MacFarland Winter Wellness December
Empowering Minds, Energizing Bodies, Enriching Lives.
📌 THIS MONTH'S WELLNESS DISCUSSION 📌
December: Resilience and Coping Skills – Provide strategies for handling stress and overcoming challenges.
📄 Here's What the Wellness Team is Doing This Month!
Managing Holiday Stress and Expectations: Discuss how the holiday season can sometimes feel overwhelming, with school assignments, family gatherings, and gift-giving. Explore ways to manage stress and keep a positive mindset.
Self-Care During Winter Break: Encourage students to plan how they can practice self-care during the break, such as getting enough sleep, staying active, or engaging in hobbies they enjoy.
Embracing Change and Growth: Reflect on the changes students may have experienced throughout the year, both academically and personally, and how they can continue to grow and improve in the new year.
Understanding and Expressing Emotions: Talk about the importance of recognizing emotions, especially as the year ends, and healthy ways to express feelings (through journaling, talking to a friend, or using art).
Staying Active and Healthy in Winter: Discuss ways to stay physically active when it's cold outside, such as indoor exercises, walking, or trying out winter sports, and how physical activity benefits mental health.
These topics aim to promote mental and emotional wellness while engaging middle school students in thoughtful reflection and self-improvement during the holiday season.
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WELLNESS GROUPS:
- Our Minds Matter Wellness Student Leadership Club to create a space where we can highlight and engage with those who are making positive choices and encourage them to serve as role models for their peers.
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SPARCS group [Structure Psychotherapy for Adolescents Responding to Chronic Stress]. A safe space for students to discuss how their experiences impact current functioning to increase effective coping skills with the focus on regulating emotions, behaviors, and impulses.
- Grief Support- Supporting students who have experienced loss/death of a loved one and helping them navigating the difficult journey and processing their emotions.
- ONSE/OLA- community violence group working together to address and prevent violence within the community, while promoting safety.
- Newcomers group for Spanish-speaking students to connect, build language skills, and adjust to their new school community and embracing cultural identities.
- High School prep- helping students transition smoothly into high school by providing guidance and ensuring they feel prepared for the challenges ahead.
- Socialization group- focus on building and improving social skills through role-playing, peer support, and helping students gain confidence in forming friendships.
Mind Your Mental Health (article)
Holidays may not feel "perfect"
For many, the winter holidays can be the most stressful time of the year. The pressures to keep up with social occasions and make others happy can lead to physical and mental exhaustion. Here are some simple ideas for cutting holiday stress.
- Don’t seek perfection. People often maintain an idealized image of how the holidays should be. However, everything about your holiday season doesn’t have to be perfect or just like last year.
- Simplify wherever possible. Be realistic about what you can do during the holidays. Eliminate some tasks or social functions so that you have more time to enjoy the people you value most.
- Avoid social media. Others posting images of lavish dinners and perfect parties can lead us to feel we’re not measuring up.
- Continue your workout routines. Exercise helps bust stress and burn off calories that accumulate so quickly at this time of year.
Mind Your Mental Health - National Stress-free family holiday's month
Anxiety in the Holidays
While the holiday season is often seen as a time of joy, it can also bring about increased anxiety for many students. The pressure of assignments, exams, and upcoming breaks can create stress, leaving students feeling overwhelmed. For teachers, it's important to be mindful of this heightened anxiety and offer support by creating a calm, balanced classroom environment. By acknowledging these challenges, offering flexible deadlines when possible, and incorporating stress-relieving activities or brain-breaks, educators can help students navigate the holiday season with a sense of calm and motivation, reducing anxiety and fostering a positive learning atmosphere.
WELLNESS MONTHLY THEME 🎄
December is Stress-Free Family Holidays Month
🌟 Wellness Wisdom! 🌟
Nurturing Motivation During the Holiday Break
The holiday season presents a unique challenge for educators striving to keep students motivated. By tapping into both intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, teachers can maintain engagement and enthusiasm. Intrinsic motivation thrives when students connect learning to personal interests and see the value in their efforts, while extrinsic motivation works through festive goals, rewards, and recognition. A balanced approach that combines the joy of the season with meaningful academic incentives ensures students stay excited about learning, even as they look forward to the break. It’s about making learning feel relevant, fun, and rewarding!
How to Help Regulate Emotions? ...a clinical approach
DBT (Dialectical Behavior Therapy)
DBT (Dialectical Behavior Therapy) skills are a set of coping strategies designed to help manage intense emotions, improve relationships, and develop healthier ways of thinking and behaving.
The core DBT skills are divided into four main modules:
1. Mindfulness: Paying attention to the present moment and accepting things as they are.
2. Distress Tolerance: Learning to handle difficult emotions without making things worse.
3. Emotion Regulation: Understanding and managing intense emotions.
4. Interpersonal Effectiveness: Building better communication skills and healthy relationships.
These skills help people stay calm, think clearly, and react in positive ways.
CLASSROOM SUPPORT: Cultivating Focus, Emotional Regulation, and Well-being
The Importance of Mindfulness and Social-Emotional Learning in the Classroom
Practicing mindfulness in the classroom is crucial for supporting students' overall well-being and development, particularly when social-emotional learning (SEL) is integrated into the school day. While academics are important, schools that focus solely on intellectual learning may miss opportunities to nurture students' emotional and social growth. Mindfulness helps students develop awareness of their thoughts, feelings, and behaviors, fostering self-regulation, empathy, and resilience.
By practicing mindfulness, students can:
- Improve focus and attention: Mindfulness exercises help students stay present and engaged, which leads to better concentration and retention of information.
- Enhance emotional regulation: It teaches students to recognize and manage their emotions, reducing impulsivity and improving emotional responses to challenging situations.
- Build social skills: Mindfulness encourages empathy and active listening, helping students connect with peers and teachers, promoting a positive classroom environment.
- Reduce stress and anxiety: Mindfulness practices create a sense of calm, helping students cope with academic pressure and personal struggles.
Incorporating mindfulness into the classroom ensures that students not only excel academically but also develop essential skills for emotional intelligence, mental health, and interpersonal relationships. This holistic approach supports both personal growth and academic success.
INSPIRATIONAL WORDS: Stress Reducing words to keep you Motivated in the Holidays
Let Go of Control
Be Thankful for Smallest Reasons
Keep Pushing for Bright Days
Weekly Wellness Team Meetings
⏰ Wellness Team meets weekly on Wednesdays, 10:30-11:30am in admin suite
😊 For student consultation supports, please contact Wellness MMS Team Members:
Ms. Raphael, Ms. Raifsnider, Ms. Castro, Ms. Sargent, Ms. Kent, or Ms. Williams
MacFarland Middle School
Principal Cooke's Email: lucas.cooke@k12.dc.gov
Location: 4400 Iowa Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20011
Phone: 202-671-6033
Website: https://www.macfarlandmsdc.org/