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Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self- Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan Kropilak Beverly Montgomery Emily Moreno Jennifer Sheerin Bonnie Silberbogen Irfana Syed QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTi decomp are neede
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Page 1: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and

Monitor Behaviors

This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch

Meghan KropilakBeverly Montgomery

Emily MorenoJennifer Sheerin

Bonnie SilberbogenIrfana Syed

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and a decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Page 2: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Core Vocabulary of the Superflex Curriculum

Flexible

Expected

Unexpected

Superflex

Rock Brain

Glassman

Space Invader

Was Funny Once

Mean Jean

Braineater

Page 3: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

“Flexible”

Thinking is Flexible...– It can change– It can adjust to go with the flow.– You are in control of changing your

thinking.

Page 4: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Superflex Curriculum

Stephanie Madrigal and Michelle Garcia Winner developed a social thinking curriculum that involves identifying expected and unexpected behavior. Flexible thinking is expected, inflexible thinking is unexpected behavior. Superflex is a superhero that helps defeat “unthinkables.” “Unthinkables” are characters that invade your brain and make your thinking inflexible and make you have unexpected behaviors. Meet Superflex and some of the characters with the strategies used to defeat them...

Page 5: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Rock Brain

“You’re not listening.”

“Not being flexible.”

“You get stuck.”

“You keep wanting to play Legos when you are supposed to clean up.”

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Page 6: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Strategies to defeat Rock Brain

“Change your mind.”

“Go with the flow.”

“Listen and do what you’re supposed to do.”

“Be a first-time listener.”

“Do what you’re supposed to do first, then go back to what you want to do.”

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Page 7: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Space Invader

Who is space invader? What does he do?– “Pops your space

bubble.”– “Makes you get too

close to others.”

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Page 8: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Strategies to defeat Space Invader

“Use your arm length to help you.”

“If someone gets too close, ask them to please move back.”

“Stop and think.”

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Page 9: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Braineater

“He makes you get distracted!”“He makes me pay attention to my friends and not my teacher.”“He uses Xbox to distract me!”

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Page 10: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Strategies to Defeat Braineater

“Move the thing that is distracting you away.”“Give the School Listening Look.”“Take a break!”“Give the person eye contact.”

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Page 11: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Glassman

“He makes you have a big reaction to a small problem.”

“He makes a small problem into a really big one.”

Page 12: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Strategies to Defeat Glassman

“Take a deep breath.”

I should think: “Is this a big deal?”

Identify the size of the problem and match your reaction to the size.

Self Talk: “It’s not big deal”

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Page 13: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Was Funny Once

“He makes you get silly when you are supposed to be listening.”

“He makes me laugh and laugh.”

“He makes you do something that you think is funny after your teacher told you not to.”

“He makes you get carried away.”

“You can’t get back on track.”

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Page 14: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Strategies to Defeat Was Funny Once

“Think about our Silly Scale”

“I need to think if I should be at a 1 or a 5.”

“Look at what everyone else is doing.”

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Page 15: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Sill y 5-point scale

5 WAY TOO SI LLY. I am not learning. My laugh is too big. I am not thinking about others.

4 TOO SILLY . Doing anything for a laugh. Looking for reactions from others. I am not learning.

3 Silly. Laughing out loud. Being funny but then stopping when the teacher tells me to.

2 A little Silly. Telling a joke one time. Laughing at one thing and then stopping. I am having fun but I am still learning.

1 Serious. This is NOT a time to laugh. Times to be serious are when the teacher is angry or when someone feels sad.

Page 16: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Mean Jean

“She makes me drip other people’s buckets.”

“She makes me say bossy and mean things.”

“She let’s ‘keepers’ pop out!”

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Page 17: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Strategies to Defeat Mean Jean

“Think: is this a keeper?”

“I need to think how I would feel if someone else said it to me.”

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Page 18: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Classroom Strategies

Flexibility chain

“Go with the flow” nonverbal signal

Connecting it to how full is your bucket (specifically Mean Jean)

Dramarama School - give a scenario to act out. Then, act it out using a strategy to defeat

Superflex awards

Constant repetition of the key vocabulary, especially flexible, expected and unexpected.

Page 19: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

Data from ParentsParent Survey Results

0

5

10

15

20

25

Highly Effective Somewhat Effective Not Very Effective

Rating

Number of Parents

Page 20: Superflex! Teaching Students Strategies to Develop Self-Awareness and Monitor Behaviors This powerpoint was adapted from the work of Jenny Hirsch Meghan.

The OutcomeSuperflex gives our students the language to identify their thoughts/feelings, point of view, and intentions.It provides them with ways to discuss behavior(s) with peers, teachers, and parents.It encourages students to use strategies to deal with those behaviors.Children learn how to work more cooperatively without labeling behaviors in a negative way.Stresses the importance of flexibility in the classroom (for both students and teachers!)Allows teachers to spend less time on behavior management as well as improves individual behaviors.It gives teachers proactive strategies to use!


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