| Literature DB >> 31285834 |
Maya Yaari1, Jane Sheehan2, Frank Oberklaid1,3, Harriet Hiscock2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Optimal mental health is critical for a child's learning and academic functioning. As a universal service, early education centres play an important role in promoting children's mental health. Social-emotional learning programs are efficacious in reducing behavioural difficulties, enhancing competence, and improving learning abilities. Mindfulness practices, known to promote health and wellbeing in adults, have been adapted to education programs for younger populations, including pre-school children. Despite an increasing use of mindfulness-based programs in pre-school settings, there is a limited number of randomised trials and paucity of data on implementation fidelity of these programs. 'Early Minds' is a mindfulness-based program developed by Smiling Mind for 3-5-year-old children. This paper describes a protocol of a pilot randomised control trial, evaluating the implementation of the program in early learning centres (ELCs, i.e. pre-schools) in Melbourne, Australia. The primary aim of this pilot study is to examine the feasibility, acceptability, and fidelity of the program. The secondary aims are to assess the acceptability of the design and measures and to investigate preliminary impacts of the program on child social-emotional outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Early education; Implementation Fidelity; Mindfulness; Pre-school; Social-emotional learning; Wellbeing
Year: 2019 PMID: 31285834 PMCID: PMC6588907 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-019-0463-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Study measures
| Construct | Measures | Time 1 | Time 2 | Time 3 |
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| Socio-demographic information | Educator: age, number of years as an early childhood educator Parent: family composition, parental education and age, language spoken at home, child age |
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| Program feasibility, acceptability, and fidelity | ||||
| User experience | Study-designed questions assessing use of the program, best and worst aspects of the program, continued use of the program, recommendation of the program to others |
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| Evaluation of implementation | Study-designed questions assessing usefulness of the program, implementation of the program, barriers to using the program, fidelity to the program, quality of training in the program, comments about the program |
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| Fidelity | Study-designed questions assessing daily implementation of activities undertaken by educators | daily, for 8 weeks
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| Knowledge and use of mindfulness theory and techniques | Study-designed questions assessing previous/current training in and use of mindfulness, techniques, length of time, and frequency that they have used mindfulness techniques |
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| Parent and educator measures | ||||
| Class climate/teacher-student relationships |
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| Dispositional mindfulness |
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| Subjective wellbeing | • How happy do you generally feel? • How content do you generally feel? • How alert do you generally feel? |
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| Child-related measures | ||||
| Child social/emotional behaviour |
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| Child irritability |
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| Child sleepiness |
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| Child executive function |
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| Child academic/pre-academic approaches to learning |
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| Child temperament |
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| Child sleep |
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| Family and parent-child outcomes | ||||
| Parent mental health |
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| Parent sleep quality | • During the past month, how would you rate your own sleep • During the past month, how would you rate your own sleep |
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| Impact of pre-schoolers behaviour on family relationships and activities |
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