Objectives: (1) To analyse the benefits of Komtü Programme implementation in children's and teachers' well-being (primary outcomes); (2) to analyse the benefits of Komtü Programme implementation in teacher's assertiveness, mentalization and self-efficacy (secondary outcomes). (3) and to analyse the benefits of Komtü Programme implementation according to children's prosocial behaviour, self-esteem and mentalization (secondary outcomes). Participants: Teachers will be placed in one of the 3 groups, according to the school's support needs they work at. In this case, randomization would not be possible in the allocation process. In one of the interventions, the participants will receive the planned actions for the first school year of the Komtü Programme. In the other intervention, the participants will only receive the training and the reflective practice planned for the Komtü. The last group will complete the school year as usual (TAU, control group). Comparisons: Researchers will compare all 3 groups among them to see to what extent: * Komtü Programme shows efficacy in fostering children's well-being compared with the training and TAU (control group). * Komtü Programme shows efficacy in fostering teachers' well-being compared with the training and TAU (control group). * Training and reflective practice shows efficacy in fostering children's well-being compared with TAU (control group). * Training and reflective practice shows efficacy in fostering teachers' well-being compared with TAU (control group). And as for the secondary outcomes, researchers will also compare all 3 group to observe possible inter-group differences.
Context: Lately, mental health has become an important issue of global priority, especially when it comes to child and youth population. Acting during this stage of life is crucial, as the symptomatology of some mental disorders present in adulthood could start before the age of 14 in 33.3% to 50% of cases. It seems that schools could be a great context to foster mental health, as children spend most of the day hours there. At school, children not only acquire academic knowledge, they also learn emotional and social competencies and, in this process, teachers can become a model for them. However, most of the school programmes that aim to enhance children's well-being are directly implemented with children, and few programmes are designed to work with teachers. Furthermore, when implementing a school programme, it is not usual to have a specialist within the school centre, that addresses teacher's worries and accompanies them through the programme completion. That is why Nous Cims Private Foundation decided to create the Komtü programme, which aims to impact children's well-being by accompanying teachers during 3 school years by a specialist that visits the centre twice a week. As this programme is relatively new, the researchers in this study intend to: (1) analyse the benefits of Komtü programme and, considering that this is a long-term programme, (2) the investigators want to study the effectiveness of a more cost-efficient approach by only implementing the training and reflective practice associated with the programme. Methodology: 8-month 3-armed quasi-experimental pre-post design with control group. Measures Operationalization: It is expected that Komtü programme could benefit teachers who receive the intervention and their students, since they share a lot of classroom time. Teacher benefits are expected in terms of higher emotional well-being (primary outcome) but also in terms of higher sense of self-efficacy, higher assertiveness and improved mentalizing capacities (secondary outcomes). Children benefits are expected in terms of higher emotional well-being (primary outcome) but also in terms of mentalization, prosocial behaviour and self-esteem (secondary outcomes). We will also consider teachers' burnout and faculty trust as process outcomes since they can impact teacher's well-being. Statistical Analyses: The analysis will encompass all participants, with the utilization of multiple imputation techniques to address any missing data. Estimation of parameters, accounting for the specific statistical assumption of each model and the data's characteristics, will be carried out using general linear modelling adjusting for baseline values. Various Stata packages will be employed to execute these models, primarily SPSS and jamovi. Concerning statistical power, a sample size of 90 teachers (30 per arm) and 180 students (90 per arm) has been proposed as the minimum required to detect a medium effect size (d=0.50) -in case of teachers- and small effect size (d =0.30) -in case of students- in the design comprising 3 arms, 2 repeated measures (pre-post), and a power level of 0.80.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
270
Mainly, 4 actions will take place: * Training with reflective practice exercises. This is a 32-hours group training involving 21 sessions that last 60 minutes and 11 hours of inter-sessions work. The contents of the training will be 5 of the 10 total blocks of Komtü training: Block 1: Meeting, observing and listening; Block 2: Neuroscience applied in the educational context; Block 3: High- quality relationships; Block 4: Conflict management; Block 5: Boundary management * Healing spaces to generate a collective restorative experience, offering tools that facilitate emotional management * Individual support for teachers to offer them resources, tools, and intervention strategies to help improve educational practice and the emotional and relational well-being of the school community * Coaching for the school management team to help them establish some objectives together and offer them the necessary resources and tools so that they can achieve them successfully.
This is a 32-hours group training involving 21 sessions that last 60 minutes and 11 hours of inter-sessions work. The contents of the training will be 5 of the 10 total blocks of Komtü training: Block 1: Meeting, observing and listening; Block 2: Neuroscience applied in the educational context; Block 3: High- quality relationships; Block 4: Conflict management; Block 5: Boundary management No other actions will take place in this group.
Nous Cims Private Foundation
Barcelona, Spain
Stirling Children's Well-Being Scale (SCWB)
This is a 15-item scale commonly used to measure children's happiness in the last 2 weeks. Items are scored from '1 = Never' to '5 = All the time'. The score ranges from 15 to 75. A higher score means more happiness (better outcome).
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 8 months
Child Well-being Level (CWBL)
This is Likert's 7-point scale to assess the child's level of happiness compared with other children of the same age. It is responded by children. It ranges from '1 = Very less happy' to '7 = Very happier'. A higher score means more happiness (better outcome).
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 8 months
Child Well-being Level - Teacher's version (CWBL-T)
This is Likert's 7-point scale to assess the child's level of happiness compared with other children of the same age. It is responded by teachers. It ranges from '1 = Very less happy' to '7 = Very happier'. A higher score means more happiness (better outcome).
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 8 months
Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS)
This is a 14-item scale commonly used to measure mental well-being in general population in the last 2 weeks. Items are scored from '1 = None of the time' to '5 = All of the time'. The score ranges from 14 to 70. A higher score means more well-being (better outcome).
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 8 months
Teacher's Subjective Well-being Scale (TSWBS)
This is a 8-item scale used to measure teacher's subjective well-being according to 2 sub-scales: teaching efficacy (4 items) and school connectedness (4 items). Items are scored in 4-points Likert scale ranging from '1 = Almost never' to '4 = Almost always'. The score ranges from 8 to 32. A higher score means more well-being (better outcome).
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 8 months
Bar-On Emotional Quotient Inventory: Youth Version (BarOn EQ-i: YV)
BarOn's scales of intra-personal (6 items) and inter-personal (12 items) scales, which are scored in 4-points Likert scales ranging from '1 = Never' to '4 = Always'. The indicated subscales ranges are 4-24 and 12-48, respectively. A higher score indicates higher emotional intelligence (better outcome).
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 8 months
Self-Other Mentalization Scale (SOMS)
These are two Likert's 5-point scales to assess the child's mentalization compared with other children of the same age. It is responded by their teachers. It ranges from '1 = Far less than others' to '5 = Far more than others'. A higher score means more mentalization (better outcome).
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 8 months
Rosenberg's Self-Esteem Scale - Child version (RSES-C)
This is a gold standard measure of self-esteem using 10 items which are scored from '1 = Totally agree' to '4 = Totally disagree'. After inverting the total score, which ranges from 10 to 40, a higher score means higher self-esteem (better outcome).
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 8 months
Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ)
Prosocial SDQ scale (5 items), which are scored in 3-point Likert scales ranging from '0 = Not true' to '2 = Certainly true'. The indicated subscale range is 0 from 10. A higher score indicates more prosocial behaviour (better outcome).
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 8 months
Mentalization Scale (MentS)
This is a 28-item scale to assess 3 dimensions of mentalization: self-related mentalization, other-related mentalization and motivation to mentalize. Items are scored from '1 = Completely incorrect' to '5 = Completely correct'. The indicated subscales scores can range from 8 to 64, from 10 to 50 and from 10 to 50, respectively. A higher score means more mentalization (better outcome).
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 8 months
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Teacher Self-Efficacy Scale - Short Form (TSES-S)
This is a 12-item scale to assess teacher's self-efficacy according to 3 subscales: efficacy in student engagement (4 items), efficacy in instructional strategies (4 items) and efficacy in classroom management (4 items). Items are scored from '1 = Nothing' to '9 = A Great Deal'. The indicated subscales range is 4-36. A higher score means more teachers' sense of efficacy (better outcome).
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 8 months
Self-reports of Assertive Behaviour: Attitudes and Values in Social Interactions (ADCAs)
This is a 35-item scale to assess auto-assertiveness (20 items) and hetero-assertiveness (15 items) in general population. It also contains a specific form to assess teacher's assertiveness in classroom interactions. Items are scored from '1 = Never or Hardly ever' to '4 = Always or Most of the time'. The indicated subscales ranges are 20-80 and 15-60, respectively. A higher score means more assertiveness (better outcome).
Time frame: Through study completion, an average of 8 months