Ask teachers what changes when yoga enters the classroom and you hear the same words: calmer transitions, longer attention, kinder kids. The research backs them up.
In a study of 2nd and 3rd graders using a ten-session classroom yoga curriculum, teachers reported significant improvements in social interaction, attention span, concentration, staying on task, academic performance, stress handling, confidence, self-esteem, and mood (Butzer et al., 2015). That breadth is the point — yoga touches behavior, emotion, and learning at once.
One controlled study went further: high-school students assigned to yoga instead of regular PE ended the year with higher GPAs (Hagins & Rundle, 2016). Attention and stress regulation are upstream of academic performance, so the finding is less surprising than it sounds. In another year-long study, self-esteem rose only in the yoga group (Eggleston, 2015).
Reviewers analyzing 14 school yoga studies concluded the practice maps directly onto the CASEL social-emotional learning framework — especially self-awareness and self-management (Martin, Peck & Terry, 2024). For schools with SEL goals and limited curriculum hours, yoga delivers those competencies in a format children experience as play, not as another lesson.
The programs behind these results were modest: 10 to 40 sessions of 30–45 minutes, run in classrooms and gyms. No special rooms, no staff hires — the model Brightroots runs in Bay Area schools, aligned to school-day, PE, or after-school slots.
Classroom yoga consistently improves what teachers care about — on-task behavior, concentration, confidence, and mood — while delivering CASEL-aligned SEL, with some evidence it lifts grades.
The studied programs used 30–45 minute sessions once or twice a week, and one controlled study found yoga students finished with higher GPAs than PE peers — suggesting the time invests back into learning.
Published reviews map school yoga directly onto CASEL competencies, particularly self-awareness and self-management, making it a concrete way to deliver SEL goals.
No. Classroom yoga is non-competitive and every pose is adaptable — which is exactly why it reaches students who avoid traditional sports.
Brightroots brings research-grounded yoga to schools and daycares across the Bay Area.
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