CBT Baseball

Wednesday, December 21, 2016



Right after I graduated from grad school, I went back to take a CBT class. Besides being a phenomenal course (with a stellar instructor), the textbook I got for it was actually worthwhile. Cognitive Therapy Techniques for Children and Adolescents: Tools for Enhancing Practice had some actually tangible strategies for doing this kind of work with a population this is still developing metacognition (PS Kindle version is way cheaper). My favorite idea from it was essentially CBT baseball. It's been over 6 years since I read the book, so I'm guessing my version is probably an adaptation of what was described in the book. The first time I used it was in a therapy position with a client that struggled with anxiety. In my role as a school counselor, I use it more often for negative thinkers and anger.



***I use this intervention after I've already established CBT groundwork; after I've worked with the student on the concept that our thoughts influence our feelings and behavior, when they understand the difference between thoughts/feelings/actions, and when they can distinguish between helpful and unhelpful thoughts. For some students, this activity is enough. For others, I do activities where we sort thoughts/feelings/actions and where we sort (or match) helpful/unhelpful thoughts.***

First, I make sure the kiddo understands the basics of baseball (or kickball!). Then, we set out the bases and review which each of them means. I usually go through one example where they are the "pitcher" and I am the "batter" before switching roles.


I use either pre-written scenarios or write them on the spot, crumple them into "baseballs", and "pitch" them to the student. At the home plate, they catch the ball, read it, and then run (or jump - my office is small!) to 1st base and say what thought would pop into their brain. Then they run to 2nd base and identify what emotion(s) and what intensity they would have. They head to 3rd and name what actions or behaviors would follow. I often scaffold with a "So if you're thinking _____ and feeling ____ level ____, what do you think you would do?". This first go around the bases with each scenario is usually negative, and I switch to umpire and tell them "you're out!" after they say something like "I would push them back" or "I would pout and put my head down".



The student heads back to home and we do the same thing again, with the same scenario, only this time they state a more helpful thought on 1st base and use that. After 3rd base, they run home and we cheer that they hit a "home run".

It's a great way to incorporate movement into individual sessions and help what is actually difficult work mentally feel more fun.

Adaptations: 
  • Student comes up with the scenarios themselves.
  • Have a stack of pre-written thought cards at 1st base that the student picks up and reads and uses for 2nd and 3rd base instead of basing it off of a given scenario. 
  • Provide action/behavior options in a visual chart/list at 3rd base.

After one of the last times that I did this with a student, I decided it was time to make some better looking bases (and laminate them so I didn't have to remake them each time).  I plan to add some flat rocks to the bottom of mine so they can be used outside as well once it warms up.







    Goal Setting in 4th Grade - Part 1 - All About Goals

    Monday, December 12, 2016

    One of the options for the academic skills unit I gave my 4th grade teachers was a 3-part lesson on goal setting. Another was for an "all in one" goal setting lesson. I had one teacher pick each, so lesson planning/editing I went. So much of what I was finding on goal setting in my searches for was about saving money to buy expensive things, or working hard to do something like get in the school play - not a fit for what my teachers were looking for. Or it was just a bit above my students, academically and/or developmentally.

    I decided the three main components to goal setting that I wanted to include were: what are goals/why are goals important/what are types of goals, what makes a goal a "good" goal, and personal goal setting.

    Here's the Part 1 PPT - below is a brief outline of it. I would share the PPT for download but it includes images and a video I don't have rights to distribute (I'm a 'google image searcher'). Should be easy enough to recreate if you wanted to though.





    -Go through PPT to explore the idea of goals, the importance of goals, and the types of goals.
    -After discussing academic goals:
                -Students brainstorm ideas of academic goals on white boards. Have a few share out.
    -After discussing personal goals:
    -Show SuperBowl dog diet/exercise commercial and discuss
                -Students do 3 rounds of snowball fight with personal goals. Discuss in a circle.

    The video doesn't show in the PPT, but here it is! It was truly the best video clip I could find on this topic. I don't love that it's about weight loss, but it's funny and hits home the main points I'm trying to get across.



    *Not sure what snowball fight is? It's an activity I use in my upper grades when I need movement or I want the students' response to be anonymous (or both). For this lesson, they each are given a half sheet of paper and asked to write an example of a personal goal a 4th grader may have. Then they crumple it up, stand up, and everyone "throws their snowball" then retrieves a new one. They open it up, add another example of a goal, crumple and throw. I talk them through each tiny step in this and it prevents it from getting too rowdy. We do 3 rounds of this and then gather in a circle. Students have in front of them a piece of paper with 3 examples of personal goals a 4th grader may have, all written by different people. I'll ask things like "raise your hand if there's one on your paper about behavior", then note how many and have a couple share out. "Who has a goal on their paper about a hobby or activity?", "Who has a long-term goal about a career?", etc.

    Journey to Friendsville Review

    Friday, December 9, 2016
                            
    Picture from Child Therapy Toys Website


    Because social skills/friendship groups are the most common small groups we do, we're always looking for awesome interventions for sessions. Games of course, are a hit with both us and the kiddos. More often than not, we're more successful just adapting regular board games to fit our needs, but sometimes "therapeutic" games can be great as well. I wrote here about Socially Speaking as one that I thought was worth the money.


    Journey to Friendship Island is a game I would consider a win as well - though its $50 price tag is a bit hefty. Some of my thoughts/comments:

    • It's touted as a 15 minute game, but I don't know how it can be played meaningfully in less than 20. The last two times I played was with 4 players and we had 25 minutes...and we didn't "finish" (that is to say, no one reached the end). It's not overly lengthy, but realistically 15 minutes is never gonna happen.
    • It's meant to tackle 5 different skills: conversing with others, using humor appropriately, dealing with conflict, joining and participating in group, and showing fairness and respect to others. There is a set of discussion/task cards for each skill and the idea is to pick one set to focus on for each game.
    • I went through all of the cards before playing and took out the ones that weren't a fit for my population/needs. To be honest, I probably only kept 1/3 of them. The ones left I really do like though.
    • The playing pieces are cars which the boys love. They definitely all feel like it's still a "game" and not just an "activity" (an important distinction to my students!).
    • The game does a nice job of balancing skill with chance. This means we get to really work on social skills as specified in the game but also things like sportsmanship, turn taking, and patience.
    •  The "resolving conflict" cards are unfortunately really heavy on fairness and disagreements as opposed to the types of conflict my students have more difficulty with (sharing, taking turns, people being mean, etc.)
    •  I use this most often with 3rd grade but I think it would be appropriate for 2nd-4th grade and could be adapted for 1st and 5th as well depending on the population.

    Here are some pictures I took to show more detail and give some examples of the task/discussion cards included (of the ones I kept):
     



    Confict Resolution Review: Rotations

    Last year I devoted an entire lesson in 3rd grade to reviewing the skills taught in previous lessons and I think it was well worth the time. This year I decided to do the same.

    Last year I used both a Mario and a Jeopardy game (pre-created PPT templates with my Qs added in). They were a big hit, but it did require whole group attention for 45 minutes straight (that's a challenge for many adults I know!) and I'm not sure how much it helped to cement ideas in their minds.



    Because so many of my lessons with 3rd grade this semester have involved sorting and/or task cards, I decided rotations would be the way to go. I tested something similar out last year and while it wasn't perfect, I decided I wanted to give rotations another shot.

    I spent the first 10 minutes explaining each of the rotations and very briefly reviewing some of the concepts. My 3rd grade classrooms are all set up in 5 table groups, and so logistically it was a breeze in terms of spacing and grouping; each table group area was a rotation and students traveled together in their table groups. Students then rotated through 5 stations/centers with about 6 minutes at each and 30-60 seconds for transitioning. In hindsight, I should have maybe just done 4 rotations so they could spend longer at each.

    Rotation A: The Conflict Escalator
    Super straightforward - this was just sorting the same cards we used in this lesson into two categories: words/actions that escalate conflict and words/actions that de-escalate conflict. This wasn't challenging at all for them, but the bimonthly survey I give my teachers indicated that understanding these choices during conflict was still an issue so I included it.



    Rotation B: Sizes of Problems
    I made an anchor chart about the weather themed sizes of problems we learned about and gave them the same problem cards we used in this lesson to sort through.







    Rotation C: Types of Conflict
    Another tiny anchor chart and some conflict scenario cards to match up. Most of the scenarios are from the PPT I used to teach this here but I added/swapped a couple as well.







    Rotation D: What would you do? Kelso's Choices Edition
    A few years ago, my co-counselor got a counselor resources catalog that had this mini (colored!) Kelso's Choices poster. It's perfect for this sort of thing. This center used that poster, the sentence stems "If this conflict happened to me, I would choose _______ because _______", and some conflict examples from this set of cards (I pulled out about 10 of them that seemed to be major issues in the grade this semester). Students took turns pulling and reading cards, then identifying how they would solve the problem and why.



    Rotation E: Talk it Out
    I pulled another 10 of the most applicable conflict example cards and put them with the Talk it Out sentence stems in sheet protectors and skinny dry erase markers. Whereas the other centers are group based, this one is individual work. Students practiced writing Talk it Out statements given conflict examples, similar to in this lesson.



    And that's it! Teachers take time to review core concepts they've already taught and practiced, why shouldn't we?! Next semester, the 3rd grade theme shifts into problem solving other types of problems (being responsible, coping skills, etc.) and this was a simple and fun way to wrap up conflict resolution.

    Staying True to You Lesson Plan

    Thursday, December 8, 2016

    Last spring, my 4th graders became overly focused on being cool and some of my 3rd graders started doing really...well..stupid things...because others told them to. I wanted to do a lesson on peer pressure but needed something that was elementary appropriate and had nothing to do with substances. Something about staying true to yourself. And something that wasn't about accepting yourself for being different.

    I found an unlikely winner in the book Sorry! by, of course, Trudy Ludwig. As I mentioned here, the book certainly does discuss genuine vs. disingenuous apologies, but the real focus is on staying true to who you are. The book is rich with discussion topics.





    One activity I use after reading this book is Quiz, Quiz, Trade with discussion questions about the book and theme. I did this with my 3rd graders because it was a better fit with their abilities than the silent talk activity below.

                                               Sorry! Quiz, Quiz, Trade Discussion Question Cards

    The other activity I use is what I call "silent talk" but others have called "chalk talk". I explain to the students that they are going to discuss the story...silently. Most are able to guess we'll be writing. I put 5-6 discussion questions on sticky chart paper and post them around the room. The idea is that after answering each question, they will continue to walk around the room and read each other's responses and add comments, ask questions, use symbols, etc. I project some ideas of ways that they can interact with one anothers' responses. I usually have to model this and remind them as we go, because they all get hyper focused with just answering all of the questions.




    With about 10ish minutes left, I stop them, gather the question sheets, and we circle up on the floor. I go through each question and share what I notice about their responses and they share what they've noticed.

    *In the past, I did this lesson after this sort of thing had already become an issue. This year, something similar started to pop up earlier than usual in one of the homerooms so I went ahead and moved this up in the curriculum map. It made the lesson more reinforcing (of their still strong beliefs in staying true to themselves and being kind) and preventative than in the past. I haven't decided yet if I think this is the right timing or if I should have waited. Time will tell!*



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