The Dove Self Esteem Project, has provided our research team with funding to develop a 60- minute workshop for Hispanic/Latinx Youth between the ages of 11 to 16 years old that builds body confidence. This workshop was developed based on prior curriculum the investigator has developed for The Dove Self Esteem Project and designed with two teachers and several adolescent children. The aims of the current study are to: 1) examine the efficacy of the workshop, and 2.) evaluate the extent to which children like the curriculum and find it useful. Children will be randomized to control group or intervention group; however, the control group will eventually go through the workshop after 2 surveys. It is hypothesized that children in the intervention group will report higher body satisfaction scores, greater self- esteem, more awareness of body talk and less engagement in appearance comparisons relative to the control group. It is hypothesized that children will report liking the workshop, finding it useful and engaging.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
154
This intervention is based on existing cognitive dissonance body confidence programs for youth such as Amazing Me, Free Being Me, and Body Project. Consistent with these programs, workshops are entirely experiential getting you to discuss appearance ideals and why they are problematic, pressures they experience to conform to appearance ideals, ways to combat pressures, they compare pictures that are normal versus digitally altered and discuss ways this is problematic, they discuss body talk statements they hear all the time and how this promotes appearance ideals, they practice ways to combat body talk statements. They develop positive affirmation statements. In addition and unique to this curriculum, all activities highlight cultural ideals and how youth can receive different messages related to different appearance ideals and they unique stress and pressures this creates.
Arizona State University
Tempe, Arizona, United States
Baseline - Body Image Self Esteem (Body Esteem Scale; Mendelson & White, 1982)
This measure assesses the extent youth like their appearance and the extent they dislike their appearance. Higher scores indicate more self esteem. Instructions are "Right now, please tell us how much this represents you." Items are on a Likert scale from 0 (never) to 4 (Always).
Time frame: This measure is administered immediately before the intervention.
Post - Body Image Self Esteem (Body Esteem Scale; Mendelson & White, 1982)
This measure assesses the extent youth like their appearance and the extent they dislike their appearance. Higher scores indicate more self esteem. Instructions are "Right now, please tell us how much this represents you." Items are on a Likert scale from 0 (never) to 4 (Always).
Time frame: This measure is administered immediately after the intervention.
Baseline - General Self Esteem (Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale - Child Version; -Rosenberg, 1965)
This measure assesses the extent to which a person like themselves or feels competent. Higher scores indicate more higher self esteem. Instructions are "Right now, please tell us how much this represents you." Items are on a Likert scale from 0 (I strongly agree ) to 3 (I strongly disagree).
Time frame: This measure is administered immediately before the intervention.
Post - General Self Esteem (Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale - Child Version; Rosenberg, 1965)
This measure assesses the extent to which a person like themselves or feels competent. Higher scores indicate more higher self esteem. Instructions are "Right now, please tell us how much this represents you." Items are on a Likert scale from 0 (I strongly agree ) to 3 (I strongly disagree).
Time frame: This measure is administered immediately after the intervention.
Baseline - Appearance Conversations Scale (Jones, Vigfusdottir, & Lee, 2004).
This measure assesses the extent a youth talks about appearance with friends. Instructions are "how often do you talk about the following things with your friends?" Items are on a Likert scale form 0 (never) to 4 (very often), with higher scores indicating higher frequency of engaging in appearance conversations.
Time frame: This measure is administered immediately before the intervention.
Post - Appearance Conversations Scale (Jones, Vigfusdottir, & Lee, 2004).
This measure assesses the extent a youth talks about appearance with friends. Instructions are "how often do you talk about the following things with your friends?" Items are on a Likert scale form 0 (never) to 4 (very often), with higher scores indicating higher frequency of engaging in appearance conversations.
Time frame: This measure is administered immediately after the intervention.
Baseline - Pressures to Conform to Appearance Ideals (Sociocultural Pressures Scale; Diedrichs, Atkinson, Steer, 2015)
Assesses how often children feel pressure from friends, family or the media to change different aspects of their appearance. Instructions are "please circle how often you do this..." Items are on a Likert scale from 0 (none) to 4 (a lot), with higher scores indicating more feeling more pressure.
Time frame: This measure is administered immediately before the intervention.
Post - Pressures to Conform to Appearance Ideals (Sociocultural Pressures Scale; Diedrichs, Atkinson, Steer, 2015)
Assesses how often children feel pressure from friends, family or the media to change different aspects of their appearance. Instructions are "please circle how often you do this..." Items are on a Likert scale from 0 (none) to 4 (a lot), with higher scores indicating more feeling more pressure.
Time frame: This measure is administered immediately after the intervention.
Baseline - Appearance Comparisons (Social Comparison to Models and Peers Scale; Jones, 2001)
Assesses how often children compare themselves to kids their age or celebrities/people in the media. Instructions are "lease circle how often you do this..." Items are on a Likert scale from 0 (never) to 4 (a lot), with higher scores indicating more engagement in appearance comparisons.
Time frame: This measure is administered immediately before the intervention.
Post - Appearance Comparisons (Social Comparison to Models and Peers Scale; Jones, 2001)
Assesses how often children compare themselves to kids their age or celebrities/people in the media. Instructions are "lease circle how often you do this..." Items are on a Likert scale from 0 (never) to 4 (a lot), with higher scores indicating more engagement in appearance comparisons.
Time frame: This measure is administered immediately after the intervention.
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.