VOLUME 20
•
ISSUE 3
•
JANUARY 2022
THE TOOLBOX A Teaching and Learning Resource for Instructors
INCORPORATING WELLNESS TO PROMOTE METACOGNITIVE KNOWLEDGE AND REGULATION A
s students transition to college, they typically Alexis Hauck face many challenges; however, these difficulties Angela L. Vaughan University of Northern Colorado have increased substantially for today’s students in the midst of an ongoing pandemic. As a result, student wellness has become a priority. This does not just include physical wellness but also many other areas such as emotional and social wellbeing. In the past, many programs feature wellness as a specific unit or content area; however, as a counterpoint, it is important to intentionally plan and incorporate wellness throughout the semester with connections to multiple topics. In this issue of The Toolbox, we will examine some basic strategies for including wellness into the student learning experience.
Incorporating Wellness to Promote Metacognitive Knowledge and Regulation Today, effective instruction goes well beyond teaching students content. Instructors are charged with the task of creating and maintaining an environment that promotes a safe place to learn. With increased enrollments of diverse student populations, many who are the first in their family to attend college, instructors also seek to help students meet basic needs. These include safe living spaces (e.g., roommate problems that pull students away from class and finishing homework), managing their money/budget so they can have consistent food access, as well as making sure content gets covered. As such, programs are asking a great deal of academic advisors, graduate students, faculty and staff who teach first-year experience seminars and want to make student safety and wellbeing a priority.
National Resource Center for The First-Year Experience® and Students in Transition, University of South Carolina
The secret of health for both mind and body is not to mourn for the past, not to worry about the future, or not to anticipate troubles, but to live in the present moment wisely and earnestly.
—Buddha
www.sc.edu/fye/toolbox
1