Children should be solid in interaction skills, friendship skills, emotional literacy, and regulation to have the needed foundation to approach problem-solving in a systematic way.
A Note from the Team
I know that everyone has a skill they feel is important to teach children. Teaching children problem solving is mine. This is a skill that we feel children will learn on their own. However, how often do adults model their thinking processes and give children instruction in how to approach, analyze, and think through problems and consequences? We expect children to do this every day. We say "think about that" regularly, but have we shown them how?
This module will lead you through a step-by-step way to teach children to recognize a problem, determine what emotion it elicits, consider solutions, and analyze consequences to see if it worked. The process is simple. The practice is the hard part. You could systematically teach a problem-solving scenario every day and never come close to all a child will face in a single week. It takes regular practice and referring back to what you have taught them.
I hope you enjoy this module as much as I do. This skill will shape the leaders of our future!
~Danita Pitts - Administrator for Early Childhood Special Education B-5
Step 1: Reading Assignment
Read pages 111-117 in the IEPm. Consult your coach if you have any questions.
IEPm
Step 2: Review the Slides and Notes
Download the presentation. Open the slides. Click the tab that says "Open With" and click Google Slides. Print the slides with the speaker notes. Review the material including videos. Jot any questions you may have to discuss with your coach or team.
Step 3: Read the Handout
Read the handout to the right. Consider the example language that can be used when teaching or reinforcing this strategy.
Step 4: Watch this in Action
Watch the teacher. Note the routine she uses.
Scripted Story 1
Scripted Story 2
Rewards
Step 6: Reflect on Your Classroom
Consider your own class and your own children. What are the most common problems that occur? Could you create scenario cards for these common events? Could you have children act out problems and using the problem-solving process and use their own pictures to create scenario cards?
Step 7: Plan to Teach the Lesson
Plan your lesson. Consider these things:
When will you teach it?
What setting - whole group, partial group, small group, 1:1?
Where will I put the kit, or a duplicate kit, for the children in the classroom to actually use when they need it for a visual reminder?
What problem would be best to introduce it?
Do I have a child who could be pre-taught this process and serve as my model? A child who really needs this skills could work with special education staff to be ready to serve as an example. This would allow for some really positive feedback and praise on a skill he/she may have struggled with in the past.
What problems can I use later to reinforce?
How will I reinforce?
Do the other classroom staff and support personnel know this process?
Do we need on for recess to carry outside?
Step 8: Video Yourself in Action
Obtain video documentation of your mastery and reflect on it using the checklist. What are your strengths? What do you still need to work on?
*Remember - A observation by your coach can substitute for your video documentation.
Step 9: Reflect Using Observation Checklist
What would someone expect to see if my class is implementing this well?
Step 10: Share and Discuss
Submit your video and checklist to your coach. Reflect on your performance and checklist results with him/her. What are your next steps?
Family Connections
Implementation Resources
Problem Solving Writ Cars
Problem Solving Steps
Solution Kit Large
Problem Solving in the Moment
Problem-Solving in a Real Life Situation