SPARK is a classroom-based social and emotional learning (SEL) program designed to reduce risk factors, build resiliency, promote emotional wellbeing and facilitate school success in youth between the ages of 10-13. Consistent with CASEL recommendations, the SPARK Pre‐Teen Mentoring Curriculum is sequenced, active, focused, and explicit (i.e., SAFE; CASEL, 2020b). The SPARK Pre‐Teen Mentoring Curriculum covers relevant and relatable topics that help students better understand themselves and others, develop vital social and emotional skills, and access their leadership and creativity to foster academic achievement and healthy community functioning.
SPARK is designed for 10-13-year-old school students. SPARK has only been evaluated in the USA. A randomised control trial was conducted (Green et al. 2021) with 357 participants (183 in the intervention and 174 in the control group).
The SPARK study was conducted with 357 participants aged 10-13 years, Study participants were 12 years old on average and mostly Hispanic (33%). Approximately half the students in both intervention and control groups were eligible for free school lunches (an indicator of socio-economic status).
SPARK has not been evaluated in Australia or with Aboriginal Australians.
Overall, SPARK had a positive effect on client outcomes.
SPARK is delivered in a group format over 12 lessons delivered sequentially over 12-13 weeks. Groups consist of 20-25 persons. Over the first two weeks, 8 sessions are held twice per week. For the remaining 4-6 weeks, sessions are held once per week. Each session lasts for 80 minutes.
SPARK facilitators deliver curriculum using a standardised instruction manual that incorporates group activities, discussions and games designed to help students understand the content of the intervention curriculum. In the SPARK study, one facilitator delivered the curriculum to students in 8 of the classes assigned to intervention group and the second facilitator delivered the curriculum to students in the remaining 3 classes assigned to intervention group.
The costs for SPARK were not reported in the study.
Because reliance on outside facilitators to deliver the curriculum could present a barrier to implementation in some schools, additional research is needed to examine the feasibility and effectiveness of training school staff to deliver the SPARK Curriculum.
1 RCT conducted in the USA with a sample of 357 people (Green et. al, 2021).
Green, AL, Ferrante, S, Boaz, TL, Kutash, K, & Wheeldon‐Reece, B 2021, ‘Social and emotional learning during early adolescence: Effectiveness of a classroom‐based SEL program for middle school students’, Psychology in the Schools, vol. 58, pp. 1056-1069, DOI 10.1002/pits.22487.
09 Dec 2022
We acknowledge Aboriginal people as the First Nations Peoples of NSW and pay our respects to Elders past, present, and future.
Informed by lessons of the past, Department of Communities and Justice is improving how we work with Aboriginal people and communities. We listen and learn from the knowledge, strength and resilience of Stolen Generations Survivors, Aboriginal Elders and Aboriginal communities.
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