Medindia LOGIN REGISTER
Medindia

Brit School Kids to Receive Meditation Lessons to Beat Stress

by VR Sreeraman on Jan 14 2010 7:15 AM

Brit students at a leading public school are to receive weekly 40-minute classes in meditation and stress relief as per a new addition to the school curriculum.

The Tonbridge School, in Kent, has already given its schoolboys, in the ages of 14 and 15, their first lesson, as part of a course designed with psychologists from the universities of Oxford and Cambridge.

The project, which is the first to introduce meditation skills as a regular subject on the curriculum, has been designed specifically for adolescents and comes after the success of a pilot study at the school last year.

The "mindfulness" course for Year 10 pupils will last for eight weeks, and it has been designed to help develop skills in concentration and to combat anxiety.

It will also show teenagers the benefits of silence and help them to identify and escape corrosive mindsets that could lead to mental health problems such as depression, eating disorders and addiction.

The course develops other exercises to help to improve attention, rather than allowing the mind to be "hijacked" by emotional issues, regrets, worries about the past and future and other distractions.

This can be done in a number of ways such as by focusing on breathing, parts of the body or movement.

Advertisement
Mindfulness originated in Eastern meditation traditions such as Buddhism but is now an established secular discipline.

A growing body of research supports wider use of the approach to address transient stress and deeper mental health problems, including recommendations from the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence that it be offered on the NHS to patients suffering from depression.

Advertisement
The project is a collaboration with staff at Charterhouse and Hampton schools - with both institutions planning similar schemes - as well as the Mindfulness Centre at Oxford and the Wellbeing Institute at Cambridge.

Richard Burnett, a divinity teacher and housemaster at Tonbridge who is leading the course, said that the course demanded a "culture change" in the perceptions of silence for teachers and pupils.

"One of the things about schools is that silence is associated with power - the teacher tells the pupils to be quiet. What you need to do is convey the idea that silence is a positive activity to be savoured and enjoyed," Times Online quoted him as saying.

He said that while some children involved in the trial had been sceptical, most had embraced the challenge that it posed in the classroom.

The pupils said that they hoped to use the mindfulness in the future to help to battle anxieties and to put things in perspective.

They also said that they found it helpful for getting to sleep and becoming less nervous about school cricket matches.

Mark Williams, director of the Mindfulness Centre at Oxford, said that Tonbridge was the first school to introduce a full meditation course in a practical rather than academic context.

"This is not about converting people to Buddhism, but showing there is scientific evidence that these practices are useful. So why deny them from being used?" Professor Williams added.

Andrew McCulloch, chief executive of the Mental Health Foundation, said that mindfulness training also offered the chance to take proactive steps to avoid depression and anxiety in later life.

"These problems have their roots in early life, so if you can learn techniques when you are young you might never have a breakdown," he stated.

Source-ANI
SRM


Advertisement