Title: POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY:
1POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY
- happiness, flourishing and flow in learning and
in life
2Positive Psychology
- Background to Positive Psychology
- The importance of Happiness/Well-being
- Ideas and strategies to use with students (and
for ourselves) - Connections to other approaches used in teaching
and learning
3Positive Psychology
-
- Martin Seligman launched Positive Psychology in
1998 when he became President of the American
Psychological Association - Positive Psychology identifies and studies the
factors that create well-being rather than at
cures for psychological illnesses - It proposes to make people happier and more
fulfilled by using and developing their
strengths - It is based on scientific research that has been
carried out through controlled experiments and
longitudinal studies
4The Importance of Happiness/Well-Being
- Why is this important to us as L/S or SEN
teachers? - What difficulties do our students face?
- What effects can this difficulties have?
5Difficulties that Students Face
- Mental Health Difficulties
- 8 of students 83,083 in number (Epsen
Implementation - Report p. 72)
- Adolescent depressive episodes
- affect between 5-10 of young people
(Buckley, - Gavin and McNicholas 2009)
- Depression is now ten times as prevalent
- as it was in 1960 in developed countries
- forty years ago, the mean age of first
episode was 29.5 years- - now it is 14.5 years (Seligman 2003)
-
6Mental/Emotional Health
- In an analysis of well-being (using measures of
emotional - well- being, psychological well-being and
social well-being), - Keyes found that children without mental
illness are not - necessarily mentally healthy (Keyes, 2006)
- Indicators for individual positive mental health
currently - include the following key elements
- life satisfaction
- optimism/hope
- self-esteem
- resilience/coping
- social integration
- spirituality
- emotional well-being
- Scottish Association for Mental Health (2006)
7Negative Emotions
- Negative emotions such as anger, fear, disgust
and so on help us to respond appropriately to our
environment their adaptive value is easy to
explain and understand (B. Fredrickson, 2003)
8Fredrickson 2003
- Barbara Fredrickson (2003) developed the
Broaden-and-Build Theory of positive emotions. It
explained that positive emotions are important to
survival. They - broaden and build cognitive processes
- expand cognition and behavioural tendencies
- increase the number of potential behavioural
options - Fredrickson found that the expanded cognitive
flexibility that is evident during positive
emotional states results in resource building
that becomes useful over time -
- .
9Emotional Chemistry
- The brain is a supremely flexible organ that
changes its chemistry in adaptive - response to what is going around it . (
Nettle, 2005) - Every feeling we have is a neuro-chemical
event - Danger, stress and anxiety trigger the release
of - adrenalin and cortisol
- These narrow your focus, sharpen your thinking
and temporarily - increase your strength to enable you to run
away fast - Dopamine is the motivation chemical
- Its release into the bloodstream is
energising - It increases our ability to focus
-
- Serotonin is the feel good chemical and is
calming and rewarding (MacConville 2008)
10Emotional Chemistry(cont.)
- Endorphins are small neuropeptides produced by
the body - They are natural opiates (endogenous
morphine) - They are released every time you laugh,
relax and exercise - Each release makes more connections in
the brain, creating new - neural pathways
- They create more bonding in the brain so
they expand cognitive processes - They enable broader, more flexible, more
creative thinking - (MacConville 2008)
- We can increase our well-being by choosing to
do activities that produce - endorphins
- In the same way, we can also make our thinking
broader and more - flexible
-
-
11Research
- The concepts and claims of Positive
- Psychology are supported by research evidence
which includes - physiological evidence
- neurological evidence
- psychological evidence
12 Happiness
- Increases positive emotions.
- Reduces the impact of negative emotions
- Nettle, Happiness The
science behind your smile (2005)
13What Happiness is Good For
- Briefly, happiness/positivity
- Increases our engagement in our everyday
lives - Broadens our mindset, our actions and our
social - resources
- Enables creative and more flexible, global
thinking - Improves attention, short term memory and
problem- - solving
- Allows us to build up intellectual and
psychological - reserves
- Undoes negative feelings
- Increases resilience and tolerance
- Sonja Lyubomirsky http//thesciencenetwork.org/s
earch?topicsHumanFlourishing
14What is Happiness?Take a minute to think about
it.
15Three Levels of Happiness
- Level 1 Level 2
Level 3 - (Momentary feelings)
(Judgements about feelings)
(Quality of life) - Joy Well-being
Flourishing - Pleasure
Satisfaction Fulfilling ones
Potential -
- More immediate
- More sensual and emotional
- More reliably measurable
- More absolute
-
- More cognitive
- More relative
- More moral and political
- Involving more cultural norms and values
-
- (Nettle, 2005)
16Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
Fulfilling ones potential
Well-being and satisfaction
Physical, sensual needs
17Levels of Happiness
- A study by Lyubomirsky (2007) has shown that our
level of happiness is made up of three main
components -
- set point this is what we are born with it
accounts for about 50 of our level of well-being - circumstances account for about 10 of our level
of well-being. Even if our circumstances change
dramatically, we quite quickly return to our set
point - intentional behaviours the
- good news is that we have a
- lot of influence on our own level
- of happiness. Our own actions/activities
- account for about 40 of our level
- of well-being (MacConville 2008)
intentional behaviours
set point
circumstances
18using Positive Psychology in our TEACHING
19Approaches that Promote Happiness and Learning
-
- The following strategies have been found to
develop positive emotions that are based on the
exercise of strengths a happiness that Seligman
calls authentic. -
20Practising releasing endorphins
through exercise, meditation, optimistic
thinking and relaxing can have huge impact on the
quality of students lives Ruth
MacConville (2008)
- An increase in happiness is generally
- achieved by pleasant activity training Nettles,
(2005 p.151)
21Effects of Exercise
- Produces serotonin and endorphins
- Gives feelings of self-esteem and
- mastery
- Allows Time-Out from stress potential
- for engagement/Flow/meditation
- Provides opportunities for social contact
- and reinforcing friendships
- Evidence from research
- SMILES
- - the Standard Medical Intervention and
Long-term Exercise Study - (Archives of Internal Medicine 1999159,
2349-2356)
22Exercise
- Younger children do not always get opportunities
for outdoor play - Restrictions at home and in school
- As students get older, many exercise less and
less, girls in particular - Many students opt out because of the
competitive nature of sport
23Meditation/Reflection/ Mindfulness
- Half an hours meditation each day is
essential, except when you are busy. Then a full
hour is needed. - Meditation actually comprises a family of
techniques - that go by different names (Zen,
transcendental, Vipassana etc.) and - different categories (concentrative,
mindfulness, contemplative) - The core ingredient that underlies them all
is the cultivation of attention - An avalanche of studies has shown that
meditation has multiple - positive effects on a persons happiness
and positive emotions, on - physiology, stress, cognitive abilities
and physical health as well as on - other harder-to-assess attributes, like
self-actualisation and moral - maturity (Sonja Lyubomirsky, 2007
250-251) -
-
St Francis de Sales 1567-1622
24Relaxation
HEALTH WARNING!!! Research shows that soaps in
particular leave the viewer slightly depressed
25Optimistic Thinking
- Research shows that optimists are more likely
to persevere - in the face of difficulty
- PRACTICE
- Identify barrier thoughts
- Visualize a future where everything is as you
- wanted it to be youve tried your best,
worked - hard and achieved your goals. Describe in
writing - what you imagine.
- Identify long-term goals and break them into
sub- - goals if barriers come into your mind,
generate - resolutions
26 OPTIMISM
- Optimism is not about providing a recipe for
self-deception. The world can be a horrible and
cruel place, and at the same time it can be
wonderful and abundant. These are both truths.
There is not a halfway point there is only
choosing which truth to put in your personal
foreground (Lee Ross, quoted by Sonja
Lyubomirsky, 2007 110)
27Signature Strengths
- Chris Peterson and Martin Seligman devised a
classification system for character strengths - This classification is based on strengths that
are traditionally acknowledged as representing
what is best in humanity - Seligman referred to these as signature strengths
and described their classification as a
classification of the sanities - They provide a counterbalance to classifications
of psychological illnesses
28Happiness Challenge
- Three Good Things
- Wishing Others Well
- Feeling and Communicating
- Gratitude
- Practising Mindfulness
29- Three Good Things
- The student keeps a daily record of three good
things that have happened during the course of
the day. The events may be small, but the
student recalls what happened and perhaps
records her/his contribution to the event. - This foregrounds positive feelings in the
students - mind
30Writing the Self
- Writing regularly about oneself is
- extremely effective in boosting
- positive emotions
- The writing does not need to be
- about happy events
- Nettle (2005) believes that it is
- effective because writing gives us
- space to be more mindful of our
- thoughts
31WOW!Wishing Others Well
- Give opportunity for students to
- share/listen to good news
- choose a person to be kind to this week (needs
very careful management and mature students!) - write a letter to a prisoner of conscience
- FEELING GRATITUDE
- Suggest that they might
- Write a letter, visit or email someone to
- whom you are grateful for some thing and tell
him/her how you feel
32Random Acts of Kindness
- Closely related to WOW and to Three Good
Things is the idea of doing one unsolicited
Good Deed for another person each day. It
could be - Clearing the table
- Picking up something that someone has dropped
- Holding open the door
- Washing the car
- Putting out the wheelie bin
- Doing the shopping
- or one of thousands of other small but
significant acts that make other peoples lives
just a little bit more pleasant
33Mindfulness
- We engage all the time in future-mindedness,
or what Seligman calls mindlessness - Activity
- In order to bring our minds into the present,
a simple breathing exercise for a few moments can
help to focus the mind on the present. This is
done by simply sitting quietly breathing in and
out, watching the breathing and thinking simply
of the breathing. If the mind strays away from
the breathing, observe that it has happened and
just return to concentrate on the breathing - This has the effect of slowing down, relaxing
and opening the mind
34Mindfulness Practise with Younger Students
- Ruth MacConville has some lovely suggestions for
younger students - Mind in a Jar - Fill a clean glass jar with
water. Point out its clearness to the children
and compare it perhaps to your mind when it is
quiet a peaceful. Now put in a little bit of
sand and swirl it around. Now its like your
mind when its busy, full of all kinds of
thoughts. Quietly watch the sand as it sinks to
the bottom and your mind clears - Rain Stick this is a tube with beads or rice
inside. The children take it in turns to turn
the rain stick over and listen to the beads
falling. Listen to the silence when the rain
stops - (MacConville, 2008)
35Flow
- Flow is a term coined by the psychologist Dr
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, an associate of Martin
Seligman - It describes a state of optimal experience and
involvement in an activity during which we are
performing at our best - During flow individuals are completely involved
in what they are doing our skill level matches
the challenges of the task, we feel compelled to
persist at what we are doing until we get it
right and we lose track of time - Flow provides an important pathway to happiness
as it provides the deep satisfaction of
successful engagement -
- (Ruth MacConville, 2008)
36FLOW
Csikszentmihalyi, (2002)
37CONDITIONS FOR FLOW
COMFORT ZONE
STRETCH ZONE Scaffolding may be put in place to
support weaker students in achieving FLOW in
their work
This area equates to Lev Vygotskys Zone of
Proximal Development/Learning (Vygotsky, 1978)
PANIC ZONE
Tal Ben-Shahar (2007)
38Setting Goals
-
- Csikszentmihalyi (1990) explains that having
meaningful - goals and a clear sense of purpose is
essential to attaining - flow
- Achievement of flow may be assisted in the
classroom by - the provision of clear goals and success
criteria for all tasks that are set - allowing adequate time for the students may
engage with each task
39Well-Being and Flourishing
- Well-Being Theory
- PERMA
- Positive Emotion
- Engagement
- Relationships
- Meaning
- Achievement
40Happiness, Flourishing and Flow in Learning and
in Life
41References and Further Reading
- Books
- Csikszentmihalyi, M. Finding Flow (1997)
- Csikszentmihalyi, M. Flow 2nd Edition (2002)
- Frederickson, B. Positivity (2009)
- Lyubomirsky, S. The How of Happiness (2007)
- MacConville , R.,Teaching Happiness (2008)
- Nettle, D., Happiness The science behind your
smile (2005) - Seligman, M., Authentic Happiness (2003)
- Seligman, M., Flourish (2011)
- Thich Nhat Hanh, Happiness (2009)
- Websites
- http//www.evenhappier.com/docs/broaden-and-build.
pdf - http//www.fredrickson.socialpsychology.org
- http//www.positivityratio.com
- http//www.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/bsp/hi/pdfs/24_01_11
_happiness_challenge_final - http//www.actionforhappiness.org
- http//www.icepe.ie (Teaching Happiness Positive
Psychology for behaviour and learning)
http//www.authentichappiness.sas.upenn.edu/questi
onnaires.aspx