MindUP 8-11

MindUP is a schools-based social and emotional learning and mindfulness programme. It is a universal programme and is offered in three versions pertaining to children aged 3-7 (MindUP 3-7), 8-11 (MindUP 8-11), and 11-14 (MindUP 11-14). The version described here is for children aged 8-11. MindUP 8-11 is delivered in primary schools and aims to improve self-regulation, prosociality in the short-term, and academic achievement and positive mental health in the long-term.
Using an educational neuroscience approach, the programme teaches children strategies to focus attention, regulate emotions, and engage in prosocial behaviours in order to foster positive academic, social, and emotional well-being. This is supported by promoting a school-wide mindful culture to support wellbeing and academic outcomes.
MindUP 8-11 is a universal programme that is intended to be inclusive, accessible, and adaptable to a range of educational settings.
The intervention consists of 15 lessons that cover topics such as self-regulation, perspective taking, and mental health. A core part of the intervention is learning a mindfulness technique that consists of focusing the mind on a given stimulus. This exercise is intended to be practiced three times a day, with the length being adaptable to children’s needs.
EIF Programme Assessment
Child outcomes
This programme can affect outcomes for children in Active and healthy, physical and mental wellbeing.
According to the best available evidence for this programme's impact, it can achieve the following positive outcomes for children:
Supporting children's mental health and wellbeing
Improved social-emotional competence
based on study 2
Improved empathy
based on study 1
Improved perspective taking
based on study 1
Improved optimism
based on study 1
based on study 2
Improved emotional control
based on study 1
Improved mindfulness
based on study 1
Improved depressive symptoms
based on study 1
Improved prosociality
based on study 1
Enhancing school achievement & employment
Improved executive function
based on study 1
Improved school self-concept
based on study 1
Improved attention
based on study 2
Preventing crime, violence and antisocial behaviour
Decreased aggression
based on study 2
Decreased oppositional/dysregulated behaviour
based on study 2
This programme also has evidence of supporting positive outcomes for couples, parents or families that may be relevant to a commissioning decision. Please see About the evidence for more detail.
Who is it for?
The best available evidence for this programme relates to the following age-groups:
Primary school
How is it delivered?
The best available evidence for this programme relates to implementation through these delivery models:
- Group
Where is it delivered?
The best available evidence for this programme relates to its implementation in these settings:
How is it targeted?
The best available evidence for this programme relates to its implementation as:
- Universal
Where has it been implemented?
- Australia
- Canada
- Finland
- Ireland
- Portugal
- Serbia
- Uganda
- United Kingdom
- United States
Ireland provision
Ireland evaluation
About the programme
What happens during the delivery?
How is it delivered?
- MindUP is delivered in 15 sessions of 40-50 minutes duration each by one class teacher, to one class/group of children.
What happens during the intervention?
- There are 15 sequential lessons that can be taught across one academic year or can be taught in a 15-week block.
- Each lesson revisits the neuroscience underpinning the lesson theme and involves interactive and engaging activities, including individual and group work.
- There are applications to real life and cross curricular learning.
- Each lesson provides the teacher with a detailed background to the lessons, including why and how each lesson links to previous learning to inform new learning. Literature suggestions and opportunities for reflection on learning are built into each lesson.
- A core element of the programme is “The Brain Break”, a mindfulness practice that is intended to be practiced 3 times per day and consists of focusing on a stimulus, e.g., a sound. The length of these breaks is tailored to the age of the children and their needs.
What are the implementation requirements?
Who can deliver it?
- The practitioner who delivers this programme is a teacher with NFQ-7/8 level qualifications.
What are the training requirements?
- The practitioners have 26 hours of programme training. Booster training of practitioners is not required.
How are the practitioners supervised?
Practitioner supervision is provided through the following processes:
- It is recommended that practitioners are supervised by two MindUP consultants (qualified to NFQ-7/8 level), with 5 days of programme training and a MindUP school lead who is a teacher or member of the leadership team at the school offering MindUP.
What are the systems for maintaining fidelity?
Programme fidelity is maintained through the following processes:
- Training manual
- Other printed material
- Other online material
- Face-to-face training
- Fidelity monitoring
- Teachers receive digital decks to teach each of the 15 lessons. Enhanced resources will be available in 2020 on the new UK website. Ongoing CPD sessions for MindUP school leads are provided.
Is there a licensing requirement?
There is no licence required to run this programme.
How does it work? (Theory of Change)
How does it work?
- Robust social and emotional competencies, such as self-awareness, self-management, and social awareness, facilitate children’s readiness for learning, prosocial behaviour, and positive mental health.
- Using an educational neuroscience approach, the programme teaches children strategies to focus attention, regulate emotions, and engage in prosocial behaviours in order to foster positive academic, social, and emotional well-being. This is supported by fostering a school wide mindful culture to support wellbeing and academic outcomes.
- In the short term, children understand how the brain experiences and regulates emotions, can apply strategies to focus attention and calm down, and are better able to act prosocially with their peers and community.
- Over the longer term, children are equipped with and apply social and emotional knowledge, attitudes, and skills to obtain better academic achievement, improved prosociality, and positive mental health.
Intended outcomes
- Active and healthy, physical and mental wellbeing
- Achieving in all areas of learning and development
Contact details
Carrie Patterson
The Goldie Hawn Foundation
info@mindup.org.uk
About the evidence
MindUP 8-11’s most rigorous evidence comes from a cluster RCT (Study 1: Schonert-Reichl et al., 2015) and one QED (Study 2: Schonert-Reichl & Lawlor, 2010) which were conducted in Canada.
These studies identified statistically significant positive impact on a number of child outcomes.
A programme receives the same rating as its most robust study, and so the programme receives a Level 2 rating overall.
Study 1
Citation: | Schonert-Reichl et al. (2015) |
Design: | Cluster RCT |
Country: | Canada |
Sample: | 99 children between the ages of 9 and 11 |
Timing: | Post-test |
Child outcomes: |
|
Other outcomes: | |
Study rating: | 2 |
Schonert-Reichl, K. A., Oberle, E., Stewart Lawlor, M., Abott, D., Thomson, K., Oberlander, T. F., & Diamond, A. (2015). Enhancing Cognitive and Social–Emotional Development Through a Simple-to-Administer Mindfulness-Based School Program for Elementary School Children: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Developmental Psychology, 51(1), 52-66.
Available at:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0038454
Study design and sample
The first study is an RCT.
This study involved random assignment of children to a MindUP treatment group and a business as usual group.
This study was conducted in Canada, with a sample of 99 children between the ages of 9 and 11 (10 years old on average). Most children (84%) lived in two parent homes and spoke English as their native language (66%). The neighbourhood income of the area the study was conducted in was approximately equivalent to the Canadian median annual income.
Measures
Executive function was measured using the flanker task and hearts and flowers task (direct assessment). Empathy and perspective taking were measured using the Interpersonal Reactivity Index (child self-report). Optimism and emotional control were measured using the Resiliency Inventory (child self-report). School self-concept was measured using Marsh’s Self-Description Questionnaire (child self-report). Depressive symptoms were measured using the Seattle Personality Questionnaire for Children (child self-report). Mindfulness was measured using the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale adapted for children (child self-report). Social responsibility was measured using the Social Goals Questionnaire (child self-report). Prosociality was measured using peer nominations. Achievement was measured using math grades (achievement test).
Findings
This study identified statistically significant positive impact on a number of child outcomes.
This includes improved executive function, empathy, perspective taking, optimism, emotional control, prosociality, school self-concept, mindfulness and decreased depressive symptoms.
The conclusions that can be drawn from this study are limited by methodological issues pertaining to unequivalent groups and clustering not being taken into account in statistical analyses, hence why a higher rating is not achieved.
Study 2
Citation: | Schonert-Reichl & Lawlor (2010) |
Design: | QED |
Country: | Canada |
Sample: | 246 children between the ages of 9 and 13 |
Timing: | Post-test |
Child outcomes: |
|
Other outcomes: | |
Study rating: | 2 |
Schonert-Reichl, K. A., & Stewart Lawlor, M. (2010). The Effects of a Mindfulness-Based Education Program on Pre- and Early Adolescents’ Well-Being and Social and Emotional Competence. Mindfulness, 1(3), 137-151. DOI 10.1007/s12671-010-0011-8.
Available at
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12671-010-0011-8
Study design and sample
The second study is a QED.
The programme was described to teachers of twelve schools. Twelve teachers were interested in participating in the programme and study and were assigned to intervention and control group on a first come, first serve basis.
This study was conducted in Canada, with a sample of 246 children between the ages of 9 and 13 (average age 11). Most children were raised in two parent families (73%) with English as the main language spoken at home (57%), followed by East Asian languages (23%) and other languages (20%). The average income in the neighbourhoods the schools were located in approximated the median income in Canada.
Measures
Optimism was measured using the Resiliency Inventory (child self-report). School and general self-concept were measured using Marsh’s Self-Description questionnaire (child self-report). Positive and negative emotions were measured using the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (child self-report). Aggressive behaviours, oppositional behaviour/dysregulation, attention and concentration, and social emotional competence were measured using the Teachers’ Rating Scale of Social Competence (teacher report).
Findings
This study identified statistically significant positive impact on a number of child outcomes.
This includes improved optimism, improved attention and social-emotional competence, decreased aggression and oppositional/dysregulated behaviour.
The conclusions that can be drawn from this study are limited by methodological issues pertaining to unequivalent groups and a lack of clarity in terms of attrition, hence why a higher rating is not achieved.