Social and Emotional Support and Activities in Online Learning for Students with Learning Challenges
Introduction
Homeschool critics sometimes worry about the social-emotional development of online learners. However, modern online education provides many opportunities for social development, from group video sessions to local sports, church, or community clubs. The flexibility of online learning can enrich students’ social networks, while also creating a supportive environment for social-emotional growth guided by parents. In this blog, we will explore how online education supports social-emotional learning (SEL) and equip parents with strategies—like movement, visualization, and advanced emotional therapies— to address student outbursts, focus challenges, difficulty sitting still, and optimize brain development to be able to visualize complex information more quickly. The ultimate goal of this blog is to support parents with key strategies that are aligned with biblical foundations and stimulate their students' learning so they mature into their unique persons in God’s image.
Socialization in Online Learning
Are there opportunities for socializing in online learning?
Absolutely! Online students can participate in virtual classrooms with live video conferencing, join extracurricular activities, and engage in community-based programs. Contrary to isolation myths, these diverse experiences often expand students’ social circles beyond traditional school boundaries.
Social-Emotional Learning: The Foundation
How does online education support social-emotional learning?
- Individualized Attention: Online instructors and parents can provide closer guidance, boosting engagement (Hawkins et al., 2004).
- Character Education: SEL principles in curricula improve academic achievement and behavioral outcomes (Durlak et al., 2011).
- Safe Spaces: Virtual environments can offer a “space of grace,” encouraging a growth mindset and emotional resilience.
Cultivating a Growth Mindset
Mindsets are malleable (Dweck, 2006). Reinforcing effort over ability helps students see mistakes as opportunities, strengthening perseverance and confidence.
Addressing Student Outbursts: A Cry for Help
Sometimes, children who have outbursts in school are simply reaching their mental capacity—particularly if they’re grappling with unintegrated (retained) primitive reflexes that make it harder to sit still, focus, or quickly visualize complex information. In early development, reflexes such as the Asymmetrical Tonic Neck Reflex (ATNR) or the Symmetrical Tonic Neck Reflex (STNR) should become “integrated” (i.e., fade or transform into mature movement patterns). When these reflexes remain active, children may experience poor coordination, difficulty crossing the midline, excess tension in their bodies, and limited attention span (Goddard Blythe, 2005; Hannaford, 2005). Because so much energy goes into controlling their bodies students can become mentally fatigued more quickly, which may result in outbursts of frustration.
Beyond physical symptoms, cognitive load increases whenever reflexes disrupt smooth eye-tracking, handwriting, or the ability to organize thoughts (Willingham, 2009). Meanwhile, emotional control can be compromised if the child’s nervous system is in a state of heightened stress from unintegrated reflexes—leading to “fight-or-flight” reactions (Siegel & Bryson, 2011). In other words, these behaviors are often a cry for help rather than deliberate defiance.
Common Signs of Cognitive Overload
- Not Understanding the Material: Confusion can trigger stress and disruptive behavior (Willingham, 2009).
- Boredom or Disengagement: Poorly scaffolded instruction can compound attention issues stemming from reflex retention.
- Emotional Overload: Without robust emotion-regulation skills, children struggling with extra physical and mental demands may escalate to outbursts (Siegel & Bryson, 2011).
Strategies for Support
- Reflex Integration Activities
- Incorporate simple movement-based exercises (e.g., cross-lateral marches, balance work, or gentle core-strengthening) that target retained reflexes (Goddard Blythe, 2005).
- Consult with a local occupational therapist or a professional trained in reflex-integration methods for more structured programs.
- Check for Understanding
- Break down tasks into smaller steps, reteach as necessary, and offer multiple examples.
- Encourage students to ask questions often; this keeps confusion from building up.
- Stress Management
- Offer short, frequent breaks that might include breathing exercises, stretching, or mindful movement to reset both body and brain (Hannaford, 2005).
- Teach students to recognize early signs of stress and practice self-calming routines before frustration escalates.
- Open Dialogue
- Validate students’ frustrations and invite questions.
- Build trust by normalizing challenges: “Everyone’s body and mind learn differently; it’s okay to ask for help.”
Why Reflex Integration Matters
When reflexes are fully integrated, children can use their cognitive resources on higher-level tasks—rather than maintaining basic postural control or fighting unintended movements. As a result, attention span improves, impulse control strengthens, and academic performance typically gets a boost. By addressing these foundational issues, educators can reduce student outbursts, foster deeper engagement, and create a more supportive and calm learning environment. Ultimately, by helping the brain develop to a higher level of thinking, the student can visualize complex information more easily, and the mental burden is decreased.
Embracing Multiple Learning Styles and Visual Processing
Debunking the “One Learning Style” Myth
Research shows that blending various modalities benefits most learners (Pashler et al., 2008). As children develop, their capacity to visualize complex concepts expands.
The Power of Visualization
Visual processing tends to outpace auditory processing, enhancing memory storage (Bower, 1970; Paivio, 1971). Mind maps, infographics, and illustrations cement new information more effectively.
Brain Development Through Movement and Sensory Integration
Programs Integrating Reflexes
Programs like Brain Blossom, Brain Gym, Bal-A-Vis-X, and the MNRI Method use body movement, visualization, and fine motor skills to strengthen neural pathways. The idea is to “filter out” extraneous signals, making learning more efficient. Unfortunately, more and more children are facing challenges from retained reflexes from lack of play in their younger years or unprocessed traumas. Additionally, these reflexes can reappear in adulthood due to various traumas.
Movement Exercises
- Bilateral Movements
- Touch the opposite knee and hand in a marching motion.
- Enhances bilateral coordination and communication between hemispheres.
- Activating both sides of the brain during learning helps increase the pathways that the brain can remember something.
- Eye Tracing
- Trace a sideways figure eight in the air.
- Improves eye-tracking, focus, and smooth left-right transitions.
- Fine-tuned eye tracking is a precursor to reading effectively
- Vagus Nerve Massage
- Gently squeeze one shoulder while looking side to side.
- Eases tension, promoting relaxation and clearer thinking.
- When done calmly, this can help the brain modulate heart rate and blood vessel dilation via the vagus nerve—promoting a relaxation response.
- Proprioceptive Calming Techniques
- Cross ankles and wrists, interlock fingers, and breathe deeply.
- Calms the nervous system, aiding emotional regulation.
- It’s an exercise that uses gentle pressure and crossing motions to reduce overstimulation or anxiety.
- Neurolymphatic Reflex Points
- Massage below the collarbone while one hand rests on the navel.
- Stimulates blood flow and mental alertness.
- Acupressure points where many nerve endings converge are effective tension relief locations in the body as it can send signals to many areas at once.
- Cross-lateral coordination
- Bounce a small ball and alternate hands.
- Sharpens hand-eye coordination and attention.
- This activity also helps with a broad range of reflex integration.
Why Movement Matters
Regularly practicing these exercises during challenging academic topics speeds up learning and helps refine neural signals, similar to strengthening a muscle for overall fitness (Ratey & Hagerman, 2008).
Memory Competitions and the Art of Visualization
Fast Visualization for the Win
Top memory competitors rely on vivid mental images—like the “method of loci” or memory palaces—to quickly encode and retrieve information (Foer, 2011).
Games for Parents and Children
- I Spy: Sharpens attention and visualization.
- Pictionary: Reinforces rapid mental imagery.
- Simon: Trains short-term memory with sequential patterns.
- Spot the Difference: Encourages detailed visual discrimination.
- Memory Palace with Toys: Place objects around the house as memory cues and recall where each toy is located.
- ABC word game: Take turns naming things for each letter of the alphabet.
Free Apps and Websites for Cognitive Training
- Lumosity (Lumosity.com)
- Elevate (ElevateApp.com)
- Peak (Peak.net)
- BrainHQ (BrainHQ.com)
These tools use visual exercises, problem-solving tasks, and sequential challenges to sharpen focus and memory.
Advanced Emotional and Sensory Therapies
- EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing)
- Guides patients through bilateral stimulation to reprocess traumatic memories (Shapiro, 2001).
- Can significantly reduce stress and anxiety about emotional memories, improving students’ emotional stability and focus.
- Studies show it can significantly reduce emotional charge to traumatic memories within 3 sessions.
- Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT/Tapping)
- Involves tapping on acupressure points while naming emotional concerns (Craig, 2008).
- Helps with rapid regulation of stress or anxiety by embracing the emotion as opposed to fighting it (Feinstein, 2019).
- This technique is an option many are able to do at home using The Tapping Solution mobile app.
- Soundscapes, Music Therapy, and Binaural Beats
- Uses music or nature sounds to induce calm or improve focus (Oster, 1973; Lane et al., 1998).
- Binaural beats are proven to help synchronize brainwaves, enhancing concentration.
- Services like Brain.fm, Endel, or Calm provide curated soundscapes for focus, relaxation, or sleep. You can listen to a sample song here.
Integrating Techniques
- Consult Professionals: For EMDR or deeper EFT work, seek certified therapists.
- Practice Consistently: Short, repeated sessions of tapping or sound therapy build lasting benefits.
- Combine Modalities: Pair movement exercises with calming music or tapping for a holistic approach.
What Does Enlightium Academy Do to Support Social-Emotional Growth?
A Holistic Approach
Enlightium Academy personalizes the student experience by prioritizing emotional support, a “space of grace,” and healthy social engagement. This holistic philosophy acknowledges that students often exhibit reflexive or symptomatic responses (such as resistance, anxiety, or restlessness) when they feel their control is diminished. By deliberately creating room for student choice, Enlightium helps alleviate those stress-based reflexes, allowing students to redirect their energy toward productive learning and personal growth.
Flexible and Personalized Learning
Enlightium encourages students to pursue local socialization through sports, clubs, or church involvement, while also providing a dynamic online student community offering Bible Studies, Book Clubs, Illustration Contests, Math Olympics, Student Council, Pen Pals, and Spelling Bees. By offering multiple paths to engage and excel, students experience:
- Autonomy Over Their Schedule: A sense of control that can diminish tension or reactive behaviors, empowering them to share decision-making with parents on essential academic and life tasks.
- Adaptability & Self-Regulation: The chance to choose how they learn and where they apply their energy, building more resilience and fewer knee-jerk reflexes when challenges arise.
Fostering Character and SEL
Our curriculum integrates biblical values, character education, and Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) skills—including self-awareness, self-management, and responsible decision-making—to support both academic and spiritual growth. When students experience genuine flexibility and see their choices acknowledged and valued:
- They cultivate better coping strategies for handling frustration or disappointment, rather than reflexively pushing back or disengaging.
- They strengthen communication skills with parents and teachers, enabling more cooperative problem-solving at home and in the classroom.
- They learn to respect boundaries and authority while maintaining a sense of personal agency—translating into mutual trust and a smoother family dynamic.
Ultimately, giving students structured choices helps them feel calmer, more engaged, and more open to guidance. This partnership of flexibility and boundaries does more than just improve academic performance; it nurtures healthy brain responses, emotional resilience, and a spirit of collaborative control—ensuring each child can develop into a confident learner and compassionate individual both inside and outside the classroom.
One Enlightium parent shared that their daughter begged them to enroll her at Enlightium Academy. She stated, “Our daughter asked to go to your school. She is a strong introvert who prefers to separate academics and social activities” (Parent of a 10th-grade student, Colorado). Another parent said, “I liked the fact that there are Bible studies, interaction through social media platforms, and great communication with families” (Parent of an 11th-grade student, Maryland). A third parent said, “I appreciated the ability to work ahead for our family to have flexibility when traveling for swim competitions and/or vacations” (Parent of a 6th-grade student, Minnesota).
Online learning can be a powerful, socially rich environment, especially when coupled with social-emotional support and insights into how the brain learns best. Movement-based and visual learning techniques, as well as advanced emotional therapies like EMDR, EFT, and soundscapes, empower students to thrive academically and emotionally. Meanwhile, schools like Enlightium Academy create a nurturing environment that values effort, emotional safety, and a growth mindset—key ingredients for long-term success.
Enlightium Academy is a private Christian online school that offers flexible, accredited, teacher-supported, and affordable education from the comfort of your home. For more information, call (509) 319-2288 or visit EnlightiumSchool.com.
References (Selected)
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- Durlak, J. A., Weissberg, R. P., Dymnicki, A. B., Taylor, R. D., & Schellinger, K. B. (2011). The impact of enhancing students’ social and emotional learning: A meta-analysis of school-based universal interventions. Child Development, 82(1), 405–432.
- Dweck, C. (2006). Mindset: The New Psychology of Success. Random House.
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