Getting Along Together

What is Getting Along Together?

Getting Along Together (GAT) is a schoolwide social and learning skills curriculum developed by Success for All Foundation, Harvard University, and the University of Michigan. Available for Pre-K through grade 8, it teaches students the skills they need to focus their thinking, manage their behavior, build positive relationships, work effectively with others, and understand and cope with their feelings — all in ways that directly support academic success and life beyond school.

GAT is woven into daily classroom life through structured lessons, brief daily practice routines, and weekly Class Council meetings so the skills students build become part of how the whole school operates.

Getting Along Together is rated a SELect program by CASEL — the highest level of evidence for effectiveness at improving student outcomes, supporting students' social and emotional growth across all five CASEL competencies.

What does
Getting Along Together teach?

GAT builds five interconnected areas of skill that research shows are essential for learning and for life:

  • Cognitive and metacognitive skills — focus, memory, self-control, and cognitive flexibility. The foundational habits students need to engage with challenging material and stay on task.
  • Emotional regulation — identifying and managing feelings, staying calm under pressure, developing empathy for others. Students who can regulate their emotions are students who can learn.
  • Interpersonal skills — conflict resolution, reading social cues, prosocial behavior, and the habits of productive teamwork.
  • Social problem-solving — practical strategies for navigating real peer situations, resolving conflict constructively, and making decisions that support the whole group.
  • Goal setting and motivation — students set goals for their classroom community, track progress, and build the habits of self-monitoring that drive long-term academic success.

Every student participates because every student has something to learn and something to contribute. When the whole school shares the same language, the same tools, and the same expectations for working together, those skills become genuinely useful rather than classroom-only rules.

How is GAT structured?

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The first two weeks — daily lessons

The school year opens with two weeks of daily lessons, approximately 90 minutes each, taught in homeroom classrooms. These lessons introduce the core skills, tools, and shared expectations that will be used all year: Stop and Stay Cool, Think-It-Through sheets, the Peace Path, I Messages, and team cooperation goals. Students don't just hear about these skills — they practice them, discuss them, and begin using them immediately.

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Weekly lessons throughout the year

After the launch, GAT continues with a weekly half-hour lesson that deepens students' understanding across unit topics including friendship, empathy, cognitive skills, hurdles to teamwork, and problem solving. Lessons are built around the Cycle of Effective Instruction — the same framework used in SFA's reading curriculum — so learning is active, structured, and reinforced through peer practice.

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Daily practice structures

Three brief daily structures keep GAT skills alive between lessons:

  • Cool Kid — Every student has a turn being recognized and celebrated by their class. Builds a culture of appreciation and positive feedback.
  • Cooperative Challenge — A schoolwide weekly challenge where every team in the building practices the same observable behavior — helping, encouraging, giving compliments, using I Messages. Because the challenge is schoolwide, it embeds GAT skills into the culture of the entire building, not just individual classrooms.
  • Brain Games — Fast, fun games that build focus, memory, self-control, and cognitive flexibility. Teachers can use them anytime — between subjects, while waiting for lunch, or as a quick re-engagement tool during the day.
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Weekly Class Council

Each week ends with a half-hour Class Council — a structured meeting where students celebrate class strengths, review their weekly goal, identify what they want to improve, and set a new measurable goal together. Students are not passive recipients of school culture. They are active builders of it.

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Parent Peek

Families receive regular communication about what skills students are learning in GAT, so the language and strategies extend into the home.

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Who is GAT for — and where does it fit?

GAT is designed to be consistent, relentless, and schoolwide. All staff — including non-homeroom instructors, special education teachers, and paraprofessionals — are trained so that GAT skills are reinforced in every classroom, every hallway, the cafeteria, the playground, and every common space in the building.

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How does GAT connect to the rest of SFA?

When students know how to work in cooperative teams, the SFA reading block works better. When they know how to resolve conflict without adult intervention, instructional time is protected. When they set goals and track progress, the motivation structures built into every SFA lesson — team scores, celebration points, Cool Kid — do their job.

Schools that implement GAT consistently report stronger and more natural cooperative learning structures — and what turns a school into the kind of place every student and adult wants to be.

Interested in Getting Along Together for your school?

Getting Along Together is included in the full SFA model and available as a standalone offering for schools not implementing the full model.

For schools interested in implementing GAT as a standalone program, reach out to request samples, pricing, and implementation details. A member of our team will follow up with everything you need.

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See Getting Along Together in action. Watch how SFA works in real classrooms, including the cooperative learning structures and school culture routines that GAT makes possible.

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