I perched on the edge of an undersized plastic chair across from my daughter's teacher at our first elementary parent/teacher conference of the year. "Your daughter listens well and is so well behaved, but her reading level is not exactly where it needs to be, and she's having trouble with some math skills. But she is very sweet and kind, and that's so important too—you can't teach those things, but don't worry, we can teach her the math and reading.
It's the Oreo cookie approach to giving parents bad news—They sneak the negative in as white filling surrounded by thin wafers of good. But as a neuroscientist, I was stunned by the complete inaccuracy of the last statement.Of course, you can teach those things. You can teach empathy, teach kindness, and respect. These are not innate talents or solely genetic gifts. They are teachable skills.
We understand how learning works for things like 2+2=4 pretty well. Teachers typically use active participation and frequent practice spaced out over a period of time to teach classroom content. But there aren't special neuroscience rules to help learn empathy, creativity, or countless other life skills–they follow the exact brain mechanisms as learning math facts.
There are spines on the edges of neurons that mediate synaptic connections between neurons and govern how we learn. In kids, the spines are super dynamic. They appear or retract based on experience and how frequently they are used. If you keep using a pathway, the spines are more likely to stick around. This results in the reshaping of synapses and long-term learning.
That school conference was a moment of profound insight into the bare-bones social skills my daughter was (not) learning at school, and it explained a lot about why her perfect classroom presence was completely train-wrecked when she got home from school.
I knew the social landscape of this classroom was terrible. A girl in my daughter's class plays a game called "bus," where the other girls line up to take rides on her back at recess. The girl is the bus, and she carries passengers around. It looks benign to the teachers who stand and monitor play at recess. But in this game, the girl charges for rides. Usually, the fare is an imaginary five cents, but my daughter gets charged $100 to take her ride every time. Why? Because the girl said, my 20th percentile weight daughter is just too heavy.
I knew complaints were flowing in about the class social situation—It wasn't just the "bus" game. Another parent, fed up with her daughter being picked on, made T-shirts that said the girl was a bully and tried to pass them out at school. This is the real reason I was at the parent/teacher conference. Yet, when I brought it up, I quickly detected a relatively new teacher overwhelmed with classroom dynamics who was grateful for an "easy," compliant kid. I saw a classroom in which my daughter was figuring out how to react to bad social situations on her own and failing.
It's here that parents need to think carefully about the qualities we want our children to possess and then consistently and purposefully create opportunities for our kids to practice those skills. Deliberate parenting will make children who live deliberate lives. In my daughter's classroom, I could see that math was being practiced—there were even memorized arithmetic songs.
But they were not teaching kindness, conflict resolution, or even problem solving, which are the things I prioritize as a parent—the building blocks of empathy. The school is not just relying on parents to teach empathy at home. They are actually assuming that kids either come in with these skills, or they don't get them. If, in turn, parents think kids are getting social skills at school, then all our kids drop through a crevice.
My daughter saw two choices with the bully in her class: Confront her or tell on her. Unable to do either, she felt completely stuck when the girl price gouged her on the playground. With repeated practice, she is learning to stand there and internalize it.
Those are not the synapses I want firing in her, so I taught my daughter how to practice empathy. It's not just the queen bee who needs to be taught empathy. Cognitive empathy is a powerful skill, and it's the underdog that needs powerful skills.
First, I asked my daughter to explain the girl's actions as if she were her best friend. "I guess she feels like she doesn't want to be alone on the playground, so she's in charge, and if she's in charge, she can decide which friends to have."
Next, my daughter became a detective, looking for body language to find motivation and predict patterns in the girl's behavior. Even at age seven, becoming a social sleuth enabled her to understand the situation better. This gave her back a measure of personal control, and eventually, the power to speak up for herself, instead of standing there, glued to the asphalt, feeling terrible.
Then, we learned conflict resolution skills the same way as math, using active participation and frequent practice spaced out over time. I became the girl, and in our living room, I rudely charged my daughter $100 a ride until her reactions to it were second nature.
We came up with a system so she could be heard in these situations: STAFF:
- Say how you feel.
- Tell them it's not okay.
- Ask for what you want to have happened.
- Find a friend.
She wasn't frozen—she knew what to say, and it rolled off her tongue. There was a scaffolding to cling to. We used these social skill pathways repeatedly—on our terms—until spines had formed between newly used neurons, the pathways were solidified, and learning had happened.
Since neuronal connections that have been used are more likely to fire the next time, it's second nature for her now. If we expect our children to be socially independent and to do it well, they need tools to do it with.
Neuroscience tells us that practice defines us as people, that the pathways we choose define our nature. Activity influences the brain's architecture, and this neural plasticity is constantly occurring, even when they are still watching TV, eating dinner, or choosing which birthday present to open first. These spines are actively growing and shrinking, and the experiences are actually turning on and off genes that support this process.
Eventually, the neuronal pathways we use most become more likely to fire as our "default" setting. In essence, we practice being ourselves until we become who we are. Viewed through this lens, every moment is a critical period to teach critical skills important to us—skills like creativity, self-control, social awareness, and compassion.
Several proven social learning curricula target empathy, social learning, and conflict resolution skills in the classroom that have gotten great results that last for years, including roots of empathy (K-8), positive action (K-12), and responsive classroom (K-5). Still, you don't have to wait for the teachers to do it. The window for explosive synaptic formation doesn't close when children hit elementary school or even high school.
Social connections are being formed even more so in tween and high school kids, continuing into adulthood. Your child's critical period for development is now. There's no bad age to start working on these skills, and there's no one correct way to do it, as long as you're consistently practicing and folding it into your everyday life.
Find a way that works for your family, and if you're consciously empathetic in spirit, then it will seep into your child.
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