Whole Child Approach to Education

Learning is a social process and the evidence supporting the importance of relationships, including mentorship, in connection to students’ academic and social-emotional outcomes continues to build. Students also don’t learn in a vacuum; physical conditions like hydration, sleep, and emotional state have direct impact on the learning centers of the brain and the ability to engage in the process of learning.
At-risk students with mentors are 55% more likely to enroll in college and 130% more likely to hold leadership positions than their unmentored peers.
American education was established over a century ago, before the science of human development emerged as a field. Our whole child work is dedicated to accelerating the integration of what we know about the science of human development into education. Grounding education in human development means taking a whole child approach to learning that accounts for the many different ways in which young people grow. The graphic above details areas critical to learning and development, representing an expanded definition of student success and well-being

A. Academic

Skills and knowledge typically associated with K-12 education. This includes the four core content areas: mathematics, literacy, science, and social studies, as well as the subjects included in most requirements for a diploma, like art, health, and physical education.

B. Cognitive

Skills related to attention, perception and memory.  These are the skills we draw upon to learn and retain knowledge like executive function, visual and auditory processing, reasoning, and short- and long-term memory.

C. Social-emotional

Skills and mindsets involved in the social process of learning and development. This domain includes social and emotional factors with links to well-being and academic success, like healthy adult attachment, stress management, self-regulation, and resilience.

D. Physical

Nutrition, fitness, and sleep, as well as vision, hearing, and dental health.

E. Mental

A state of well-being demonstrated by the ability to realize potential, cope with stress, work toward goals, and make meaningful social contributions and connections.
The mental health domain draws from the definition provided by the World Health Organization: a “state of well-being in which every individual realizes his or her own potential, can cope with the normal stresses of life, can work productively and fruitfully, and is able to make a contribution to her or his community.”

F. Identity

An individual’s unique sense of purpose, including one’s  personal, collective, and cultural identities, as well as one’s personal values.


🎉👫🎉 School of Intellectual Development "New Generation Z" invites children from 4 to 12 years old to visit training in mental arithmetic.

✨7 reasons to learn mental arithmetic:

1. To teach а child to do addition, subtraction, multiplication and division of single-digit, double-digit and three-digit numbers by the Japanese method in easy way and without boredom
2. To develop imaginative thinking of the child
3. To develop all kinds of memory, concentration, attention
4. To increase the ability to learn foreign languages
5. To develop self-confidence
6. To engage in a progressive methodology, which is used in 52 countries of the world.

🏆Our advantages are:

1. Small groups
2. A unique intelligent on-line simulator that allows to engage all kids and select tasks individually for each kid
3. Experienced teachers with specialized education

🌟🌟🌟 Believe in your child’s limitless possibilities and send an application to attend classes
+ 380689662804 or m.me/NGenerationZ,  @new_generation_z

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