deena simmons

Speaker Encourages Faculty To Consider Students’ Stories

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Dena Simmons had some hard-earned advice for teachers: consider the backstory of each student in your class. From her childhood in the Bronx, NY, to boarding school in Connecticut, to a successful career in higher education, Simmons, who leads the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence, brought her personal narrative to a recent faculty meeting. She shared difficult boarding school memories: a teacher publicly correcting her diction; walking into a dorm room and seeing the resident guarding valuables in Simmons’ presence; and being asked, “Where are you from? No, where are you from from?” She said she didn’t fit in at school but eventually absorbed the cultural rules.

“I learned to erase myself to survive,” said Simmons, who is biracial. “There is damage done when people cannot be who they are.”

Simmons encouraged teachers to cultivate their own emotional intelligence, which is defined as the ability to monitor one’s own and others’ feelings, to discriminate among those feelings, and to use this information to guide one’s thinking and actions. Simmons said that using emotional intelligence within the framework of being culturally responsive, or taking the time to learn about a student’s unique cultural background and experiences, help classroom leaders take into account that students start with baggage that may not be obvious or visible. This also gives teachers insights into the array of positive attributes that students may be shielding from view.

“It’s important to bring the world into our classroom, because what matters most is to support the rich strengths of our students,” she said. “We want our students to thrive, because we want to prevent Charlottesville, Missouri, Charleston.”

See Dena Simmons’ TED talk here.

Speaker Encourages Faculty to Consider Students’ Stories

Dena Simmons

Dena Simmons had some hard-earned advice for teachers: consider the backstory of each student in your class. From her childhood in the Bronx, NY, to boarding school in Connecticut, to a successful career in higher education, Simmons, who leads the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence, brought her personal narrative to a recent faculty meeting. She shared difficult boarding school memories: a teacher publicly correcting her diction; walking into a dorm room and seeing the resident guarding valuables in Simmons’ presence; and being asked, “Where are you from? No, where are you from from?” She said she didn’t fit in at school but eventually absorbed the cultural rules.

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