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Web-based Single-session Intervention of Mindset for Improving Pre-practicum Anxiety and Coping
Sponsor: The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Summary
Practicum is an essential educational component of professional training, however, the process can be challenging and sometimes frustrating, with obstacles such as the rigorous training process and mental distress. Being adequately prepared to confront the challenges and difficulties in practicum is crucial for the learning outcomes and psychological well-being of social work and/or counselling trainees. At the same time, mindset is found to be a modifiable factor in intervention, which is essential in clinical psychology, therapy, prevention, and early intervention. Instilling growth mindsets regarding intelligence, emotion, and failure-is-enhancing mindsets, respectively, is worthwhile in easing anxiety and stress coping. However, the existing intervention approaches lack of mindset integration, low intensity, distinctions of employees and interns, more objective and reliable outcome indictors and well-designed randomised controlled trials. Using a two-arm randomised controlled trial, the proposed study will examine the efficacy of a Web-based Single-session Intervention of Mindset on Intelligence, Failure, and Emotion (We-SMILE) on reducing anxiety related to practicum and improving mental health and practicum-related outcomes. A total of 117 students will be recruited from the social work and/or counselling programmes, and randomly assigned to existing pre-practicum training (Training As Usual, TAU) or that plus the We-SMILE. The intervention is 45 minutes in length. Participants will be assessed at three timepoints: baseline (T1), two weeks post-intervention (T2), and eight weeks post-intervention (T3). Patient and public involvement is adopted in the intervention design and implementation strategies. It is expected that the We-SMILE group will present lower anxiety related to practicum and more positive secondary outcomes (depression, anxiety, stress, psychological well-being, learning and performance orientation, academic self-efficacy, and confidence) compared to the TAU group. The intention-to-treat principle and linear-regression-based maximum likelihood multi-level models will be used for data analysis. The study will not only provide evidence on integrated mindset intervention for trainees' mental health and learning outcomes, but also benefit social work and/or counselling supervisors and programmes as an accessible module.
Official title: Efficacy of an Integrated Growth Mindset Intervention on Reducing Anxiety for Social Work and/or Counselling Practicum Trainees: Study Protocol for a Two-Arm Randomised Controlled Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 24 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
117
Start Date
2024-05-26
Completion Date
2025-07-01
Last Updated
2024-07-19
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Web-based Single-session Intervention of Mindset on Intelligence, Failure, and Emotion (We-SMILE)
This study will be a two-arm randomised controlled trial to examine the efficacy of the We-SMILE for pre-practicum social work and/or counselling students by comparing to the We-SMILE intervention group and the no-intervention training-as-usual group.
Locations (1)
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Hong Kong, Hong Kong