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Positive Psychology & Positive Interventions

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Positive Psychology & Positive Interventions Martin E.P. Seligman NASP April 1, 2005 Outline The Educative Model Theory: The Pleasant Life, Engaged Life, Meaningful ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Positive Psychology & Positive Interventions


1
Positive Psychology Positive Interventions
  • Martin E.P. Seligman
  • NASP
  • April 1, 2005

2
Outline
  • The Educative Model
  • Theory The Pleasant Life, Engaged Life,
    Meaningful Life
  • Interventions Positive Emotion
  • Interventions Engagement
  • Interventions Meaning and Purpose
  • Empirically Validated Positive Interventions
  • Three School Children Examples
  • Prevention of Depression in School
    Children
  • School Children Plus Parents
  • Teaching Positive Psychology In 9th Grade
    Language Arts

3
What is Positive Psychology?
  • psychology should be
  • as concerned with strength as with weakness
  • as interested in building the best things in life
    as in repairing the worst
  • as concerned with making the lives of normal
    people fulfilling as with healing pathology

4
Science of Positive Psychology
  • Measurement
  • Classification VIA-1
  • Causation Discoverable
  • Left Frontal Activity
  • Optimism Success
  • What is a Good Day?
  • Interventions (Tx Rx)
  • Efficacy and Effectiveness
  • Can Psychology Make People Happier?
  • Educative/Coaching vs Therapy Model
  • Schools as the Forefront

5
Three Happy Lives
  • Not Cheery, Smiley Face (Hollywood)
  • The Pleasant Life (Positive Emotion)
  • The Engaged Life (Eudaimonia)
  • The Meaningful Life

6
The Pleasant Life
  • Having as many pleasures as possible
  • Learning the skills to amplify them

7
The Good Life
  • Len
  • Pleasure vs Flow (Gratification)
  • Identify Signature Strengths www.authentichappines
    s.org
  • Recraft Work, Love, Play
  • Derive Thereby Gratification

8
VIA Strengths the Really Big 24Peterson
Seligman (2004)
  • 1. Wisdom and Knowledge
  • curiosity/interest
  • love of learning
  • judgment/critical thinking
  • originality/ingenuity/creativity
  • perspective
  • 2. Courage
  • valor
  • industry/perseverance
  • integrity/honesty
  • zest/enthusiasm
  • 3. Love
  • intimacy
  • kindness/generosity/nurturance
  • social intelligence
  • 4. Justice
  • citizenship/duty/loyalty/ teamwork
  • equity/fairness
  • leadership
  • 5. Temperance
  • forgiveness/mercy
  • modesty/humility
  • self-control/self-regulation
  • prudence/caution
  • 6. Transcendence
  • appreciation of beauty/awe
  • gratitude
  • hope/optimism
  • humor/playfulness
  • religiousness/sense of purpose

9
The Meaningful Life
  • Knowing your signature strengths
  • Use in the service of something larger than you

10
Positive Emotion About the PastThe Pleasant
Lifewww.reflectivehappiness.com
  • Contentment, Satisfaction, Serenity, Pride
  • Interventions
  • Gratitude Visit
  • 3 Blessings

11
Positive Emotion About the FutureThe Pleasant
Life
  • Hope, Optimism, Faith, Trust
  • Interventions
  • ABCDE Learned Optimism
  • One Door Closes

12
Positive Emotion About the PresentThe Pleasant
Life
  • Pleasures Bodily Complex
  • Interventions
  • Savoring A Beautiful Day

13
Engagement at WorkThe Good Life
  • Take VIA www.authentichappiness.org
  • Recraft Work Using Signature Strength
  • Use Signature Strength in a New Way

14
Engagement with PeopleThe Good Life
  • Perfect Surprise
  • Strengths Date
  • Gift of Time

15
The Meaningful Life
  • Strengths Family Tree
  • Fun vs. Philanthropy
  • Your Legacy to Positive Human Future (Grandchild
    Writes Obituary)
  • Use Signature Strength to Serve an Institution

16
Validation of Positive Interventions
  • Placebo Controlled
  • Random Assignment
  • Long Follow up
  • Web Based

17
Positive Interventions Empirically
Validated(Seligman, Peterson, Steen)
  • 320,000 Registrees www.authentichappiness.org
  • Exercise Link
  • Baseline Battery (SHI CESD)
  • Intervention Fidelity Check
  • Placebo Controlled
  • Six Month Follow Up

18
Happiness Index
  • Pre Post 1
    Week 1 Month 6 Months
  • Memory (79) 58.5 61.6 58.3 57.6
    58.7
  • Blessings(80) 57.1 58.8 59.9 62.2
    62.4
  • Story (78) 57.3 61.6 58.7 56.9
    56.2
  • Gratitude(82) 58.5 64.7 61.8 60.9 59.0
  • VIA (75) 58.6 60.2 58.4 58.3
    58.8
  • UseVIA(77) 57.2 58.6 59.4 62.1
    61.2

19
CES Depression
  • Pre Post 1
    Week 1 Month 6 Months
  • Memory (79) 13.5 12.1 12.9 12.5
    13.6
  • Blessings(80) 14.2 10.2 9.9 9.4
    10.8
  • Story (78) 13.7 10.3 13.6 14.2
    12.8
  • Gratitude(82) 13.8 9.5 11.0 11.1
    13.6
  • VIA (75) 13.7 11.7 12.8 12.9
    13.7
  • UseVIA(77) 14.1 10.8 10.4 9.8
    11.3

20
Disseminating Positive Interventions
  • Masters of Applied Positive Psychology
  • Positive Psychology Center (PPC)
  • University of Pennsylvania
  • First Class September 2005
  • Specialty Tracks
  • Coaching
  • Clinical Psychology
  • Health
  • Organizational Leadership
  • Education
  • www.reflectivehappiness.com

21
Penn Resilience Program
  • Jane Gillham
  • Karen Reivich
  • Martin Seligman
  • Derek Freres
  • Andrew Shatte
  • Maria La Russo
  • Tara Chaplin
  • Steven Brunwasser
  • Conflict of Interest Warning Dr. Seligman Dr.
    Reivich own stock in ADAPTIV, and PRP technology
    has been licensed to ADAPTIV

22
Penn Resilience Program (PRP)
  • School-based intervention
  • For middle school students (5th-8th grade)
  • Based on CBT and social problem-solving
    techniques
  • Manualized curriculum
  • Group format
  • Twelve 90 minute sessions
  • Teacher Training

23
PRP Cognitive Component
  • Link between thoughts and feelings/actions (ABC
    model)
  • Identifying explanatory style
  • Examining alternatives evidence for
    interpretations

24
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25
PRP Problem-solving Component
  • Assertiveness
  • Negotiation
  • Relaxation
  • Creative problem solving
  • Decision making

26
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27
PRP Results
  • Targeted intervention, conducted at school
  • 118 5th 6th graders at risk for depression
  • School Personnel vs Clinically Trained
  • Prevention (PRP) vs. Matched control
  • 3 Year follow-up
  • Explanatory style (CASQ) depressive symptoms
    (CDI)

28
Explanatory Style (mean CN score)
29
Moderate to Severe Depressive Symptoms ( with
CDI gt14)
30
Clinical Depression CDI gt 19. PRPParent
ChildGillham et al 2005
31
Clinical Anxiety RCMAS gt 20Gillham et 2005
32
Teaching Positive Psychologyto 9th Graders
  • University of Pennsylvania,
  • Swarthmore College,
  • Wallingford-Swarthmore School District, and
  • The Department of Education

33
Teaching Positive Psychologyto 9th Graders
  • Investigators
  • Martin Seligman
  • Sharon Parker
  • Jane Gillham
  • Karen Reivich
  • Chris Peterson

34
Three Routes to Happiness
  • The Pleasant LifePositive Emotion
  • The Engaged Life--Positive Character
  • The Meaningful Life--Positive Institutions
  • The Negative Questions Does building these
    Three Lives in Adolescents Prevent Symptoms of
    Disorder
  • The Positive Questions Increase Positive
    Emotion, Engagement, Meaning? Grades? Health?
    Civic Engagement?

35
The Positive Psychology Curriculum
  • 22 stand-alone lessons that are delivered in
    80-minute blocks across the course of the
    academic year
  • Teachers also integrate the Positive Psychology
    concepts into their regular curriculum (teaching
    of The Odyssey, Lord of the Flies, Romeo and
    Juliet, etc.)
  • Each of the stand-alone lessons have brief
    didactic portion, in-class experiential portion,
    and homework and maintenance activities

36
Unit 1 The Pleasant Life
  • Lesson 1 Blessings (countering the negativity
    bias)
  • Lesson 2 Savoring (increasing mindfulness and
    appreciation)
  • Lesson 3-6 Promoting Optimism (increasing hope
    and resilience)
  • Lesson 7 Gratitude (appreciation of others and
    giving thanks)
  • Lesson 8 Letting Go of Grudges (promoting
    forgiveness and perspective)

37
Unit 2 The Engaged Life
  • Lesson 1 Identifying Strengths (who am I at my
    best?)
  • Lesson 2 Who Are Our Friends and Why? (applying
    strengths to friendships)
  • Lesson 3 Strengths Narratives (building comfort
    sharing strengths)
  • Lesson 4 Using and Developing Strengths
    (building non-signature strengths as well)
  • Lesson 5 Family Tree of Strengths (applying
    strengths to build stronger families)
  • Lesson 6 Giving the Gift of Time (making
    kindness a priority)
  • Lesson 7 Panel of Paragons Preparation
  • Lesson 8 Panel of Paragons (learning from
    community members)

38
Unit 3 The Meaningful Life
  • Lesson 1 What is Meaning? (becoming part of a
    We)
  • Lesson 2 Being a Good Teammate (valuing
    loyalty, dependability, going over and above)
  • Lesson 3 Fun vs. Philanthropy (the lessons of
    altruism)
  • Lesson 4 Passing the Torch (learning from our
    elders)
  • Lesson 5 Mentoring an 8th Grader (guiding those
    who come after)

39
The Full Life vs The Empty Life
  • LSPleasure Engagement Meaning
  • Predicting Life Satisfaction
  • 15 Replications. Multi method
  • Pleasure marginal
  • Good Life lt.0001
  • Meaningful Life lt.0001
  • The School as the Fulcrum
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