| Literature DB >> 34831827 |
Valérie Benoit1, Piera Gabola2.
Abstract
Over the last 20 years, the effectiveness of positive psychology interventions for the development of the well-being of children and adolescents and the moderation of high levels of anxiety and depression in this population has been largely demonstrated. Emphasis has been placed on the promotion of well-being and prevention of mental health problems in the school context in order to foster, through positive psychology, the cognitive and socio-emotional development of primary and secondary students, e.g., by strengthening positive relationships, positive emotions, character strengths, optimism, and hope. However, little is known about the impact of these interventions on young children. This systematic review aims at examining the effects of positive psychology interventions on the well-being of early childhood children (<6 years old), both in the preschool education context with educators or teachers and also in the family context with parents. Several electronic databases were searched, and the findings systematically reviewed and reported by the PRISMA guidelines. Very few studies met the inclusion criteria (n = 3), highlighting the need for further research in this area. Indeed, all of the selected studies demonstrated the importance of positive psychology interventions with young children to promote positive aspects of development, such as gratitude, positive emotions, life satisfaction, accomplishment, positive relationship, or self-esteem. Limitations in the field are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: early childhood; health prevention and promotion; positive psychology interventions; review; well-being
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34831827 PMCID: PMC8623229 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182212065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram. * Reasons for exclusion included ineligible population (n = 15), ineligible intervention (n = 9), outcomes not reported (n = 3), other (irrelevant content, n = 1; ineligible language, n = 1; inadequate methodology, n = 1). Adapted from Moher et al. [54].
Overview of the positive psychology intervention programs.
| Study | Sample (N; Age; Sex Ratio) | Program/ | Description | PP Component (PERMA) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elfrink et al. (2017) | N = 184; | Positief Educatief Programma (Positive Education Program; PEP) | Whole-school approach to positive education for primary schools focusing on improving the well-being of children aged 4 to 12 and creating a positive school climate during a school year. Four core components: values, life rules, well-being, and engagement. | Engagement |
| Owens and Patterson (2013) | N = 62; | Gratitude Sources and Best Possible Selves | Program of 4 to 6 weeks duration (once-weekly sessions) for children from 5 to 11 years old, taking place after school care and summer day camp programs. Small-group intervention sessions (3–10 children per group) where children were asked to draw either what they were grateful for (sources of gratitude—intervention group), a fictional future situation in which they would be at their best (best possible self—alternative intervention group) or something they had done during the day (control group). They were also asked to describe the content of their drawing to a research assistant (verbal descriptions recorded). | Positive emotions (gratitude) |
| Shoshani and Slone (2017) | N = 315; | Maytiv Preschool Program | Activities promoting positive emotions, engagement, positive relationships, and achievement during one school year. Eight modules of basic positive psychology concepts tailored to the developmental characteristics of young children (3 to 6 years old), delivered by trained preschool teachers. | Positive emotions (empathy and gratitude) |
Methodological characteristics, measures, and outcome summary of positive psychology interventions on children’s well-being.
| Study | PERMA(H) Model Element Measured | Key Methods/Outcome Measures | Outcome Summary (PERMAH Model) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elfrink et al., (2017) | Engagement | Longitudinal (T1/T2; 6 months); no control group | Positive impact of PEP on children’s well-being and problem behavior; improvement in student–teacher relationship; positive impact on students’ engagement. |
| Owens and Patterson (2013) | Positive emotions | Longitudinal (T1/T2, 4 to 6 weeks; once-weekly intervention sessions); quasi-experimental (intervention, alternative, and control group) | No effect of the intervention on positive and negative affect and on life satisfaction; outcomes in the gratitude condition do not differ from those in the control condition; participants in the best possible selves’ condition show greater gains in self-esteem than do those in the gratitude or control conditions. |
| Shoshani and Slone (2017) | Positive emotions | Longitudinal (T1/T2; 9 months); quasi-experimental | Significant increase in the intervention group in children’s positive emotions, empathy, and life satisfaction. No changes in negative emotions or for self-regulation. Increase in pro-social behaviors in the intervention group. No significant changes in total mental health difficulties. Effect of the intervention on children’s approaches to learning with significant increase in positive learning behaviors and engagement in the intervention group. Effect sizes for the magnitude of the significant changes in the intervention group were in the small to large range (0.34–0.81). |