TY - JOUR
T1 - Intervention to strengthen emotional self-regulation in children with emerging mental health problems
T2 - Proximal impact on school behavior
AU - Wyman, Peter A.
AU - Cross, Wendi
AU - Brown, C. Hendricks
AU - Yu, Qin
AU - Tu, Xin
AU - Eberly, Shirley
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgements We are grateful to the families and staff of the Rochester City School District, in particular to our colleagues Gary Hewitt, Andrew MacGowan, and Gladys Pedraza-Burgos. We also thank Jason Barry, Karen Schmeelk-Cone, Michael Teisl and Jennifer West from the Resilience Project Team. We acknowledge support from the Center for Mental Health Services (SAMHSA) grant KD1-SM52964, the University of Rochester Medical Center-Project Believe, and National Institute of Mental Health grants R01MH40859, T32MH018911, and K23MH73615.
PY - 2010/7
Y1 - 2010/7
N2 - A 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following effects at post-intervention: reduced problems rated by teachers in behavior control, peer social skills, shy-withdrawn and offtask behaviors (ES 0.31-0.47).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.
AB - A 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.
KW - Emotion self-regulation
KW - Externalizing
KW - Internalizing problems
KW - Randomized controlled trial
KW - School-based intervention
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U2 - 10.1007/s10802-010-9398-x
DO - 10.1007/s10802-010-9398-x
M3 - Article
C2 - 20180009
AN - SCOPUS:77955907290
SN - 0091-0627
VL - 38
SP - 707
EP - 720
JO - Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
JF - Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
IS - 5
ER -