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Enhancing Schools Through Mindfulness Techniques

This workshop explores mindfulness, its benefits, and integrating mindfulness techniques for adults and children in educational settings. Learn from experts and practice techniques to cultivate positive outcomes in schools.

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Enhancing Schools Through Mindfulness Techniques

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  1. Paula Gill Lopez, Ph.D. Amy. L. Underhill, M.A. Fairfield University Using Mindfulness Techniques To Achieve Positive Outcomes in Schools

  2. Participants will become familiar with the construct of mindfulness; what it is, what it is not, how to integrate it with other techniques • Participants will realize the numerous benefits associated with mindfulness techniques • Participants will practice and learn mindfulness techniques with a focus on adults • Participants will practice and learn mindfulness techniques with a focus on children Workshop Objectives

  3. Mindfulness guru, Jon Kabat-Zinn defines mindfulness as, “the awareness that emerges through paying attention on purpose, in the present moment, and non-judgmentally to the unfolding of experiences moment by moment” (2003, page 145) What Mindfulness Is

  4. Mindfulness involves attending EXTERNALLY in the present moment, through the five senses: • Seeing • Hearing • Touching • Tasting • Smelling • As well as attending INTERNALLY in the present moment, through • Bodily sensations • Thoughts • Emotions What Mindfulness Is (Hooker and Fodor, 2008)

  5. INTENTION involves consciously and purposely regulating attention. ATTENTION is the ability to sustain attention in the present moment without interpretation, discrimination or evaluation; a bare registering of the facts observed (Brown, Ryan & Creswell, 2007). ATTITUDE is a frame of mind brought to mindfulness meditation; commonly described as openness, acceptance, or nonjudgmentality. Three primary components in process of mindfulness (Shapiro, Brown & Astin, 2008, page 7)

  6. “In practicing mindfulness, one becomes aware of the current internal and external experiences, observes them carefully, accepts them, and allows them to be let go of in order to attend to another present moment experience.” (Hooker and Fodor, 2008, p. 77) What Mindfulness Is

  7. Pure mindfulness is simply attending to what is happening in the present moment • The trick is not to let our thoughts carry us away from the present moment • Anchors assist us by providing a focus to bring us back to the present moment • Examples of anchors include our breath, our five senses, a mindfulness exercise script Use of an Anchor in mindfulness (Williard, 2010)

  8. “In anchored mindfulness meditation, we observe and then simply label a thought, feeling, or sensation before returning our attention to the anchor task. For example, as we focus on our breath for an anchor, we notice the belly growls and suddenly we are swept away in planning dinner. When we notice that, we simply note “stomach growling” and return to the breath, cutting off more of the narrative about planning dinner each time.” (Williard, 2010, p. 6) What Mindfulness Is

  9. Mindful Breathing • Mindful breath • Energizing breath • Calming breath

  10. CONCENTRATIVE MINDFULNESS • Disciplined, samadhi or “onepointedness” focus of attention • Like a zoom lens • A depth practice-vertical movement in the mind • Characteristic energy is closed, absorbed & trancelike • Sustained unwavering attention on one object • Experience of undisturbed stillness • Broad awareness of the present moment, not focusing on a single object or purpose. • Like a wide angle lens • A surface practice-horizontal movement in the mind • Characteristic energy is open, available & fully awake • Engaged with the full range of human experience • Experience of interconnectedness Concentrative vs. mindfulness meditation(Atkinson, 2008; Goleman, 1972; Kabat-zinn, 1994; Shapiro, Brown & Astin, 2008)

  11. “We could say that our minds are like the ocean – the whole ocean. Vipassana [mindfulness meditation] is a resting in awareness on the surface of that ocean - constantly changing, shifting, responsive to weather and climactic conditions. Some days are gray, some are brilliant blue. Some waves are choppy, some quiet. Shikantaza [Zen or concentrative meditation] is hundreds of feet down in that ocean. It’s quiet. It’s dark. It doesn’t change constantly, and strange creatures sometimes inhabit this sphere. This, too, is the ocean . . . This, also, is the mind . . . Putting these two great forms of meditation together allows us to experience the vastness of our minds and of our lives.” Concentrative vs. mindfulness meditation(Atkinson, 2008, page 4)

  12. “Concentration is a cornerstone of mindfulness practice. Your mindfulness will only be as robust as the capacity of our mind to be calm and stable. Without calmness, the mirror of mindfulness will have an agitated and choppy surface, and will not be able to reflect things with any accuracy . . . But concentration practice, however strong and satisfying, is incomplete without mindfulness to complement and deepen it . . . What is missing is the energy of curiosity, inquiry, investigation, openness, availability, engagement with the full range of phenomena experienced by human beings.” Concentrative vs. mindfulness meditation(Kabat-zinn, 1994, page 72, 74)

  13. RELAXATION MINDFULNESS • Characterized by progressive muscle relaxation & autogenic training • Pursuit of a particular psychophysical state of reduced autonomic arousal • Taught as a stress management technique to use during anxiety-provoking situations • Involves witnessing events and experiences as they present themselves on a moment to moment basis • Relaxation may be a by-product of mindfulness, but it’s not the goal • Mindfulness is not contingent on stressful situations but is considered “a way of being” (Kabat-Zinn, 1996) What Mindfulness Is Not(Shapiro, Brown & Astin, 2008)

  14. Pure Mindfulness is merely observing without altering • However, there is value in integrating mindfulness with other practices like relaxation • Examples of integration • Calming Breath – relaxation & mindfulness • Energizing Breath – increased metabolism & mindfulness • Body Scan – Pure mindfulness vs. Tension release (stress and chronic pain relief) Integrating Mindfulness with Other Practices

  15. Mindfulness Body Awareness • Body scan • Self-massage • Standing posture

  16. “. . . there is a great deal of hatred and anger and discrimination. How is it possible, in such a state, for people to practice deep looking with the aim of achieving a deep knowledge...So it is necessary to practice mindfulness- it could be Buddhist or Christian- but it is necessary to bring mindfulness to our everyday life. If you are a journalist, a teacher, or a filmmaker you should practice mindfulness- for the sake of your own calm and your own happiness, but also for that of other people as well. Because we need your calm, your compassion, your understanding. So we should be mindful as individuals but also as a community, as a family, as a nation.” (Thich Nhat Hanh, 2006, pages 93-94) Why Mindfulness

  17. Statistically significant improvements associated with • Chronic pain • Eating disorders • Depression relapse • Fibromyalgia • Psoriasis • Mood and stress levels for cancer patients • Anxiety, depression, obsessive neuroses, narcissistic and borderline personality disorders • General psychological and spiritual functioning Positive Research Outcomes – Adults(Baer, 2003; Shapiro, Brown & Astin, 2008)

  18. Burke (2009) conducted a rigorous statistical review of mindfulness-based approaches with children and adolescents, findings included: • Reasonable support for the feasibility and acceptability of mindfulness-based approaches • Lack of empirical evidence of the efficacy of interventions • Major methodological flaws (small samples, no control groups or randomization) • Research is in its infancy Research on positive outcomes with children and adolescents

  19. Results of pioneering studies that examined mindfulness approaches to promote the students’ learning experience found • Students were better able to generalize learned material to new situations • Students to be more creative • Students to be more independent thinkers • An increase in students’ selective attention, a decrease in test anxiety, and teachers’ ratings of ADHD behaviors in students • School staff could benefit from mindfulness interventions themselves Positive Research Outcomes – youth (Napoli, Krech & Holley, 2005)

  20. Mindful Smelling

  21. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1jGk9fR7-pg&feature=related Mindful Seeing

  22. Mindful Listening

  23. Mindful Touch

  24. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GEl-Qu7ApGQ&feature=related Deep Sensory Mindfulness

  25. Mindful Eating

  26. Everyday Mindfulness • Washing the dishes • Taking the trash out • Vacuuming • Folding laundry • Grocery shopping • Baking or cooking • Bathing • Playing with your pet • Driving to work • Listening to traffic • Lifting weights • Shaving • Grooming

  27. Considerations for doing mindfulness with kids • Works well in small groups or individually • Start simple • Be prepared for things to get silly • It takes time • Be sure to play; make it fun • Avoid falling into stereotyped “meditation”. “Taking time” is a better way to word this • Practice frequently • Be ready to improvise

  28. Activities Fostering Mindfulness with Kids • Bubble breathing • Belly breathing • Fabric feelings • Morning check ins (eye color, color of shirt) • Whisper time • Snack Time • Tiptoeing • Animal Stretches • Listening to Silence • Closed Eye Games • 100 Things Kids Can Do Mindfully (Williard, p.54-55)

  29. Snow/Rain Activities Silent Screams Monkey Chains Guided Imagery Pebble Sorting • Singing Bowl • Musical Instruments, Pots and Pans • Ice/Heat Packs • Drinking a heated drink More Mindfulness with Kids

  30. Snow globe/ Glitter balls Stress balls Classroom chains Shoelaces/charms • Mindfulness bracelets • Stickers/signs • Bell in classroom • Stones/buttons • Magic beans Ways to Help Kids Generalize

  31. Mind Up (Canada) • Wellness Works (PA) • Inner Kids (CA) • Mindful Schools (CA) • Mindfulness Project (OH) • Still Quiet Place (CA) (Adapted from Association for Mindfulness in Education, 2011) Programs for Schools

  32. QUESTIONS?

  33. Baer, R. (2003). Mindfulness training as a clinical intervention: A conceptual and empirical review. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice, 10, 125-143. Burke, C. (2009). Mindfulness-based approaches with children and adolescents: A preliminary review of current research in an emergent field. Journal of Family Studies. Springer Science and Business Media, LLC. Goleman, D. (1972). The Buddha on meditation and states of consciousness. The Journal of Transpersonal Psychology, 4 (1-2), 1-44, 151-210. Hooker, K. & Fodor, I. (2008). Teaching mindfulness to children. Gestalt Review, 12(1):75-91, 2008 Kabat-Zinn, J. (1994). Wherever You Go There You Are. Hyperion. Kabat-Zinn, J. (2003). Mindfulness-based interventions in context: Past, present, and future. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice, 10, 144-156. Napoli, M.; Krech, P.R. & Holley, L.C. (2005). Mindfulness training for elementary school students: The attention academy. Journal of Applied School Psychology, Vol. 21 (1), 99-125. Shapiro, S.; Brown, K.W. & Astin, J.A. (2008). Toward the integration of meditation in higher education: A review of research. Prepared for the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society. Williard, C. (2010). Child’s Mind. Parallax Press. Thich Nhat Hanh. (2006). True Love. Shambhala. References

  34. http://www.dayonepublishing.com/VMC/index.html- mindfulness practice scripts http://www.thehawnfoundation.org/welcome - a school based 15 week curriculum for k-8 teaching neuroscience and mindfulness. http://www.mindfulexperience.org/- a research site with a monthly newsletter- FREE subscription http://mindfulschools.org/schools/ - Link to videos, sample lessons and kids’ commentaries. http://www.mindfuled.org/464/ http://www.stillquietplace.com/ - another curriculum for kids devised by this Holistic Medical professional RESOURCES

  35. RESOURCES

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