Mindfulness Training Improves Middle School Teachers' Occupational Health, Well-Being, and Interactions with Students in Their Most Stressful Classrooms

Published In

Journal of Educational Psychology

Document Type

Citation

Publication Date

10-7-2021

Abstract

Mindfulness training (MT) for teachers has become popular, yet gaps remain in our understanding of the time-course of the impacts of MT on teacher- and classroom-outcomes; the generalizability of MT impacts on elementary versus secondary teachers; and how characteristics of teachers and schools may moderate the impacts of MT. In this randomized-controlled trial, we examine the near- and longer-term impacts of the Mindfulness-Based Emotional Balance (MBEB) program with regard to improving middle school teachers’ mindfulness, self-compassion, occupational health and well-being, and quality of interactions with students in their self-nominated “most stressful classroom.” The sample included 58 sixth through eighth grade teachers randomized to condition (n = 29 MBEB and n = 29 Waitlist Control) who were assessed at baseline, postprogram, and follow-up (4 months later). Results showed that compared with controls, MBEB teachers reported greater occupational self-compassion and less job stress and anxiety at postprogram and follow-up; as well as less emotional exhaustion and depression at follow-up. No observed differences in quality of teachers’ interactions with students in their most stressful classrooms (classroom organization or emotional support) were found at postprogram. At follow-up, however, results showed MBEB teachers had better classroom organization than control teachers. Exploratory analyses showed that longer-term impacts of MBEB were moderated by teaching experience and school type, with newer teachers (≤ 5 years) and teachers in Grades 6–8 schools showing more beneficial personal and classroom outcomes at follow-up compared with more experienced teachers or those working in Grades K–8 schools, respectively. Implications for future research and teacher professional development are discussed.

Rights

(c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved

DOI

10.1037/edu0000675

Persistent Identifier

https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/37018

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