Child Development Clinical Trial
Official title:
Implementing a Mindfulness-informed, Evidence-based Social and Emotional Program With Kindergarten Students Within a Trauma-informed Framework
Verified date | June 2022 |
Source | Western University, Canada |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Mind Up (MindUP) is a mindfulness-based social-emotional learning program for children that has shown promising evidence of effectiveness across several domains (including executive functioning and behavioral symptoms). MindUP has exploded in popularity in recent years, but much of the existing research is limited by sample size, lack of accounting for clustering, or has been conducted by the program developers. In this study we are evaluating MindUP with grade three students (~age 8) in three conditions; students who receive MindUP for the first time (n=~150 in 8-10 classrooms), students have been receiving MindUP since kindergarten (~150 in 8-10 classrooms), and students in comparison classrooms (i.e., no intervention; ~150 students in 8-10 classrooms). Regular classrooms teachers will receive training in trauma-informed approaches and the MindUP program prior to implementing. Students will be assessed in the fall and at the end of the school year using structured rating scales; they will also provide self-report data. In November 2020, students' grade 4 teachers will provide another set of ratings to be used as 6-month follow-up data. The primary outcome is social-emotional learning. Secondary outcomes include executive functioning, academic skills, classroom climate, and self-concept.
Status | Terminated |
Enrollment | 429 |
Est. completion date | November 30, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | November 30, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Decision to implement the MindUP program is made at the school level, with agreement from classroom teachers - All students in a classroom in any of the three arms of the study are eligible to participate Exclusion Criteria: - Students with very low literacy or cognitive functioning may not be able to complete the self-report measures, but can still participate in the teacher-rating component of the study |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Western University | London | Ontario |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Western University, Canada | Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) |
Canada,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Social and emotional learning | Composite Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) score from the Social Skills Improvement System-Social Emotional Learning Edition (SSIS-SEL); the score is transformed from a raw score based on norms provided in the manual; higher scores are better. Scores are standardized with a mean of 100 and a standard deviation (SD) of 15. | Change from baseline to post-intervention; one school year (approximately 6 months) | |
Primary | Social and emotional learning (follow-up) | Composite Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) score from the Social Skills Improvement System-Social Emotional Learning Edition (SSIS-SEL); the score is transformed from a raw score based on norms provided in the manual; higher scores are better. Scores are standardized with a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 15. | Change from baseline to 6-month follow-up; one calendar year | |
Secondary | Academic skills | Academic skills reported by teachers on SSIS-SEL and/or report card and standardized testing data. Higher scores are better. | Change from baseline to post-intervention; one school year (approximately 6 months) | |
Secondary | Social and Emotional Learning Subscales | Subscales from the SSIS-SEL (self-awareness; self management; social awareness; responsible decision-making; relationships); higher scores are better. Scores are standardized and norm-referenced with a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 15. | Change from baseline to post-intervention; one school year (approximately 6 months) | |
Secondary | Self-concept | Child's view of themselves as assessed by the Feelings, Attitudes, and Behaviors Scale for Children (FAB-C). Higher scores are indicative of poorer functioning (i.e., feeling negative about oneself or feeling socially unaccepted). T scores are used to interpret the level of concerns as reported by children on the FAB-C. These scores are linear transformations of the raw scale scores (M = 50, SD = 10). T scores provide information about an individual's scores relative to the scores of respondents in the standardization sample. Percentiles represent the percentage of children in the standardization sample with scores at or below the same value. For all FAB-C subscales, T scores over 60 are considered somewhat elevated and T scores over 65 are considered significantly elevated. | Change from baseline to post-intervention; one school year (approximately 6 months) | |
Secondary | Class climate | Classroom cohesion and satisfaction as measured by the My Class Inventory-Short Form. Both cohesion and satisfaction are measured with six yes/no items, such that children can score between 0 and 6 on each subscale. If the two scales are moderately correlated (as expected give the age of the children), then we will sum them for one class climate scale (ranging from 0-12; higher scores indicate higher cohesion and satisfaction in the classroom). | Change from baseline to post-intervention; one school year (approximately 6 months) | |
Secondary | Executive functioning | General executive control deficits as measured by the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function, Second edition (BRIEF-2). Higher scores are indicative of poorer functioning. T scores are used to interpret the level of executive functioning as reported by teachers on the BRIEF-2 rating forms. These scores are linear transformations of the raw scale scores (M = 50, SD = 10). T scores provide information about an individual's scores relative to the scores of respondents in the standardization sample. Percentiles represent the percentage of children in the standardization sample with scores at or below the same value. For all BRIEF-2 clinical scales and indexes, T scores from 60 to 64 are considered mildly elevated, and T scores from 65 to 69 are considered potentially clinically elevated. T scores at or above 70 are considered clinically elevated. | Change from baseline to post-intervention; one school year (approximately 6 months) | |
Secondary | Executive functioning (follow-up) | General executive control deficits as measured by the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function, Second edition (BRIEF-2). Higher scores are indicative of poorer functioning. T scores are used to interpret the level of executive functioning as reported by teachers on the BRIEF-2 rating forms. These scores are linear transformations of the raw scale scores (M = 50, SD = 10). T scores provide information about an individual's scores relative to the scores of respondents in the standardization sample. Percentiles represent the percentage of children in the standardization sample with scores at or below the same value. For all BRIEF-2 clinical scales and indexes, T scores from 60 to 64 are considered mildly elevated, and T scores from 65 to 69 are considered potentially clinically elevated. T scores at or above 70 are considered clinically elevated. | Change from baseline to 6-month follow-up; one calendar year |
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