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The relation of social and emotional learning to empathy and critical thinking development in middle school students / Wisemayer, Olivia, ; dissertant.
Format: Book
Publication Date: Nov 30, 2016
Publisher: ProQuest LLC
Place of Publication: Ann Arbor, MI
Pages: 124
Sources ID: 89136
Notes: Access: https://search.proquest.com/docview/1944400247External Resources: Cite This Item Search for versions with same title and author | Advanced options ... Dissertation: M.S.; Brenau University; 2017 Access: https://search.proquest.com/docview/1944400247 https: //search.proquest.com/docview/1944399554 https: //search.proquest.com/docview/1944399560 Geographic: Georgia. Note(s): Includes bibliographical references (pages 111-124)./ Participants were seventh-grade students in the gifted and talented program at a rural Georgia middle school. Class Descriptors: LC: LB1072 Responsibility: by Amy Orfield Jacques, Olivia Wisemayer, and Joshua Ferguson. Material Type: Document (dct); Thesis/dissertation (deg); Internet resource (url); eBook (ebk) Date of Entry: 20181129 Update: 20190508 Provider: OCLC
Visibility: Public (group default)
Abstract: (Show)
"The study involved an intervention with 18 seventh-grade students (ages 12-13) intended to increase critical thinking and empathy skills. Researchers met with students three mornings each week (for a total of about two hours each week) for seven weeks to conduct interactive psychology-based activities. Students completed pretest and posttests on empathy and critical thinking. Results indicated there was not an increase in empathy. The only critical-thinking scale that demonstrated a significant change was scholarly rigor. There were no significant correlations between the change in empathy and the change in critical thinking on any of the five subscales. Despite the small sample size and lack of control group, this study points to a possible connection between a school intervention in psychology-based activities in social and emotional learning (SEL) and one aspect of critical thinking indicating value in exploring this further"--Page 7.