WWC review of this study

Brief intervention to encourage empathic discipline cuts suspension rates in half among adolescents

Jason A. Okonofua, David Pauneskua, and Gregory M. Walton (2016). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

  •  examining 
    1,682
     Students
    , grades
    6-8

Reviewed: August 2024

At least one finding shows moderate evidence of effectiveness
At least one statistically significant positive finding
Meets WWC standards with reservations
Student Discipline outcomes—Tier 2 (moderate evidence) found for the domain
Outcome
measure
Comparison Period Sample Intervention
mean
Comparison
mean
Significant? Improvement
    index

At least one suspension day

Empathic Instruction vs. Instruction on using technology to promote learning—Okonofua et al. (2016)

1 Semester

Full sample;
1,682 students

4.60

9.80

Yes

 
 
19
Show Supplemental Findings

At least one suspension day

Empathic Instruction vs. Instruction on using technology to promote learning—Okonofua et al. (2016)

1 Semester

Previously suspended students;
420 students

29.40

51.20

Yes

 
 
21

At least one suspension day

Empathic Instruction vs. Instruction on using technology to promote learning—Okonofua et al. (2016)

1 Semester

Blacks and Latinos;
420 students

6.30

12.30

Yes

 
 
17

At least one suspension day

Empathic Instruction vs. Instruction on using technology to promote learning—Okonofua et al. (2016)

1 Semester

Boys;
420 students

8.40

14.60

Yes

 
 
15


Evidence Tier rating based solely on this study. This intervention may achieve a higher tier when combined with the full body of evidence.

Characteristics of study sample as reported by study author.


  • Female: 52%
    Male: 48%
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    California
  • Race
    Asian
    17%
    Black
    2%
    Other or unknown
    74%
    White
    7%
  • Ethnicity
    Hispanic    
    54%
    Not Hispanic or Latino    
    46%
  • Eligible for Free and Reduced Price Lunch
    Other or unknown    
    100%

Setting

The study took place in five public middle schools in three school districts in California.

Study sample

The researchers randomly assigned 31 teachers to the intervention or comparison group. A total of 1,682 students taught by these teachers in grades 6, 7, and 8 were included in the study. Approximately 52% of the students were female. 17% were Asian, 7% were White, 2% were Black, and the rest did not report race. 54% were Hispanic or Latino.

Intervention Group

The "empathic-mindset" intervention is a brief online exercise aimed at enhancing teacher-student relationships by fostering an empathic approach to student misbehavior. The intervention includes targeted articles, narratives, and reflection exercises, completed at the beginning of the school year, emphasizing the importance of understanding students' perspectives and maintaining positive relationships during misbehavior. The intervention consists of a 45-minute module completed online and a 25-minute follow-up booster module.

Comparison Group

Comparison teachers received a training module which was a similar length as the empathic mindset intervention but that did not focus on misbehavior. The module focused on using technology to promote learning.

Support for implementation

Implementation support was not provided.

 

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