Differential effects of digital mindfulness-based interventions on creative potential and responsibility among middle school students.
Rebecchi Kevin, Lubart Todd, Shankland Rebecca, Hagège Hélène
The British journal of educational psychology September 1, 2024 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1111/bjep.12694 via PubMed
Summary
Digital in-class meditation programs for middle school students improved convergent creative thinking and responsibility, particularly when the meditation was focused on responsibility rather than self-centeredness. A cluster randomized controlled trial with 107 adolescents showed significant differences in graphic and verbal convergent thinking and responsibility scores between the two types of meditation. However, there were no effects on divergent thinking or self-reported mindfulness. The study highlights the importance of meditation intentions.
Study at a glance
| Design | cluster randomized controlled trial |
|---|---|
| Sample size | 107 |
| Population | year 7 adolescents from six classes |
| Key finding | Digital meditation interventions significantly enhanced convergent creative thinking and responsibility among middle-school students. |
Abstract
Creativity and responsibility are enhanced by meditation among adults, but such effects have not been studied in adolescents. Moreover, the determinants of the ethical effect (such as responsibility) of meditation are unclear. To address this gap by investigating the impact of digital in-class meditation programmes in middle school, focusing on intentions (self-centred vs. responsibility-centred), on adolescents' creative potential and sense of responsibility. These intentions are operationalized by different purpose-based meditations. We conducted a cluster randomized controlled trial involving 107 year 7 adolescents from six classes, assigning them to two experimental groups and an active control group. Pre- and post-intervention assessments were conducted over an 11-week period, including a creativity (EPoC) test comprising four exercises (graphic and verbal, divergent and convergent thinking), a responsibility and a mindfulness scale. Our findings revealed no discernible effects on divergent thinking or self-reported mindfulness. However, we observed significant differences in graphic and verbal convergent creative thinking, as well as impacting responsibility scores, between a responsibility-centred meditation group and a self-centred meditation group. Moreover, distinctions were noted between control and self-centred meditation groups and between some classes. Effect sizes indicated that the interventions had a moderate but significant impact on the variables measured. Our study reveals the effectiveness of digital meditation interventions in enhancing convergent creative thinking and responsibility among middle-school students. Notably, it shed new light on the importance of meditation intentions, which may be as significant as the form of meditation itself.