Using Social And Emotional Learning Paradigms To Inform A Therapeutic Intervention For Preschool-Aged Children And Their Parents

Neha Navsaria,Elizabeth J. Hawkey, Blair M. Whalen, Kathryn Galvin

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY(2020)

Cited 5|Views2
No score
Abstract
Early intervention for young children who struggle with emotional dysregulation can prevent future social, emotional, and behavioural problems and promote healthier trajectories. Although existing interventions address these areas, there are few that focus explicitly on the acquisition of targeted social and emotional skills within a developmentally appropriate framework. To address this gap, a novel social and emotional learning intervention (SEL-I) for children identified with mental health concerns and their parents is introduced. An overview of the intervention theory, structure, and initial pilot implementation with five children, aged four to six, is provided. Participants in this phase had high rates of session attendance, treatment satisfaction, and SEL-I skill use. Initial results indicate good adherence and behavioural outcomes and improved social and emotional skill attainment. This suggests the need for the additional study and development of SEL-informed therapy interventions to prevent and reduce impairing social and emotional development, especially for young children with additional risk factors.
More
Translated text
Key words
Social and emotional learning, early childhood, psychotherapy, parenting
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined