Background
Concerns about the mental health and well-being of K-12 school teachers have never been more urgent, with stress levels, burnout, and rates of attrition reaching historically high levels. Mindfulness-based interventions may be a professional development option for teachers to better meet the demands of their career with skills such as mental flexibility, emotion regulation, resilience, empathy, compassion, and interpersonal skills.
Aims
Using a randomized waitlist controlled study of this curriculum, our hypotheses are as follows:
Method
Participants will be 200 K-12 teachers of regular classrooms from school districts in the Utah Valley area. The curriculum is an online, accessible, engaging, research-based introductory course developed to teach basic mindfulness skills through instructional videos and guided practices. The course consists of a 15-session training program completed over about 3 weeks in 25-min sessions. The curriculum includes instruction in basic mindfulness principles, including skills for reducing stress, managing challenging emotions, building resilience, and cultivating compassion for self and others.
Results
Subjective well-being & mindfulness skills results from data collection are forthcoming. Course feedback has been positive thus far.
Conclusion
This project could have important implications for promoting teacher well-being using a curriculum that is grounded in evidence-based practices, is easily accessible and scalable, relatively brief, and that requires little or no work on the part of the school system.