Feel Your Best Self Wins Telly Award for the Second Straight Year
For the second year in a row, UConn’s collaborative project Feel Your Best Self has been honored for its excellence in video at the 45th Annual Telly Awards.
Feel Your Best Self (FYBS) offers a joyful, freely accessible online toolkit for kids and caregivers at school and home to explore important life skills in emotion-focused coping. This award-winning toolkit centers around 12 strategies, learned through engaging videos featuring puppet friends Nico, CJ, and Mena, as they navigate everyday situations. In addition to the videos, the online toolkit offers facilitator guides for educators and caregivers, a Feelings Forecast, strategy step cards, discussion tip sheets, reflection sheets, and puppet-making options.
The Telly Awards honor excellence in video and television across all screens. Last year, the FYBS project was recognized in four Telly Awards categories winning a gold, and three silver awards. This year, they submitted in a new category, and won a silver for Education and Training – Online.
“Our team has worked hard over the past year to continue to improve and expand the FYBS toolkit and to connect with as many caregivers and schools as possible to bring awareness to the project,” co-creator Emily Wicks says. “Winning another Telly Award is a huge honor and helps highlight these amazing resources on a national scale.”
The Telly Awards are judged by over 200 industry leaders who work for major companies and television networks such as Adobe, MSG Sphere Studios, Netflix, Meta Creative Shop, among many others. This year, there were over 13,000 entries with the winners representing the most innovative stories across all screens. Past winners include Adobe, BET, CNN, The Walt Disney Company, NASA, and ESPN.

Over the past year, FYBS has participated in various conferences, collaborations, workshops, and events both nationally and internationally. FYBS traveled to several places including Atlanta, New Orleans, and Bologna, Italy, to share this innovative project and how it can be integrated into various settings.
Earlier this year, FYBS co-creators Sandra Chafouleas, a Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor in the Neag School of Education, and Wicks, manager of operations and collections at UConn’s Ballard Institute and Museum of Puppetry, spent a week at the American Nicaraguan School in Managua to lead trainings, class workshops, and caregiver information sessions.

Most recently, Wicks and Implementation Coordinator Molly Ferreira teamed up with North Windham Elementary School to teach a puppet-making workshop to a group of bilingual second graders. The classroom teacher Erin Trudeau said, “My favorite thing about Feel Your Best Self is that all of the strategies are super easy to implement – you can do them in just a couple of minutes and then you’re ready to move on!”
The FYBS team has also published several briefs and crosswalks that help enhance the use of FYBS as well as give supporting evidence as to how the FYBS strategies align with other popular social-emotional learning (SEL) programs. All these resources can be found freely accessible on the FYBS website.
Feel Your Best Self is made possible through the generous support of the Principal Foundation. Additional support is from the Neag Foundation and others. To learn more about Feel Your Best Self, visit feelyourbestself.org or contact feelurbestself@gmail.com.
Latest UConn Today
- American Academy of Nursing Announces its 2025 Fellows Including Three UConn School of Nursing FacultyMallory Perry-Eaddy, Ph.D., RN, CCRN, Tiffany Kelley, Ph.D., MBA, RN, NI-BC, FNAP, and Gee Su Yang, Ph.D., RN, will be inducted as Fellows into the American Academy of Nursing.
- Finding New Strategies for Treating a Catastrophic DiseaseFoot and Mouth Disease was eradicated in the US in 1929, and researchers are working to make sure it stays that way
- Geothermal Brine May Hold a Key to Stored Energy ChallengesMaking domestic lithium recovery economically and environmentally viable is a critical goal for meeting the nation’s increasing appetite for energy storage and sustainability
- UConn Medical Students Learning to Strike Out Organ Donation InequitiesNew England Donor Services Launches New Medical Student Summer Immersion Program to Advance the Future of Organ Donation and Transplant Equity.
- End of an Emergency Medicine EraDr. Robert Fuller leaves a legacy at UConn Health and beyond
- UConn’s Institute for Collaboration on Health, Intervention, and Policy Recognizes Faculty Research ExcellenceInCHIP Excellence Awards celebrate UConn and UConn Health faculty who are advancing their field, providing impactful mentorship, and engaging with communities to improve health outcomes.