Developing emotional control is a vital step in fostering middle school students’ executive function skills. This critical ability helps them manage reactions, stay calm under stress, and make thoughtful decisions—essential for academic success, social empowerment, and emotional well-being. In this blog, we’ll explore practical strategies teachers can use to integrate emotional control into their curriculum, promoting self-regulation, confidence, and improved learning outcomes.
Provide each student with a blank sheet of paper and have them fold it in half lengthwise. On the left side, students write five problems they’ve experienced over a specific period. On the right side, they document their reaction to each problem. Then, guide them in evaluating whether the size of their reaction matched the size of the problem. For any mismatched reactions, encourage reflection on what a more appropriate reaction might have looked like.
Ask students to write strategies for coping with stress on a note card and keep it accessible. Strategies might include taking deep breaths, counting to ten, or going for a brief walk. Over an agreed-upon period, have students try one or more strategies when feeling stressed. Then, document how their reactions change and identify which strategies are most effective for them.
Teach students a belly-breathing technique and encourage them to use it three or more times during moments of upset over a designated period. Students document what triggered their emotions, how upset they felt, and how their mind and body responded after practicing belly breathing.
Have students compare and contrast how anger manifests at school, at home, and in social situations. Encourage them to document their thoughts, feelings, and actions in each setting to determine if their reactions are consistent or vary based on the environment.
Over a designated period, students document two or more situations where they experienced strong negative feelings. For each, they write down the unhelpful thought they had and then create a new, more helpful thought. Students reflect on whether focusing on the new thought changes their feelings.
Incorporating these activities into your classroom supports executive function instruction and provides students with strategies to improve their emotional control. These lessons are a key component of solving executive function challenges, empowering students to build the skills they need for long-term success. When students feel in control of their emotions, they experience improved engagement, stronger social skills, and better academic performance.
Explore more ways to develop emotional control for grades 1-4 and 9-12.
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By focusing on teaching executive function skills, particularly developing emotional control, teachers can create a classroom environment that fosters student confidence, enhances learning, and supports every student’s growth.