
Most of what I write is for teachers, but if you’ve ever worked in a classroom, you already know this: what happens at home and what shows up at school are deeply connected. SEL at home is also important, but often our families don’t know exactly what that looks like. The same skills we’re trying to build during a morning meeting or a conflict at recess are being shaped in the everyday moments families are navigating too. As a parent of two myself, I now deeply understand how important it is to continue intentional and structured SEL routines and activities at home to help foster that prosocial behavior at school. So if you’re a parent reading this, you’re not outside the work of SEL. You’re right in the middle of it. And if you’re a teacher, this is the bridge.
When people talk about SEL at home, it can start to sound like one more thing to add. Another system, another set of conversations you’re supposed to be having perfectly. In reality, the skills we’re after (emotional regulation, flexibility, problem-solving, and self-awareness) are built through small, repeatable moments that already exist in your day.
Here are 20 activities and routines that build SEL at home in a way that’s actually sustainable.
1. Two-Minute Replay
At the end of the day, revisit one moment together. Not to fix it, just to understand it. This builds self-awareness over time, which is a core competency identified by CASEL.
2. Emotion Charades (Real-Life Edition)
Act out more subtle emotions like “nervous” or “left out.” Expanding emotional vocabulary helps kids regulate more effectively (Denham, 2020).
3. The Pause Button
Teach kids to press an imaginary button and take a breath when things feel big. Pairing a gesture with a strategy makes it easier to use in the moment.
4. 10-Minute Family Meeting
Keep it short: one problem, one plan. This builds collaborative problem-solving and supports executive functioning (Diamond, 2013).
5. “What’s Your Job Right Now?”
In overwhelming moments, give a clear, immediate role. It narrows focus and reduces emotional overload.
6. Car Ride Check-In
Use side-by-side time for connection. Try “high, low, and something you’re still thinking about.”
7. Build-Your-Own Playlist
Let kids create playlists for different moods. Music supports emotional processing and regulation (Thompson & Schlaug, 2015).
8. “Try It Again” Reset
Offer a redo instead of a consequence. Practice is what builds the skill.
9. Check-Lists
Kids love old school checklists and the dopamine hit of checking off what’s been accomplished. Pick a tricky time (morning routine, bedtime, homework, etc.) and create a check-list to help kids know what needs to get done.

10. 5-Minute Clean-Up Sprint
Set a timer and clean together. Shared effort builds belonging and teamwork. SEL at home that also lessens the mental load of parents everywhere? Yes, please.
11. “Teach Me Something” Time
Let your child lead for 10 minutes. This builds confidence and autonomy, which are key drivers of motivation in Self-Determination Theory.
12. Penpals
Think of a cousin, friend, grandparent – someone who your child enjoys but doesn’t see often. Write a note, send an art project, and be sure to consider what the recipient might like to see or know about. This builds executive functioning skills, empathy, perspective taking, and more!
13. Calm Corner (Used When Calm)
Spend time there when your child is regulated so it feels familiar and safe when they actually need it.
14. “What Did Your Body Feel Like?”
After a big emotion, connect it to physical sensations. This builds interoception, a key part of regulation.
15. The “One Thing” Reflection
Before bed, ask: “What’s one thing you handled well today?” It builds self-reflection without overwhelm.
16. Play Games That Involve Losing
Simple games like Uno and Zingo give kids a low-stakes way to practice frustration tolerance.
17. Plan B Practice
When plans change, name it and adapt together. Flexibility is a core executive functioning skill.
18. Walk It Out Reset
Take a short walk to regulate after a hard moment. Movement helps calm the nervous system.
19. Emotions Check-In
Use a feelings chart, mood meter, or another emotion regulation tool to check in on your child’s emotions when they get home from school, camp, or an extracurricular activity. It can be so helpful to know your child’s state, and it’s really powerful for kids to practice identifying their emotions. Chances are, your kids are engaging in this routine at school, so it’s a great for SEL at home, too!
20. Model Repair in Real Time
Let your child hear you say, “I didn’t handle that well. I’m going to try again.” Modeling repair is one of the most powerful SEL tools we have.
SEL at Home Doesn’t Need to be Fancy
If you zoom out, none of these are complicated, and that’s exactly why they work. The research around social emotional learning is pretty consistent on this: kids don’t build these skills from being told what to do. They build them through repeated, supported practice in real situations (Jones & Kahn, 2017).
That’s what carries into the classroom, shows up in friendships, and, over time, it’s what builds real independence.
You don’t need to do all 20. Pick two or three that fit naturally into your day and start there – it’s usually enough to shift things in a way you can actually feel.
