School-Based Training for Sustainable Emotional Development in Chinese Preschoolers: A Quasi-Experiment Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Emotional Competence of Preschoolers
1.2. The Design of the ECL Program
- (a)
- Theoretical basis. The theoretical framework within which it is set is the model proposed by Denham et al. [6]. In accordance with this model, there were three units (i.e., emotional expression, emotion knowledge, and emotion regulation), each with 5 class sessions (Appendix A).
- (b)
- Dynamic. There are not only pre-set courses but also generative courses based on student feedback in terms of curriculum design. Four generative class sessions were designed (Figure 1).
- (c)
- Systematic application. This program is delivered to the upper Kindergarten class (Daban, for Aged 5–6 children) in the first semester of the 2020/2021 academic year. Chinese Kindergartens generally have 5 to 6 regular theme-based class activities per week, covering five learning domains: health, language, society, science, and art. This ECL program was delivered as an additional part of learning activities. The program has three units, and each has five class sessions. The children in the experimental group attended one session per week, and each session lasted approximately 35 min. There were also extended activities for each unit. Figure 1 demonstrates the framework of this program, and Appendix A, Appendix B and Appendix C present the details. To increase its ecological validity, we adopted emotional competence courses and relevant environment settings and daily activities. Consequently, it fulfils the requirements of duration and intensity.
- (d)
- Highly interactive and participatory. It is delivered using active, participatory, and flexible teaching strategies (Appendix B). In addition, appropriate extended activities (Appendix C) were incorporated into each unit. As a result, it stimulates the pre-schoolers’ interest, which leads to their greater participation and interest.
1.3. The Current Study
- Did the experimental group outperform the control group significantly in the pre-test of EC before the early intervention?
- Did the experimental group outperform the control group significantly in the post-test of EC after the early intervention?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Sample
2.2. Instruments
2.2.1. Emotional Comprehension
- (I).
- External causes understanding was the awareness that emotions may be caused by external situations.
- (II).
- Desire understanding was the capacity to recognize that two individuals can feel different emotions about the same situation because they have different desires.
- (III).
- Belief measured the awareness that individuals’ beliefs can influence their emotional reactions to a situation.
- (IV).
- Reminder was the awareness of the role of memories in emotional experience.
- (V).
- Regulation understanding valued the awareness that emotions could be regulated by psychological strategies.
- (VI).
- Hiding was the comprehension of the discrepancy between felt and expressed emotions.
- (VII).
- Mixed emotions were the awareness that individuals can have contradictory emotional responses to a given situation.
2.2.2. Expression Identification Task
2.2.3. Emotion Regulation Strategy Inventory
2.3. Procedure
2.3.1. Ethical Clearance
2.3.2. Four Stages
2.4. Statistical Analyses
3. Results
3.1. Testing Hypothesis 1
3.2. Testing Hypothesis 2
3.3. Testing the Training Effects
4. Discussion
4.1. The Training Effect of ECL Program on EC
4.2. Educational Implications
4.3. Limitation and Future Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Session Name | Session Goal | Core Content | Teaching Strategy |
---|---|---|---|
Unit 1 Emotion comprehension | |||
EC1: Little emotion monster | 1. Learn about basic emotions and their key features 2. Child describe their emotion and how it happens | Identify the basic emotions | TPB |
EC2: I know the method | 1. describe their reason for fear and anger 2. Understand that some emotion can be caused by different things/incidents 3. talk about coping methods for fear and anger | Regulate negative emotions | EA |
EC3: Please listen to me | 1. Listen to other children’s negative emotion, experiencing emotion 2. Promote children to understand each other, enhance their acceptances of peers | Understand others’ emotion | EA |
EC4: The golden house | 1. Narrate the occurrence experience of emotions 2. Learn to analyze the emotional change of the hero of the story and the reasons 3. Describe life events that contain emotional change | Feel the change of emotion | TPB |
EC5: Let’s find it | 1. Understand that one can have mixed emotions; these emotions may conflict 2. Tell an experience with mixed emotions | Understand mixed emotions | EA |
Unit 2 Emotion expression | |||
EE1: Guess the emotions I performed | 1. Repeat the different intensity of emotions 2. Learn three ways to express emotion | Learn methods to express emotions | PA |
EE2: Hands are not for beating others | 1. Realize that beating others is an inappropriate way to express emotion 2. Learn how to copy when others express emotion inappropriately 3. Learn how to express emotion appropriately | Correct the wrong ways to express emotions | TPB VD |
EE3: Mouth is not for shouting | 1. Realize that shouting at others is an inappropriate way to express emotion 2. Learn how to copy when others express emotion inappropriately 3. Learn how to express emotion appropriately | Learn how to face wrongly expressed emotions | TPB VD |
EE4: Emotion dictionary | 1. Learn more emotional words 2. explain emotional words with personal experience 3. Express emotions with new emotional words | Learn to use emotional words | PA |
EE5: My favorite emotion | 1. Express favorite emotions and explain reasons 2. Respect other’s different opinions when debating 3. Acknowledge the importance of common emotions | Learn the importance of emotion | EA |
Unit 3 Emotion regulation | |||
ER1: How emotion emerge? | 1. Learn basic brain mechanisms of emotion 2. Learn measures to regulate emotions 3. Share an experience of emotion regulation | Mechanism of emotion | EA |
ER2: Fairness | 1. Talk about the meaning of fairness 2. Try to understand the existence of unfairness | Learn to understand fairness | EA VD |
ER3: Mocking | 1. Understand the meaning of mocking and realize it is inappropriate to mocking others 2. Explain mocking with personal experience 3. Learning coping strategies for mocking | How to face mocking | TPB |
ER4: Lose and win | 1. realize that viewing lose and win 2. participate in competition and experience lose and win 3. Learn to face loss and win more positively | Learn to face lose and win | CGA EA |
ER5: Emotion broadcasting | 1. Learn to care for others, promote care for each other 2. Help peers to copy negative emotion, using previously learned strategies | Care for each other | TPB |
Appendix B
Appendix B.1. Teaching with Picture Books (TPB)
Appendix B.2. Expression Activity (EA)
Appendix B.3. Performance Activity (PA)
Appendix B.4. Competition Game Activity (CGA)
Appendix B.5. Video-Based Discussion (VD)
Appendix C
Appendix C.1. Face Expression Wall (FEW)
Appendix C.2. Emotion Mailbox (EM)
Appendix C.3. Emotion Storybook (ES)
Appendix C.4. Colorful Emotion Bean (CEB)
Appendix C.5. Regulation Tips Tree (RTT)
Appendix C.6. Emotion Broadcasting Station (EBS)
Appendix C.7. Movie Watching (MW)
Appendix C.8. Stickers for Prizes (SFP)
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Stage | Function | Duration |
---|---|---|
1. Introduction Emotion experience and expression | Help children recall emotional memories, raise their interest to participate | 10 min |
2. Illustration Emotion knowledge/comprehension | With appropriate teaching strategies, help children experience relevant emotion, illustrate the features and causes of emotions, and promote their understanding of emotion | 15 min |
3. Discussion Emotion regulation | Organize discussions on a specific theme, promote children to gain competence skills, especially emotion regulation skills. Teachers summarize and enhance children’s regulation skills | 10 min |
Experimental Group (n = 31) | Control Group (n = 25) | t | |
---|---|---|---|
Gender | |||
Boy | 18 | 14 | |
Girl | 13 | 11 | |
Age range (month) | 60–76 | 60–73 | |
Age (month) | 68.31 (3.75) | 68.16 (3.77) | 0.06 |
Pre-Test | Post-Test | Gain Scores | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Experimental | Control | t Test | Experimental | Control | t Test | Experimental | Control | t Test | |
TEC task | |||||||||
External cause | 0.87(0.34) | 0.76(0.44) | 1.07 | 1.00(0.00) | 0.84(0.47) | 1.88 | 0.13(0.34) | 0.08(0.49) | 0.44 |
Desire | 0.97(0.18) | 0.88(0.33) | 1.26 | 1.00(0.00) | 0.92(0.28) | 1.61 | 0.03(0.18) | 0.04(0.35) | −0.11 |
Belief | 0.71(0.46) | 0.60(0.50) | 0.85 | 0.87(0.34) | 0.56(0.51) | 2.74 ** | 0.16(0.52) | −0.04(0.45) | 1.52 |
Reminder | 0.81(0.40) | 0.88(0.33) | −0.73 | 0.97(0.18) | 0.80(0.41) | 2.06 * | 0.16(0.37) | −0.08(0.40) | 2.33 * |
Regulation | 0.74(0.45) | 0.60(0.50) | 1.12 | 1.00(0.00) | 0.76(0.44) | 3.07 ** | 0.26(0.44) | 0.16(0.55) | 0.73 |
Hiding | 0.61(0.50) | 0.56(0.51) | 0.39 | 0.94(0.25) | 0.72(0.46) | 2.24 * | 0.32(0.48) | 0.16(0.47) | 1.27 |
Mixed | 0.16(0.37) | 0.28(0.46) | −1.06 | 0.90(0.30) | 0.28(0.46) | 6.12 *** | 0.74(0.44) | 0.00(0.41) | 6.43 *** |
Emotion Identification task | 6.97(0.34) | 6.84(0.54) | 0.55 | 8.00(0.00) | 7.12(0.88) | 5.57 *** | 1.03(0.80) | 0.28(1.10) | −2.97 ** |
Emotion Regulation Strategy Inventory | |||||||||
Cognitive reconstruction | 3.22(0.55) | 3.31(0.65) | −0.58 | 3.48(0.44) | 3.12(0.67) | 2.40 * | 0.26(0.55) | −0.19(1.04) | 2.08 * |
Problem solving | 3.37(0.44) | 3.25(0.56) | 0.88 | 3.59(0.45) | 3.11(0.48) | 3.82 *** | 0.22(0.45) | −0.14(0.86) | 2.00 * |
Support Appling | 3.40(0.54) | 3.19(0.67) | 1.3 | 3.66(0.54) | 3.27(0.58) | 2.57 * | 0.26(0.63) | 0.08(0.83) | 0.91 |
Alternative activities | 2.80(0.49) | 2.74(0.53) | 0.46 | 3.12(0.58) | 2.78(0.64) | 2.11 * | 0.32(0.66) | 0.04(0.92) | 1.33 |
Self-comforting | 4.21(0.55) | 4.10(4.49) | 0.78 | 4.48(0.53) | 4.14(0.62) | 2.19 * | 0.27(0.65) | 0.04(0.78) | 1.18 |
Passive coping | 3.94(0.45) | 4.05(0.48) | −0.89 | 3.66(0.43) | 3.96(0.60) | −2.17 * | −0.28(0.56) | −0.09(0.84) | −1.00 |
Emotional venting | 4.55(0.34) | 4.48(0.47) | 0.71 | 4.37(0.43) | 4.59(0.37) | −2.02 * | −0.18(0.41) | 0.11(0.64) | −2.03 * |
Attack behavior | 4.69(0.44) | 4.45(0.64) | 1.68 | 4.01(0.71) | 4.43(0.53) | −2.47 * | −0.68(0.59) | −0.02(0.77) | −3.66 *** |
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Wu, J.; Zhang, M.; Lin, W.; Wu, Y.; Li, H. School-Based Training for Sustainable Emotional Development in Chinese Preschoolers: A Quasi-Experiment Study. Sustainability 2021, 13, 6331. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13116331
Wu J, Zhang M, Lin W, Wu Y, Li H. School-Based Training for Sustainable Emotional Development in Chinese Preschoolers: A Quasi-Experiment Study. Sustainability. 2021; 13(11):6331. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13116331
Chicago/Turabian StyleWu, Jianfen, Manlin Zhang, Wenqi Lin, Yunpeng Wu, and Hui Li. 2021. "School-Based Training for Sustainable Emotional Development in Chinese Preschoolers: A Quasi-Experiment Study" Sustainability 13, no. 11: 6331. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13116331
APA StyleWu, J., Zhang, M., Lin, W., Wu, Y., & Li, H. (2021). School-Based Training for Sustainable Emotional Development in Chinese Preschoolers: A Quasi-Experiment Study. Sustainability, 13(11), 6331. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13116331