Effects of a Mindfulness-Based Intervention for Teachers: a Study on Teacher and Student Outcomes

Objectives Teachers’ stress can affect their occupational health and negatively impact classroom climate and students’ well-being. This study aims to evaluate the proximal and distal effects of a mindfulness-based program, specially developed to promote teachers’ social-emotional competencies (SEC),...

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Veröffentlicht in:Mindfulness 2021-07, Vol.12 (7), p.1719-1732
Hauptverfasser: de Carvalho, Joana S., Oliveira, Sofia, Roberto, Magda Sofia, Gonçalves, Carolina, Bárbara, José M., de Castro, Aline F., Pereira, Rita, Franco, Mariana, Cadima, Joana, Leal, Teresa, Lemos, Marina S., Marques-Pinto, Alexandra
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objectives Teachers’ stress can affect their occupational health and negatively impact classroom climate and students’ well-being. This study aims to evaluate the proximal and distal effects of a mindfulness-based program, specially developed to promote teachers’ social-emotional competencies (SEC), across teachers, classroom climates, and students’ outcomes. Methods The study followed a randomized trial design with two data collection points (pretest and posttest). Participants in the experimental group (EG) included 123 elementary school teachers, their 1503 students, and these students’ parents (1494), while the control group (CG) comprised 105 elementary school teachers, their 947 students, and these students’ parents (913). A mixed data collection strategy was used that included teachers’ and students’ (self-) report, observational ratings of teachers’ classroom behaviors, and parents’ reports on students. Results After the intervention, EG teachers, compared to CG teachers, reported a significant increase in mindfulness and emotional regulation competencies, self-efficacy, and well-being and a decrease in burnout symptoms. Similarly, a significant improvement was found in EG teachers’ classroom behaviors related to students’ engagement. Additionally, significant improvements were also found in EG students’ perceptions of the quality of their teachers’ involvement in classroom relationships, self-reported effect, and social competencies perceived by their parents. Conclusions These findings further the knowledge on the role played by mindfulness-based SEC interventions in reducing teachers’ burnout symptoms and cultivating their SEC and well-being, in promoting a nurturing classroom climate and also in promoting the SEC and well-being of students.
ISSN:1868-8527
1868-8535
DOI:10.1007/s12671-021-01635-3