Mindfulness and Yoga in Schools A Guide for Teachers and Practitioners

(Ben Green) #1

92 • PART II: MINDFULNESS IN EDUCATING FOR SELF-REGULATION AND ENGAGEMENT CHAPTER 5: THE MINDFUL CLASSROOM • 93


Teach to the Developmental Level and Age

Be mindful of the developmental capabilities of the students with whom you are working.
The manner in which tools are taught must match the developmental level of the students
for mindfulness programming to be effective, see Table 5.1.
To illustrate, Mrs. Jones, a second-grade teacher, began her mindfulness practice
2 years ago. After an in-service session on mindful schools, she feels ready to begin
teaching mindfulness to her second graders. She uses her own experience with medi-
tation to inform her mindfulness teaching; however, she does not stop to consider the
developmental level of her students and their neurological ability to pay attention. She
begins with a 10-minute guided meditation she has downloaded from a well-known
mindfulness resource page. It does not go well. She stops several times to redirect students
who are talking or fidgeting, and a student who gets out of his seat is given a time out.
After the 10 minutes, Mrs. Jones is exhausted, has yelled twice, which always feels bad,
and isn’t sure if mindfulness is a good idea. She rationalizes that her class this year feels
immature, and perhaps she will try this again next year with hopes of a more attentive

TABLE 5.1 Mindfulness Practice by Age

Age DevelopmentAl notes minDfulness prActice tips
Grades
K–2


  • In preoperational/operational thought
    (need concrete examples and lived
    experiences)

  • Use mindfulness practices to learn
    focus, self-regulation, and self-care

  • Live in the present moment

  • Reactive

  • Unfiltered bare awareness

  • Few self-limiting beliefs

  • Eager, curious, and ready to learn

    • Mindfulness lessons 10–30 minutes

    • Present concept with a short practice
      (2–5 minutes)

    • Use props (breathing buddies)

    • Establish rituals and routines

    • Make it fun, safe, and warm

    • Don’t explain everything; let them
      experience

    • Help them see cause and effect

    • Keep practices embodied and filled
      with movement
      Grades
      3–5



  • In operational thought (still need
    concrete examples and lived
    experiences, can learn some
    abstractions, can think about their
    thinking)

  • Use mindfulness practices to learn
    focus, self-regulation, and self-care

  • Learn in a step-by-step fashion

  • Rational minds developing rapidly

  • Emerging self-awareness

  • Increased ability to describe emotions
    and physical states

  • Beginning to wonder why they are
    learning things

  • Eager to please

  • Emerging impulse control

  • High need for positive reflection

  • Peers becoming very important

  • Mindfulness lessons 10–30 minutes

  • Can spend up to 10 minutes in silent
    practice

  • Can begin to include dialogues and
    reflection time

  • Use mindfulness journals

  • Embodied games and practices are
    still important; engage through play

  • Routine still important

  • Stress related to testing and other
    pressures real for them

  • Allow them to learn through
    experience, rather than telling them

  • Give them the rational reason for
    learning a lesson


(continued )
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