improving university teachers’ skills and psychological health through act

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Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT Francisco Montesinos, Spain

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Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT. Francisco Montesinos, Spain. University context provides difficult situations in which teachers have to deal with their own barriers in order to develop effective teaching interventions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Francisco Montesinos, Spain

Page 2: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

University context provides difficult situations in which teachers have to deal with their own barriers in order to develop effective teaching interventions.

Risk of burnout has been found in University teachers (Lackritz, 2005; Ponce, 2005; Guerrero, 2009).

ACT and Psychological Flexibility has been shown to be useful for workers (Bond y Flaxman, 2006) and health professionals (Hayes y Strosahl, 2004; Dahl, Wilson, Luciano y Hayes, 2005)

ACT based training has been useful with health professionals to improve skills for coping with difficult situations with patients, identifying avoidance behaviors and learning new emotion management strategies.

Page 3: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Design

• Preliminary study• Pre-experimental design with one group with

pre-test and post-test. • Hypothesis: an ACT-based intervention can

contribute to reduce interference of psychological barriers, increase frequency of teachers’ interventions coherent with their goals and values and improve their psychological health.

Page 4: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Participants

Page 5: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Participants

Teaching area

Page 6: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Measures• Individual interview

– identification of difficult situations, barriers and usual reactions

• Subjective scales of intensity and interference of barriers (1-10)

• Questionnaires– Maslach Burnout Inventory MBI

(Maslach & Jackson, 1986) – Acceptance an Action Questionnaire AAQ-II

(Bond et al., in press) – Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills KIMS

(Baer & Smith, 2004) • Open questions related to what they have learned

Page 7: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

How we did it

• Course: “Emotions management in teaching context”. Training credits were available for teachers.

• UEM teachers showed great interest for this course, found it very different from other training offers, and appreciated this opportunity to face psychological issues and to share their problems and worries in their teaching area.

Page 8: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Intervention protocolSession 1(4 hours)

Creative hopelessness: Identifying difficult situations, psychological barriers and short term and long term consequences for ineffective behaviors in teaching context.

Control is the problem, not the solution. Polygraph metaphor (Wilson & Luciano, 2002, p. 85). “¿What’s your mother’s name?” Exercise (Wilson & Luciano, 2002, p. 143)

Values clarification. Gardening metaphor (Wilson y Luciano, 2002, p. 113). Funeral exercise (Wilson y Luciano, 2002, p. 153). Differentiating between values, goals, actions and barriers. Making a commitment. “Crossing the river” metaphor.

Session 2(4 hours)

Evaluating commitments and actions

Pros and cons of human language. “Relate anything to anything else” Exercise (Hayes & Smith, 2005, p. 19). “What are the numbers?” exercise (Wilson & Luciano, 2002, p. 143). Examples to discriminate how verbal contents depend on our experience and how verbal relations are additive and arbitrary.

Psychological acceptance.

“Being willingly Out of Breath” Exercise (Hayes & Smith, 2005, p. 49).

“Opening the closet and straightening up” metaphor. Observing internal experience flowing exercise (Wilson & Luciano, 2002, p. 216, 230): exposure to emotions and thoughts: past and future situations

Invitation to practice acceptance

Page 9: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Results (I)

Frecuencia de situaciones que generan malestar

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14

Cuando el profesor comete un error

Cuando el profesor desconoce unarespuesta

Cuando el profesor habla en público

Cuando los alumnos no entienden

Expresión inadecuada de quejas

Desacuerdos y exigencias con notas

No participación, desinterés

Comp. inadecuado, faltas de respeto

Situations that more frequently involved distress

Behavior problems, disrespectful behaviors in students

Lack of interest, no attention

Disagreement with marks and demands for higher grades

Inadequate expression of complaints by students

Lack of understanding by students

Teacher having to speak in public

Teacher not knowing how to respond

Teacher errors

Page 10: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Results (II)

More frequent barriers

InsecurityAnger

Nervousness IndignationAnnoyance Frustration

Lack of motivationBlockedBlame

AnxiousnessDisappointment

Weakness

Page 11: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Results (III)

Intensity of barriers

1 week

Page 12: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Resultados (IV)

Interference of barriers

Page 13: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Improved skills (qualitative analysis)Results (V)

Increasing consciousness of emotions“stop and listen to my body”, “listen to the emotions and identify them”, “identifying my emotions and be conscious of how they can influence my behavior with the students”

Developing acceptance and increasing tolerance to distress“not everything is always under our control”, “let me feel the emotion and not block it”, “get close to the emotions from another place”

Maintaining a valuable direction“think about what I’m going to find along this path and make space for these emotions in order to achieve my goal”, “think about where I want to go and not lose the way that leads us to our objectives y values”

Page 14: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Conclusions (I)

• This study reminds us that emotions make part of the teaching context, and that it can be useful for teachers to have skills to manage their own barriers and even take advantage of barriers to enrich the teaching experience.

• Teachers reclaim and consider useful better training related to competences that help them to manage their own emotions in the classroom.

Page 15: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Conclusions (II)

• An ACT-based intervention contributed to increase acceptance skills in university teachers. Qualitative data points out that they improved their skills and intensity and interference of barriers decreased in most participants.

• Further investigation is needed with more experimental control, broader samples and a longer follow-up period, and more precise measures which help us to identify involved processes of change.

Page 16: Improving University teachers’ skills and psychological health through ACT

Thank [email protected]

www.institutoact.es