Add abstract
Want to add your dissertation abstract to this database? It only takes a minute!
Search abstract
Search for abstracts by subject, author or institution
Want to add your dissertation abstract to this database? It only takes a minute!
Search for abstracts by subject, author or institution
Individual and Group Child-Centered Play Therapy: Impact on Social-Emotional Competencies
by Sarah M Blalock
Institution: | University of North Texas |
---|---|
Year: | 2016 |
Keywords: | play therapy; group play therapy; Education, Guidance and Counseling; Health Sciences, Mental Health |
Posted: | 02/05/2017 |
Record ID: | 2134076 |
Full text PDF: | http://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc849659/ |
A randomized controlled trial study was conducted to test the effectiveness of 16 sessions of the modalities of individual and group child-centered play therapy (CCPT) on improving social-emotional assets, including self-regulation/responsibility, social competence, and empathy. Participants were 56 students in four urban elementary schools in north central Texas, referred by teachers for disruptive or problematic behavior: 10 female and 46 male; ages 5 to 10 years with mean age 7.12; and 21 identifying as Hispanic, 17 as White, 8 as Multiracial, 1 as Asian, and 9 unspecified. Teachers and parents completed the Social and Emotional Assets and Resilience Scale (SEARS; Merrill, 2011) at pre- and post-treatment. With a significance criterion of p< .05, teacher reports provided no statistically significant results. However, parent reports indicated a statistically and practically significant interaction effect with a medium to large effect size, indicating a substantial improvement in children's scores from pre- to post-test attributed to group assignment. Mean differences indicated substantial gains in overall social-emotional assets, according to Total scores, in both individual and group treatment conditions as compared to the waitlist control group. Additionally, both individual and group play therapy was correlated with significant improvement with a large effect for the constructs of self-regulation/responsibility and social competence, with the group condition having a larger effect than the individual condition. Regarding empathy, neither modality resulted in significant improvement, though individual CCPT resulted practically in a large effect. These results indicate CCPT may provide a developmentally appropriate treatment for clinicians working with children in schools and in the community to foster their social and emotional competencies. Advisors/Committee Members: Lindo, Natalya, Ray, Dee, Holden, Jan, Bratton, Sue.
Want to add your dissertation abstract to this database? It only takes a minute!
Search for abstracts by subject, author or institution
Emotional Intelligence and Leadership Styles
Exploring the Relationship between Emotional Intel...
|
|
Bullied!
Coping with Workplace Bullying
|
|
Police Suicide
Acuity of Influence
|
|
Looking for Understanding
A Phenomenological Exploration of Artists’ Decisio...
|
|
Visualizing the Invisible
Application of Knowledge Domain Visualization to t...
|
|
Early Career Experiences of Young Adults with Atte...
|
|
Pressure to Behave, Believe, and Become
Identity Negotiation Stories from People Who Grew ...
|
|
Aesthetic Alternative
Hip Hop as Living Art
|
|