Background
The effect of a positive day reflection as a technique of positive psychology has been found repeatedly [3,4,6,8,9]. In this context, Tayyab Rashid [7] refers to Positive Psychological Interventions as a "relearning of attention and memory". Can this approach also be used to help people better recognize their strengths?
Aims
For this purpose four specific questions (4-Evening-Questions) where combined, evaluated in a study and implemented in workshops, coachings and schools. An aim was to find out which kind of experiences people make during and after this exercise.
Method
In a study 74 participants were instructed to reflect their day based on the following 4 questions every evening over a period of two weeks:
1. What gave me pleasure today?
2. I wnich situations did I feel alive today?
3. For what and to whom can I be grateful today?
4. Which strengths could I live out today?
Following the exercise, participants were asked to reflect on their experiences using the following three guiding questions to reflect on their experience:
1. how was the exercise for me?
2. what changed/what do I do differently?
3. how was the experience with the individual questions?
For this purpose, the study participants were instructed to write down the answers as a "chat
with themselves"
The written reflections were then evaluated using qualitative content analysis according to Mayring [5]. Two raters inductively formed categories and assigned all of the participants' experiences to these categories.
Results
The results show that the exercise leads to a sensitization of perception, a change in the interpretation of situations as well as in one’s own actions [1,2].
Conclusion
Its an "easy to implement" technique that has a measuarble impact. It can be used in practice as a coaching-tool in workshops as well as in schools.