are naturally exploring all these concepts, beginning in primary school. Our students with social emotional and/or organizational learning differences require explicit metacognitive explanations paired with practical strategies that help unpack abstract expectations. This direct instruction provides concrete tools for helping them evolve in learning-related competencies. Interventionists will find much of this information relevant for actively working with students, beginning when they are 11 years old and when continuing to address these concepts throughout their tween, teen, and young adult years and across adulthood, as societal expectations naturally become more complex and nuanced over time.
Topics explored during this course:
Social competencies needed to be considered an “independent” young adult
What’s important for managing in and across an individual’s life is likely not graded on tests and classwork.
Rather than aspire to “be happy” on any given day, aspire to experience well-being.
Do more than talk about what you plan to do: identify reasonable goals, as well as develop and use strategies to work toward accomplishing them.
Managing anxieties while building competencies to initiate and maintain face-to-face communication
Who Should Register for This Course
The Social Thinking Methodology is used by a wide variety of professionals, including speech-language pathologists, special and general education teachers, social workers, counselors, clinical and school psychologists, occupational therapists, behavior specialists, and school administrators, to name a few. It’s also used by family members and caregivers across settings.
Learning Objectives and Agenda
Objectives
Participants will be able to:
Explain why it’s important to teach individuals the importance of being comfortable with discomfort.
Define the Four Steps of Executive Functioning
Explain why sleep management, including when and how to wake up, is an essential life skill.
Agenda
1 hour and 30 minutes
Defining what it means to become “independent”
Explore important life skills and social concepts not graded in school
Being “happy” versus learning to establish “well-being” in one’s life
Shifting from talking about doing things to actually doing them
The importance of learning to initiate in-person communication and managing related anxieties
30 minutes previously recorded Q&A about course content
Credit
2 hours of CE credit are available for select professionals.
Social Thinking is proud to provide access to continuing education credit for speech-language pathologists (livestream and recorded), educators (livestream and recorded), and others!
Credit may be available for this course and may vary by country or institution. Please verify eligibility with Social Thinking.
Course | 5 Critical Life Skills for Tweens, Teens, and Young Adults
- Paid
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