Title: Promoting Childrens Social and Emotional Development
1- Promoting Childrens Social and Emotional
Development - Effectiveness of a Social Emotional Competence
Promotion Program Among Children in Elementary
School A Randomized Controlled Trial - Kimberly A. Schonert-Reichl
- University of British Columbia
- 19th IUHPE World Conference
- Pre-conference Symposium, June 10, 2007
- Vancouver, BC, Canada
2With Thanks To . . .
- Funders
- UBC Human Early Learning Partnership (HELP),
- BC Ministry of Education,
- UBC Hampton Research Fund,
- United Way,
- BC Medical Services Foundation (Vancouver
Foundation) - And to . . .
- Mary Gordon and the members of the Roots of
Empathy Board
- Co-investigators
- Clyde Hertzman
- Veronica Smith
- Anat Zaidman-Zait
- Community Collaborators
- Vancouver School Board (Alva Jensen, Larry
Haberlin Jacqui Farquar) - Vancouver Coastal Health Authority (Lois Yelland)
- Research Assistants
- Angela Jaramillo, Denise Buote, Kristen Foulkes,
Shayna Rusticus, Celina Vergel de Dios, Lynda
Hutchinson, Zoe Paris, Matt Haberlin, Molly
Stewart Lawlor, Janette McIntosh
3Focus of the Discussion
What is the Roots of Empathy Program?
- Background
- The importance of promoting childrens social and
emotional competence. - The need for evidence-based practice.
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5The Research Evidence
- Making the Case for Promoting Childrens Social
and Emotional Competence
6Key Research Findings
- There is an inextricable link between childrens
social and emotional competence and their school
and life success. - There is a growing research literature
demonstrating that social and emotional
competence can be fostered in childhood and
adolescence. - There is a need for evidence-based programs that
can foster childrens social and emotional
understanding and development.
7Recent Research . . .
- Social emotional literacy reduces violence and
promotes prosocial behaviors (Schonert-Reichl et
al., 2005 Weissberg Greenberg, 1998). - Prosocial behaviors exhibited by students in the
classroom were better predictors of academic
achievement than were standardized test scores
(Wentzel, 1993). - Academic achievement in Grade 8 could be better
predicted from knowing childrens grade 3 social
emotional competence than from knowing childrens
grade 3 academic achievement (Caprara,
Barbanelli, Pastorelli, Bandura, Zimbardo,
2000).
8- . . . emotional literacy is as vital as any
other skill, and is particularly central to
childrens ability to interact and form
relationships. - Susanne Denham
- Social and Emotional Prevention and Intervention
Programming for Preschoolers, 2003
9Social Emotional Learning and Academic Success
- Promoting students SR and social emotional
competence leads to higher academics - Weissberg et al. (2007) conducted the largest
ever meta-analysis of 270 research studies on
social emotional learning. Findings revealed
that - Students enrolled in an SEL program ranked at
least 15 percentile points higher on achievement
tests than students who did not participate.
10How Can Social and Emotional Competence be
Promoted in Schools?
11Theoretical Model
12- The developmental mechanism that is used most
frequently to explain age-related increases in
altruistic behavior is the increasing ability of
the child to take the point of view of the other
person (Underwood Moore, 1982 p. 144).
13The Need for Research Examining Efficacy of
Prevention Programs
- There is a growing awareness of the importance of
evidence-based practices in schools. - Limited research exists that has examined the
effectiveness of school-based programs (CASEL,
2002). - Of those evaluations that exist, many have been
limited in scope and fraught with methodological
shortcomings (Durlak Wells, 1997). - Not informed by developmental theory.
- Absence of experimental design (e.g., control
group). - Utilize outcome measures of questionable
reliability and validity. - Few focus on promoting emotional competence.
14The B.C. Context
- Human and Social Development is one of the goals
of the British Columbia (BC) school system. - Social Responsibility has been identified by the
BC Ministry of Education as one of the four
Performance Standards (Reading, Writing,
Numeracy). - Increased focus on early intervention and
prevention - Human Early Learning Partnership (HELP)
- Consortium for Health, Intervention, Learning,
and Development (CHILD)
15UBC VSB Partnership
16Can an Infant be a Catalyst for Change? The
Roots of Empathy Program
17What is the Roots of Empathy?
- A universal primary preventive classroom-based
social emotional competence promotion program
created by Mary Gordon. - Cornerstone of the program is a class visit by an
infant, his/her caregiver(s), and an instructor
over 9 months. - In lessons children learn about the babys growth
and development via interactions and observations
with the baby. - The curriculum fosters empathy and
emotional/social understanding through various
forms of story telling, discussion, and
child-centered activities.
18The Roots of Empathy Program Canada and Beyond
- Piloted in Toronto in 2 classrooms in 1996.
- This school year, 51,552 children in 2,062
classrooms across 9 provinces in Canada are
receiving the program. - By June 2007, 158,775 children in total will have
received the program. - Piloted in Japan, Australia, New Zealand.
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25ROE Theoretical Framework
- View of empathy as multidimensional (Feshbach,
1979) - Cognitive perspective-taking
- Affective emotion
- Social Relational (Hammond et al.,2007)
- Ecological Focus
- A focus on changing the ecology of the classroom
environment to one in which belonging, caring,
collaboration, and understanding others is
emphasized (Cohen, 2001 Goodenow, 1993
Noddings, 1992).
26Fostering a prosocial value orientation thru
engaging children collectively in activities that
benefit others (Staub, 1988).
27Emotional Literacy
Observation of and labelling babys emotions
Reflecting and identifying own emotions
Understanding the emotions of others (empathy)
Comfort in discussing emotions
Try not to get mad at a baby because he might
learn to be mean when he grows up.
28Research studies to date
- 2000-2001Primary Grade Evaluation (N 132)
- 2001-2002 National Evaluation (N 585)
- 2002-2003 Rural/Urban Evaluation (N 419)
- 2003-2004 Randomized Controlled Trial (N 456)
- 2004-2007 Longitudinal Follow-up (N 374)
29Child Outcome Measures
- Social/Emotional Understanding
- Infant Facial Expression of Emotion Task (Emde et
al.,1993) - Understanding of Mixed Emotions (Brown Dunn,
1996) - Chandler Cartoon Task (Chandler, 1973)
- The Relationship Questionnaire Interpersonal
Understanding subscale (Schultz Selman, 2000) - Empathy-related Responding (Davis, 1983)
- Parenting Sense of Competence (Gibaud-Walston
Wandersman, 1978) - Classroom Autonomy and Supportiveness
(Battistich, Solomon, Watson, Schaps, 1997)
30Child Outcome Measures (contd)
- Teacher Reports (Teacher Reports Child Behavior
Scale, Ladd Profilet, 1996 NLSCY) - Proactive Aggression cold blooded (bullying)
- Reactive Aggression hot-headed
- Relational Aggression (indirect) e.g., gossip
- Prosocial Behaviors (share, help, cooperate)
- Peer Behavioural Assessments (Parkhurst Asher,
1992 Schonert-Reichl, 1999 Wentzel, 1997) - Prosocial Behaviors (share, help, cooperate)
- Prosocial Characteristics (kind, trustworthy,
takes perspectives) - Proactive, Reactive, Relational Aggression
- Peer Acceptance
31- Summary of Key Findings
- (2000-2003)
322000-2001 Changes in Proactive Bullying
Aggression from Pretest to Post-Test by Group
Comparison Children
Roots of Empathy Children
332001-2002 Changes in Teachers Reports of Social
Behaviors
342001-2002 Changes in Peer Assessments of
Prosocial Behaviors and Prosocial Characteristics
35- Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT)
36Year 4 2003-2004, RCT
- Participants
- 456 children (46 girls)
- 10 ROE Program classrooms (n 234) in 10 schools
- 10 Comparison classrooms (n 222) in 10 schools
- Grades 4-7 (Mean Age 10.71, SD 1.1)
- 53 English as a First Language
- Classrooms were randomly assigned to serve as
either program or comparison classrooms.
37Change Scores for Interpersonal Understanding and
Peer Intimacy (Pretest to Posttest)
38Change Scores for Teachers Ratings of Prosocial
Behaviour (Pretest to Posttest)
39Change Scores for Teachers Ratings of Aggression
(Pretest to Posttest)
40Change Scores for Peer Nominations of Prosocial
Behaviors (Pretest to Posttest)
41Change Scores for Classroom Supportiveness
(Pretest to Posttest)
42What have we learned so far?
- Across the 4 years of research, children who
receive ROE in contrast to those who do not, show
significant improvements in the following areas - Increased understanding of emotion
- Increased prosocial behaviors
- Decreased aggression/bullying
- These findings are in direct concordance with the
ROE program goals. - These findings demonstrated some consistency
across grade levels, settings, informants, and
measures utilized.
43Classroom Practice Informing Developmental Theory
- Caring Classroom Environment
44Some Future Directions The search for
mechanisms/processes
- Longitudinal follow-up
- Are changes sustained?
- Sleeper effects?
- Changes across developmental transitions
- Effects of ROE on internalizing problems
- The mediating role of classroom context
- Psychobiologic correlates (biological roots of
ROE) - Subgroup analyses of high risk children
- Examine relation between childrens knowledge of
infant development and their behaviors with
infant siblings/other infants. - Implementation and sustainability
45Contact Information
- Kim Schonert-Reichl
- Dept. of Educational and Counselling Psychology,
Special Education - University of British Columbia
- Office (604)822-2215
- Research Lab (604)822-3420
- E-mail kimberly.schonert-reichl_at_ubc.ca
- Roots of Empathy
- (416) 944-3001
- Website www.rootsofempathy.org
46HELPs Mission
- To create, promote and apply new knowledge
through leading interdisciplinary research
to help children thrive. - Please visit HELPs website
- www.earlylearning.ubc.ca
- Sign up for HELPs Listserv. Find info on
research projects, new publications and
resources, maps, upcoming events, etc.