Title of article :
Intervention to Strengthen Emotional Self-Regulation
in Children with Emerging Mental Health Problems:
Proximal Impact on School Behavior
Author/Authors :
Peter A. Wyman &Wendi Cross، نويسنده , , C. Hendricks Brown &
Qin Yu، نويسنده , , Xin Tu، نويسنده , , Shirley Eberly، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
model for teaching children skills to strengthen
emotional self-regulation is introduced, informed by the
developmental concept of scaffolding. Adult modeling/
instruction, role-play and in vivo coaching are tailored to
children’s level of understanding and skill to promote use
of skills in reallife contexts. Two-hundred twenty-six
kindergarten—3rd grade children identified with elevated
behavioral and social classroom problems from a
population-based screening participated in a waitlisted
randomized trial of the Rochester Resilience Project
derived from this model. In 14 lessons with school-based
mentors, children were taught a hierarchical set of skills:
monitoring of emotions; selfcontrol/ reducing escalation of
emotions; and maintaining control and regaining equilibrium.
Mentors provided classroom reinforcement of skill use.
Multi-level modeling accounting for the nesting of children
in schools and classrooms showed the following effects at
post-intervention: reduced problems rated by teachers in
behavior control, peer social skills, shy-withdrawn and offtask
behaviors (ES 0.31–0.47). Peer social skills improved
for girls but not for boys. Children receiving the intervention
had a 46% mean decrease in disciplinary referrals and a
43% decrease in suspensions during the 4-month intervention
period. Limitations and future directions to promote
skill transfer are discussed.
Keywords :
Emotion self-regulation . School-basedintervention . Externalizing . Internalizing problems .Randomized controlled trial
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology