The Independent on Saturday

Teens learn happiness online

- LINDSEY BEVER Post | The Washington Bever reports on chronic illness, mental health and navigating the medical system

A WIDELY popular course at Yale University about the psychology of happiness has been retooled for teens.

It teaches them how to better manage stress and feel happier as they navigate their high school years.

The free six-week course, the Science of Well-Being for Teens, launched this month on the online platform Coursera as short TikTok-length videos on the misconcept­ions about happiness; the behaviours, feelings and thoughts that lead to mental well-being; and how to obtain it. By this week, more than 13 000 people had enrolled.

“We’re not taking care of our young people today if we’re not giving them strategies to navigate all the complex societal pressures that they face,” said Laurie Santos, a professor of psychology at Yale University who taught the original happiness course and filmed the online version for teens. “We’re really letting our young people down.”

Teenagers are in the midst of a mental health crisis – one that began years before the pandemic but has been exacerbate­d by it, mental health profession­als say.

Therapists who treat youths say they are seeing higher rates of anxiety, depression, loneliness, isolation, self-injury and suicidal ideation. There is a critical need, they say, for better resources to help address the problem.

American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n chief science officer Mitch Prinstein said: “We’re seeing a little bit more of an increase in what we call internalis­ing symptoms – some of these kinds of emotional distress types of symptoms.”

More than 37% of high school students reported poor mental health during the pandemic, according to a survey from the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. And in the year leading up to the pandemic, 44% experience­d persistent sadness or hopelessne­ss; nearly 20% considered suicide; and 9% attempted suicide, the survey showed.

“I think when people hear about classes about happiness, they think:

‘Oh, it’s another person telling teenagers they need to be happy all the time’,” Santos said.

Santos said negative emotions could be important signals that there might be a problem.

“But we need to know the appropriat­e ways to listen and to react to them, to understand the message that things like sadness or anxiety or anger might be sending and then channel them in an appropriat­e direction.”

The course for teens was born from Santos’s college course Psychology and the Good Life, which turned out to be the university’s largest class, with more than 1 200 students enrolled in 2018.

A version of the course was released on Coursera, where more than four million people have enrolled. Santos was a co-author on a study that showed that people who took the online course experience­d improved well-being.

Some teens enrolled in the online course for adults, Santos said. But she started receiving requests from parents to develop content focused on issues more relevant to younger pupils.

Santos filmed her lectures for her

new course before a group of high school pupils last year, giving them the opportunit­y to engage in discussion­s and ask questions that pupils watching online may also have. Here are some of the lessons found in the course:

● Rethinking what happiness means: in the first section, Santos explains how the human mind lies to people about what will make them happy – a significan­t other, money, perfect grades, getting into the best colleges, social media. She says that often, these things will not make teens as happy as they think and may, in fact, distract from other things that could improve their mental well-being.

● Becoming “other” oriented: The course focuses on things teens can do to feel happier – for example, making social connection­s, maintainin­g a sense of free time and being more “other” oriented than selfish. Santos tells teens that one of the most important behaviours that can make them happier is doing nice things for others – volunteeri­ng their time, donating their money or other things, or even doing random acts of kindness such as opening a door for someone else.

● Learning self-compassion: the course for teens goes beyond her course for college students. It teaches teens ways to change their thought processes to feel happier.

Teens learn, for instance, to tune out their inner critic, which may cause them to feel inferior and lead to self-sabotaging behaviours such as procrastin­ation, and instead think in more self-compassion­ate ways.

● Breaking anxiety cycles: this section gives them tools to regulate their emotions, such as engaging the senses to break the cycle of anxiety.

“What are five things you can see right now? What are four things you can hear right now? What are three things you can feel right now? The act of doing these exercises focuses your attention in a different way and can slow down that anxious voice in your head.”

Santos, who also hosts the Happiness Lab podcast, said she developed the course to make teens feel there were “pieces of advice and strategies that really matter for them in their lives now”.

The videos would be released on YouTube later, Santos said.

Mental health profession­als who work with teens say such resources are vital, particular­ly now.

During a critical time for socialisat­ion, teens missed out on parties, school dances and graduation ceremonies because of the pandemic.

“The rites of passage for teenage-hood were disrupted,” said Mary Alvord, a psychologi­st and co-author of Conquer Negative Thinking for Teens.

“If we can teach children and teens and adults to try to make changes to things they can control, they feel more empowered,” she said. “If they feel more empowered, they feel more in control of their life. And if they feel more in control of their life, they’re not feeling helpless. Then they don’t tend to be as depressed.”

 ?? ?? TEENAGERS in the midst of a post-pandemic mental health crisis can take advantage of a free online Harvard course to gather tools to help them pursue happiness. | Pixabay
TEENAGERS in the midst of a post-pandemic mental health crisis can take advantage of a free online Harvard course to gather tools to help them pursue happiness. | Pixabay

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