Developing mindfulness with children and young people: a review of the evidence and policy context

Purpose - This paper aims to explore the growing field of the teaching of mindfulness to young people, looking at its social and policy context, its applications, and other areas of work that it might support and within which it might fit. It focuses particularly on the state of the current evidence...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of children's services 2013-01, Vol.8 (2), p.141-153
1. Verfasser: Weare, Katherine
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose - This paper aims to explore the growing field of the teaching of mindfulness to young people, looking at its social and policy context, its applications, and other areas of work that it might support and within which it might fit. It focuses particularly on the state of the current evidence for such teaching and the conclusions that can be drawn from it.Design methodology approach - The paper is a literature review, drawing mainly on the 20 or so significant and good quality studies (i.e. those with significant numbers of participants, published in peer-reviewed journals) that make up the evidence base for mindfulness and the young, along with some comments on the policy context into which mindfulness can and might fit.Findings - Work on mindfulness with young people is popular with both staff and students, has a developing presence and can be effective in promoting a very wide range of outcomes. When well taught and when practised regularly, it has been shown to be capable of improving mental health and well-being, mood, self-esteem, self-regulation, positive behaviour and academic learning. There are many possible promising locations for mindfulness within mainstream education and the health services, including work to improve on mental health and well-being for staff and students, social and emotional learning, special education and mainstream subject based work.Originality value - Mindfulness is a new and growth area. Work with adults is well developed with a convincing evidence base, but work with the young, although developing rapidly, is much younger and this review is one of only a handful attempting to bring it to wider professional awareness.
ISSN:1746-6660
2042-8677
DOI:10.1108/JCS-12-2012-0014