The Effect of Quranic Stories on School-Age Children’s Self-Concept

Introduction: This study aimed to investigate the effect of Quranic stories on school-age children’s self-concept. Methods: This study was conducted as a pretest-posttest experimental design on 60 primary school children aged 7-12 years old in the city of Gonbad-e-Kavos in 2017, who were assigned t...

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Main Author: Hojjati H
Format: Article
Language:fas
Published: Arak University of Medical Sciences 2019-07-01
Series:Complementary Medicine Journal of Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cmja.arakmu.ac.ir/article-1-625-en.html
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spelling doaj-83b8267f54f448ebaa81579ba6dbb6082020-11-24T21:23:13ZfasArak University of Medical SciencesComplementary Medicine Journal of Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery2228-70942228-70942019-07-0191The Effect of Quranic Stories on School-Age Children’s Self-ConceptHojjati H02. Assistant Professor, PhD in Psychiatric Nursing, Department of Nursing, Ali Abad Katoul College, Islamic Azad University, Aliabad Katoul, IranIntroduction: This study aimed to investigate the effect of Quranic stories on school-age children’s self-concept. Methods: This study was conducted as a pretest-posttest experimental design on 60 primary school children aged 7-12 years old in the city of Gonbad-e-Kavos in 2017, who were assigned to two groups of intervention and control through simple random sampling. The intervention group received eight sessions of storytelling (two sessions per week for 60 minutes). The participants completed the Piers-Harris Children's Self-Concept Scale twice. The data were analyzed though SPSS 16 and using independent t-test and paired t-test. Result: Based on the results, overall self-concept was 57.20 ± 4.57 in the control group and 62.63 + 3.85 in the intervention group, which shows a significant difference (p=0.001). Independent t-test showed no significant difference among the dimensions of self-concept scale in the intervention and control groups. However, independent t-test showed a significant difference between the mean of self-concept dimensions of school-age children in the intervention group and that in the control group. Also, there was no significant difference in the self-concept of children before and after the storytelling in the control group (p=0.31), but there was a significant difference in the children’ self-concept before and after the storytelling sessions in the intervention group (p <0.005). Conclusion: Self-concept increased in the group receiving Quranic storytelling. Therefore, it can be said that storytelling intervention influenced the level of self-concept of school-age children. The Quranic stories make children aware of themselves and lead to their good mental health. http://cmja.arakmu.ac.ir/article-1-625-en.htmlQuranic storiesself-conceptprimary school children
collection DOAJ
language fas
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hojjati H
spellingShingle Hojjati H
The Effect of Quranic Stories on School-Age Children’s Self-Concept
Complementary Medicine Journal of Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery
Quranic stories
self-concept
primary school children
author_facet Hojjati H
author_sort Hojjati H
title The Effect of Quranic Stories on School-Age Children’s Self-Concept
title_short The Effect of Quranic Stories on School-Age Children’s Self-Concept
title_full The Effect of Quranic Stories on School-Age Children’s Self-Concept
title_fullStr The Effect of Quranic Stories on School-Age Children’s Self-Concept
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Quranic Stories on School-Age Children’s Self-Concept
title_sort effect of quranic stories on school-age children’s self-concept
publisher Arak University of Medical Sciences
series Complementary Medicine Journal of Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery
issn 2228-7094
2228-7094
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Introduction: This study aimed to investigate the effect of Quranic stories on school-age children’s self-concept. Methods: This study was conducted as a pretest-posttest experimental design on 60 primary school children aged 7-12 years old in the city of Gonbad-e-Kavos in 2017, who were assigned to two groups of intervention and control through simple random sampling. The intervention group received eight sessions of storytelling (two sessions per week for 60 minutes). The participants completed the Piers-Harris Children's Self-Concept Scale twice. The data were analyzed though SPSS 16 and using independent t-test and paired t-test. Result: Based on the results, overall self-concept was 57.20 ± 4.57 in the control group and 62.63 + 3.85 in the intervention group, which shows a significant difference (p=0.001). Independent t-test showed no significant difference among the dimensions of self-concept scale in the intervention and control groups. However, independent t-test showed a significant difference between the mean of self-concept dimensions of school-age children in the intervention group and that in the control group. Also, there was no significant difference in the self-concept of children before and after the storytelling in the control group (p=0.31), but there was a significant difference in the children’ self-concept before and after the storytelling sessions in the intervention group (p <0.005). Conclusion: Self-concept increased in the group receiving Quranic storytelling. Therefore, it can be said that storytelling intervention influenced the level of self-concept of school-age children. The Quranic stories make children aware of themselves and lead to their good mental health.
topic Quranic stories
self-concept
primary school children
url http://cmja.arakmu.ac.ir/article-1-625-en.html
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