An Intervention Study on Mindfulness Meditation and Mindfulness, Stress, Flourishing, and Academic Achievement in a First-Year Experience Seminar

This study investigated the two research questions, 1) what are the relationships among the pretest latent variables mindfulness, stress, and flourishing and the manifest variables GPA and retention in first-year college students in a first-year experience seminar and 2) will there be differences in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bambacus, Elizabeth S
Format: Others
Published: VCU Scholars Compass 2018
Subjects:
GPA
Online Access:https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/5397
https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6512&context=etd
id ndltd-vcu.edu-oai-scholarscompass.vcu.edu-etd-6512
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-vcu.edu-oai-scholarscompass.vcu.edu-etd-65122019-10-20T22:05:32Z An Intervention Study on Mindfulness Meditation and Mindfulness, Stress, Flourishing, and Academic Achievement in a First-Year Experience Seminar Bambacus, Elizabeth S This study investigated the two research questions, 1) what are the relationships among the pretest latent variables mindfulness, stress, and flourishing and the manifest variables GPA and retention in first-year college students in a first-year experience seminar and 2) will there be differences in mindfulness, stress, flourishing, GPA, and retention between groups of students in a first-year experience seminar who received a brief mindfulness intervention and those who did not? To answer these questions, the author analyzed secondary data collected from 373 first-year college students at a large public research university who took Introduction to the University (UNIV 101). The study was a repeated-measures quasi-experimental nonequivalent control groups design. Eighteen instructors across 35 class sections volunteered to provide the intervention in their class, 248 first-year students (66%) made up the mindfulness group, and 125 first-year students (35%) made up the comparison group. Women made up 70% (n = 261) of the sample and males made up 30% (n = 112). Pretests and posttests included demographics, the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS), the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), the Flourishing Scale (FS), and questions asking about prior mindfulness experience (pretest) and current and potential future practices (posttest). Chi-squared tests and t-tests evaluated variances between groups in demographics and outcome variables. Only gender varied significantly. Bivariate Pearson’s correlations of the latent variables showed 1) a significant positive relationship between mindfulness and flourishing and 2) significant negative relationships between stress and both mindfulness and flourishing. Simple regression analyses for the pretest latent variables with GPA showed a significant positive predictive relationship only between pretest flourishing and Spring GPA. The same tests run with the posttest latent variables showed 1) significant positive predictive relationships between GPA and both mindfulness and flourishing and 2) significant negative predictive relationships between stress and GPA. Only posttest flourishing positively predicted retention. For question two, a multilevel model controlling for class sections and gender showed no significant differences in any outcome variable between either group. A post hoc analysis showed that all students had significant decreases in mindfulness and flourishing at the end of the semester and a significant increase in stress. 2018-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/5397 https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6512&context=etd © Elizabeth S. Bambacus Theses and Dissertations VCU Scholars Compass mindfulness college students stress well-being GPA retention Student Counseling and Personnel Services
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic mindfulness
college students
stress
well-being
GPA
retention
Student Counseling and Personnel Services
spellingShingle mindfulness
college students
stress
well-being
GPA
retention
Student Counseling and Personnel Services
Bambacus, Elizabeth S
An Intervention Study on Mindfulness Meditation and Mindfulness, Stress, Flourishing, and Academic Achievement in a First-Year Experience Seminar
description This study investigated the two research questions, 1) what are the relationships among the pretest latent variables mindfulness, stress, and flourishing and the manifest variables GPA and retention in first-year college students in a first-year experience seminar and 2) will there be differences in mindfulness, stress, flourishing, GPA, and retention between groups of students in a first-year experience seminar who received a brief mindfulness intervention and those who did not? To answer these questions, the author analyzed secondary data collected from 373 first-year college students at a large public research university who took Introduction to the University (UNIV 101). The study was a repeated-measures quasi-experimental nonequivalent control groups design. Eighteen instructors across 35 class sections volunteered to provide the intervention in their class, 248 first-year students (66%) made up the mindfulness group, and 125 first-year students (35%) made up the comparison group. Women made up 70% (n = 261) of the sample and males made up 30% (n = 112). Pretests and posttests included demographics, the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS), the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), the Flourishing Scale (FS), and questions asking about prior mindfulness experience (pretest) and current and potential future practices (posttest). Chi-squared tests and t-tests evaluated variances between groups in demographics and outcome variables. Only gender varied significantly. Bivariate Pearson’s correlations of the latent variables showed 1) a significant positive relationship between mindfulness and flourishing and 2) significant negative relationships between stress and both mindfulness and flourishing. Simple regression analyses for the pretest latent variables with GPA showed a significant positive predictive relationship only between pretest flourishing and Spring GPA. The same tests run with the posttest latent variables showed 1) significant positive predictive relationships between GPA and both mindfulness and flourishing and 2) significant negative predictive relationships between stress and GPA. Only posttest flourishing positively predicted retention. For question two, a multilevel model controlling for class sections and gender showed no significant differences in any outcome variable between either group. A post hoc analysis showed that all students had significant decreases in mindfulness and flourishing at the end of the semester and a significant increase in stress.
author Bambacus, Elizabeth S
author_facet Bambacus, Elizabeth S
author_sort Bambacus, Elizabeth S
title An Intervention Study on Mindfulness Meditation and Mindfulness, Stress, Flourishing, and Academic Achievement in a First-Year Experience Seminar
title_short An Intervention Study on Mindfulness Meditation and Mindfulness, Stress, Flourishing, and Academic Achievement in a First-Year Experience Seminar
title_full An Intervention Study on Mindfulness Meditation and Mindfulness, Stress, Flourishing, and Academic Achievement in a First-Year Experience Seminar
title_fullStr An Intervention Study on Mindfulness Meditation and Mindfulness, Stress, Flourishing, and Academic Achievement in a First-Year Experience Seminar
title_full_unstemmed An Intervention Study on Mindfulness Meditation and Mindfulness, Stress, Flourishing, and Academic Achievement in a First-Year Experience Seminar
title_sort intervention study on mindfulness meditation and mindfulness, stress, flourishing, and academic achievement in a first-year experience seminar
publisher VCU Scholars Compass
publishDate 2018
url https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/5397
https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6512&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT bambacuselizabeths aninterventionstudyonmindfulnessmeditationandmindfulnessstressflourishingandacademicachievementinafirstyearexperienceseminar
AT bambacuselizabeths interventionstudyonmindfulnessmeditationandmindfulnessstressflourishingandacademicachievementinafirstyearexperienceseminar
_version_ 1719272811775655936