When eighth-graders rush into Seth Brown's math class at Wayzata West Middle School in a week, they'll drill into finicky equations, but they'll also learn how to focus before lessons, tweak their attitudes and accept their mistakes.
They are not just students of math, but of "social-emotional learning," an approach to education that is gathering support around the country and in Twin Cities classrooms.
Social and emotional learning balances academic achievement with "softer" skills: self-control, self and social awareness, relationship building and decisionmaking. Supporters say it's a necessary antidote to the pressures schools put on children.
"We kind of stress them out," Brown said.
Twin Cities educators who have joined the movement say they can see improvements in both classroom behavior and school performance when they teach to "the whole child."
"It's the foundation of what we do in education," said new Minneapolis superintendent Ed Graff, who earned a national reputation for championing the approach in Alaska.
Minnesota is one of eight states working with a national group to help make guidelines for schools and districts around social and emotional learning strategies. While the movement has its skeptics, it is surfacing in districts across the metro area in various forms, ranging from personalized learning to stress reduction.
A middle school in Wayzata is training teachers on the concept of mindfulness, which is awareness of emotions and surroundings, and hopes to implement it on the student level.