Abstract

Socioemotional learning (SEL) skills are the competencies that children need to be successful and accepted members of society. In this study, we built a SEL framework and a SEL measurement tool from the ground up that assess children's development of skills with communities of the Baka ethnic group in Cameroon. We conducted a participatory and interactive study to develop a SEL framework and measurement tool that is specific to the context of indigenous Baka communities in Cameroon. Using a quick ethnography methodology and an emic approach, a researcher team comprised mainly of Baka community members engaged parents, teachers, and others in iterative cycles of data collection, analysis, and reflection to develop the framework and assessments. The resulting Baka SEL framework includes skills and domains distinct from predominant SEL frameworks, underscoring the importance of drawing SEL priorities from communities themselves. Shared foundational constructs underlying the Baka SEL framework and other frameworks indicate possible universal human expectations for emotional and relational skills. Two SEL measurement tools were produced: a caregiver tool and a teacher tool, each using storytelling to elicit specific, honest, and detailed information about child behavior. These tools allow us to capture child behavior in the school and the home, and to collect data on all participating children within a specific time period. The described approach is a simple, practical, and culturally appropriate strategy for collaborating with rural communities to articulate their understanding of SEL. The resulting framework and tools illustrate the importance of rooting SEL in local culture, while the approach to developing them serves as a model for other early childhood care and education organizations and programs.

Highlights

  • Numerous studies have demonstrated the importance of increased socioemotional learning (SEL) skills in improved quality of life into adulthood, and that preschool programs can help build these skills [1,2,3,4,5]

  • In order to understand the Socioemotional learning (SEL) skills that Baka children need for success, we conducted a participatory study to answer two research questions: [1] How do Baka caregivers conceptualize SEL skills that children need for success? [2] How can a measurement tool faithfully and validly capture progress in developing these skills in early childhood? The objectives of this study are [1] to build a Baka SEL framework and [2]

  • The Baka SEL Framework The initial domains and indicators drawn from the pile sort open coding of caregiver interviews during step 3 of phase 1 are summarized in Table 4 below

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Summary

Introduction

Numerous studies have demonstrated the importance of increased socioemotional learning (SEL) skills in improved quality of life into adulthood, and that preschool programs can help build these skills [1,2,3,4,5]. Childhood care and education programs that develop SEL skills must ensure their work is rooted in a localized understanding of SEL. Predominant approaches for child development measurement in international contexts, including measurement of SEL, entails the adaptation of existing measures to new settings [12,13,14,15]. Research has concluded that certain measures can be translated and adapted to different cultures while retaining acceptable reliability and validity. Crosscultural and context-specific norms are seldom provided in these measures or validity studies [8]. Retrofitting a tool developed for children in a certain cultural context to a historically marginalized society risks carrying over assumptions about valuable skills from one culture to another. While the literature is clear that defining and measuring SEL with measures that bear psychometric muster for formative purposes is useful, missing from the literature is an empirical evaluation of a SEL measure that is first defined and constructed within an indigenous context

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