The Effects of Mindfulness-based Training in Undergraduate Students of Translation and Interpreting (CRAFTftiugr)

November 26, 2022 updated by: Mercedes García de Quesada, Universidad de Granada

Testing the Effects of Two Mindfulness-based Programs on Well Being and Academic Performance of Undergraduate Students of Translation and Interpreting: An Interventional Study

The Faculty of Translation and Interpreting of the University of Granada (UGR) has been leading the lists of the best faculties in this area in Spain and abroad for years. This has largely defined the profile of its students as high performing and, therefore, more prone to display maladaptive perfectionism which can lead to psychological distress (Rice et al 2006). However psychological distress is not something that only affects high profile students. Several studies report overall greater stress levels among undergraduate students when compared to general population levels (Ramasubramanian 2017). In fact, it is estimated that nearly 40 percent of university students experience mild to severe depressive symptoms with over 50 percent of students predicted to experience some level of depressive symptomatology during their college years (Pogrebtsova et al 2018: 46). Coping with cognitive and emotional challenges is therefore a desirable aim for every student on a daily bases.

It is within this framework that CRAFTftiugr was born, a teaching innovation project, which is the result of the interaction among experts in mindfulness, lecturers and researchers in Translation and Interpreting and Experimental Psychology, students, Administrative and Support Staff and social stakeholders in the context of Higher Education. The main objective of the study is to test whether participating in a course on mindfulness-based techniques can improve students' cognitive, emotional and personal traits as well as academic performance. Together with this main purpose, the present study also aims to compare the effects of two mindfulness based programs, MBSR and CRAFT, on the students' ability to improve specific aspects of cognition, emotional intelligence, creativity or academic performance among others. Both mindfulness-based programs involve training sustained attention and an accepting and open attitude though they differ in several aspects of their methods, intention and aims.

Drawing conclusions from the outcomes, a curriculum applied to Translation and Interpreting Studies will be designed aimed at preventing the development of psychological stress, perfectionism and other anxiety disorders, maximizing comfort in the Higher Education context and, ultimately, improving academic achievement.

Study Overview

Detailed Description

The first year of the project has been devoted to the design of the study, the creation of the curriculum content for the courses (see attached document), all the administrative procedures aimed at formally introducing a course of this type into the Bachelor's Degree in Translation and Interpreting, and applying and receiving approval from the UGR Ethics Committee on Human Research (CEIH), the UGR Human Subjects Protection Review Board (see attached document).

All 1st and 4th year students are informed and invited to participate both in the course and in the study; they can choose to participate either in the study alone, in the course alone or in both.

So that the 4 ECTS credits of the mindfulness-based course can be validated for the completion of the Degree in Translation and Interpreting as prescribed by the European Higher Education Area, a petition was filed to the governing body of the Faculty of Translation and Interpreting of the UGR. In this petition, the content of the course, design and aim of the study, potential participants, duration and other issues related with the project were included and explained. The Faculty grants some facilities (lecture rooms and Administrative and Support Staff's help) and allows the validation of 4 ECTS credits in exchange for participation in the course.

In order to encourage participation in the study besides the 4 European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS) credits obtained as a result of attending the course, they could receive a discount on the original price for the ECTS credit in case they also opt for participating in the study. If they are grant holders, they get a further discount.

All participants are asked to fill in an informed consent, a demographic questionnaire to determine eligibility and a battery of tests. Eligible participants are randomly assigned to either the MBSR group or the CRAFT group. To ensure a balanced proportion of 1st and 4th year students in each group, the course year variable is blocked. Also, excluded students who follow the course, are assigned to both groups proportionally with the criterion of "being 1st or 4th year students".

All questionnaires are uploaded to the UGR LimeSuvey platform, an open source online survey tool specially designed to develop, publish and collect survey responses. This software is the one recommended by the University of Granada to present and collect online data for research purposes as it complies with all current legislation and ensures that all protection data requirements are being effectively met.

For specific security guarantees, an institutional email account is created through which all communication related to the project is carried out. In the same line, all the documentation generated within the project is uploaded and shared on a virtual cloud owned by the UGR (www.ugrdrive.ugr.es).

Both program instructors are fully qualified. Carmen Verdejo-Lucas (MA) is a certified MBSR instructor with more than 30 year experience. She is a clinical psychologist specialized in mindfulness and compassion based interventions. She is also a certified Cultivating Emotional Balance (CEB) instructor by Santa Barbara Institute for Consciousness Studies and has received training from some of the most outstanding figures in mindfulness and compassion: Jon Kabat-Zinn, Alan Wallace, Eve Eckman, Ronald Siegel, Paul Gilbert, Jonh Picock, Margaret Cullen and Gonzalo Brito. Pilar Posadas de Julián (PhD) is specialized in mindfulness in educational contexts. She did her degree in Translation and Interpreting, and her PhD in Linguistics and Language Learning. As a musician, she works as a full professor at the Department of Pedagogy and Singing of the Conservatoire for Music and Dance combining this job with university postgraduate lecturing at different universities and institutions in and outside Spain. With more than 30 year experience in yoga, meditation and relaxation techniques, she is an accredited practitioner in a variety of mindfulness and yoga based techniques. She has been IP in several teaching innovation projects and has been awarded different prizes.

Due to the health emergency crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, following instructions by our university (https://covid19.ugr.es/), the original study design has been changed from crossover to parallel. Contents of the programs and teaching methodology have also changed accordingly to adapt to online classes. Both programs are adapted and extended due to the circumstances.

Data collection is done at two different points in time: 1, before initiating the intervention, and 2, at the end of the intervention. Both data gathering phases lasts for approximately 15 days.

At the baseline, the only face-to-face measure is administered as such by another member who is blind to hypothesis. Due to the exigencies of health emergency situation and the impossibility to administer this measure face to face at the end of the intervention, it is also uploaded to the LimeSurvey platform and administered online at the end of the intervention.

The University of Granada General Foundation was the entity appointed to carry out all the administrative procedures (participants' enrollment, payment of fees, participants' medical insurance, certificate issuing at the end of the course and the like). The Chair in Conscience and Development of the University of Granada (Spain) is responsible of co-funding and the study members from the Cognitive Neuroscience Group (HUM-379, https://www.ugr.es/~jcarlosresina/Home.html) at the Mind, Brain and Behavior Research Centre (CIMCYC) of the University of Granada (Spain) are responsible of randomization and data analysis.

It is expected to find improvements in all measures (psychological and academic) in both groups after completing the course compared to pre-training and compared to a passive control group (students from the same degree that didn't chose to receive the course during the present academic year). In order to measure potential specific effects of each mindfulness program, pre-training to post-training psychological measures will be compared once completed the first program. Altogether, this applied study might help to elucidate whether these important transversal competences and soft skills in Translation and Interpreting can improve with mindfulness-based techniques and ultimately could be recommended as part of the official curricula of the Translating and Interpreting degree.

Study Type

Interventional

Enrollment (Actual)

75

Phase

  • Not Applicable

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Locations

      • Granada, Spain, 18002
        • Department of Translation and Interpreting of the University of Granada

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

18 years and older (Adult, Older Adult)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Genders Eligible for Study

All

Description

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Students from 1st year of the joint Bachelor's Degree in Translation and Interpreting, and Tourism of the University of Granada.
  • Students from 1st year of the Bachelor's Degree in Translation and Interpreting of the University of Granada.
  • Students from 4th year of the Bachelor's Degree in Translation and Interpreting of the University of Granada.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Current psychotherapy or history of psychotic disorder or neurological condition.
  • Established formal meditation prior experience.

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

  • Primary Purpose: Supportive Care
  • Allocation: Randomized
  • Interventional Model: Parallel Assignment
  • Masking: Quadruple

Arms and Interventions

Participant Group / Arm
Intervention / Treatment
Experimental: CRAFT group
This arm will instruct the students on an adapted and extended version of the CRAFT program. This is a mindfulness based program which is a systematic combination of practices derived from ancient philosophies, such as yoga and Buddhism, in conjunction with more recent disciplines such as mindfulness, emotional intelligence and positive psychology. The contents are structured along in five consecutive modules aimed at cultivating and enhancing consciousness, relaxation and regulation, attention, bliss and transcendence.

The CRAFT program was created by P. Posadas, PhD (Posadas 2017). This program aims to cultivate positive emotions toward oneself and others, engaging socio-emotional processes and activating traits such as empathy, motivation and creativity. It has been previously implemented in other Higher Education Institutions (Rull et al 2019, Posadas 2018, 2019).

It originally consists of 8 weekly classes, 2 hours each (18 hours direct instruction) but it has been adapted and extended due to the situation caused by the COVID19 pandemic.

The resulting 12 week program is structured along the following topics: Consciousness, Relaxation-Breathing-Regulation, Mindfulness/Full Attention, Bliss, Transcendence, Communication as Connection, Mindfully, Consciously and Blissfully Living our Daily Lives, My Work of Art "My Wonderful Craft Work Here and Now", Time and Energy Management, Passion and Compassion in the COVID context.

Other Names:
  • The CRAFT (Conscience, Relaxation-regulation, Attention, Bliss and Transcendence) program, adapted due to COVID-19
Experimental: MBSR group
This arm will instruct the students on an adapted and extended version of the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) program. The MBSR is a secular, evidence-based practice originally developed for chronic pain, but which has reported positive results among an array of clinical and nonclinical populations. This program aims to cultivate non-judgmental attention to and awareness of present moment experience while promoting stress reduction.

The MBSR program is a group-based therapy which teaches mindfulness skills through a range of formal and informal mindfulness practices. Created by Kabat-Zinn (1982), in the current study it is taught by an officially accredited instructor and is compliant with the guidelines established by Brown University and the University of Massachusetts, USA.

It originally consists of 8 weekly classes, 2 hours each (18 hours direct instruction) but it has been adapted and extended due to the situation caused by the COVID19 pandemic.

The resulting 12 week program is structured along the following topics: The Underpinnings of MBSR, The Perception of Reality, Emotion Regulation, Understanding Stress: The Mind-Body Relation, Responding to Stress, Communication and Personal Relations, Daily Life Management, My Personal Plan: "The First Week of the Rest of my Life", Time and Energy Management, Emotion Regulation in the COVID context.

Other Names:
  • The MBSR (Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction) program, adapted due to COVID-19
No Intervention: No intervention group
This group does not receive any instruction. The aim of this arm is to determine if there are any differences in outcomes between the two groups that receive intervention and this one.

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Change on the Five Facets Mindfulness Questionnaire
Time Frame: Baseline, 4 months
A 39-item self-report scale, translated and validated in Spanish, that measures mindfulness traits (Baer et al 2006, 2010; Cebolla et al 2012). Respondents rate a series of statements on a 5-point likert scale, with 1 being "never" and 5 being "very often".
Baseline, 4 months
Change on the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire
Time Frame: Baseline, 4 months
A 10-item self-report scale, translated and validated in Spanish, that measures emotion regulation (Gross and John 2003; Cabello, Salguero, Fernández-Berrocal and Gross 2013). Respondents rate a series of statements on a 7-point likert scale, with 1 being "I strongly disagree" and 7 being "I totally agree".
Baseline, 4 months
Change on the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale
Time Frame: Baseline, 4 months
A 21-item self-report scale, translated and validated in Spanish, that measures depression, anxiety and stress levels (Henry and Crawford 2005, Bados et al. 2005). Respondents rate a series of statements on a 4-point likert scale, with 0 being "not at all true of me" and 3 being "very true of me".
Baseline, 4 months
Change on the Trait Emotional Intelligence Questionnaire
Time Frame: Baseline, 4 months
A 30-item self-report scale, translated and validated in Spanish, that measures self-regulation, psychological wellbeing, sociability and emotionality (Petrides et al 2016, Pérez 2003). Respondents rate a series of statements on a 7-point likert scale, with 1 being "I strongly disagree" and 7 being "I totally agree".
Baseline, 4 months
Change on the Cultural Intelligence Scale
Time Frame: Baseline, 4 months
A 20-item self-report scale, translated and validated in Spanish, that measures cultural intelligence (Ang et al 2007; Moyano et al 2014). Respondents rate a series of statements on a 7-point likert scale, with 1 being "I strongly disagree" and 7 being "I totally agree".
Baseline, 4 months
Change on the Mind Wandering questionnaire
Time Frame: Baseline, 4 months
An 8-item self-report scale, translated and validated in Spanish, that measures the levels of the mind wandering trait (Carriere et al 2013). Respondents rate a series of statements on a 7-point likert scale, with 1 being "almost never" and 7 being "almost always".
Baseline, 4 months
Change on the ANTIVEA task
Time Frame: Baseline, 4 months
Online cognitive test, assessing several objective indices (based on participant's reaction times and accuracy) of attention and vigilance (Luna et al 2018).
Baseline, 4 months
Change on the Test on creativity
Time Frame: Baseline, 4 months
Face-to-face questionnaire, in Spanish, measuring divergent thinking (Berná and Limiñana 2010, Elisondo et al 2017).
Baseline, 4 months
Change on the Motivated Strategies for Learning Questionnaire
Time Frame: Baseline, 4 months
A 52-item self-report scale, translated and validated in Spanish, that measures motivation and learning strategies (Rojas-Ospina and Valencia-Serrano 2019; Muñoz and Asencio 2018; Pintrich et al 1987, Pintrich and De Groot 1990; Martínez Fernández and Galán 2000). Respondents rate a series of statements on a 5-point likert scale, with 1 being "I strongly disagree" and 5 being "I totally agree".
Baseline, 4 months

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Academic performance assessment
Time Frame: Up to 4 years
Results from primary outcome are associated with academic performance of students' core subjects.
Up to 4 years
Qualitative questionnaire on students' experience
Time Frame: 4 months
This qualitative questionnaire with open ended questions builds directly on the results from the quantitative phase. The quantitative results are interpreted in more detail through the qualitative data.
4 months

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Publications and helpful links

The person responsible for entering information about the study voluntarily provides these publications. These may be about anything related to the study.

General Publications

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start (Actual)

October 23, 2019

Primary Completion (Actual)

July 31, 2020

Study Completion (Actual)

October 31, 2020

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

May 9, 2020

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

May 13, 2020

First Posted (Actual)

May 19, 2020

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (Actual)

December 1, 2022

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

November 26, 2022

Last Verified

November 1, 2022

More Information

Terms related to this study

Plan for Individual participant data (IPD)

Plan to Share Individual Participant Data (IPD)?

Yes

IPD Plan Description

Data set from the ANTI-VEA task (one of our primary outcomes) will become part of a more general database belonging to the UGR Cognitive Neuroscience research group (HUM-379). This group is responsible for the design of the task with the aim to study attentional processes. Three of the researchers from the present project belong to such research team.

IPD Sharing Time Frame

From data collection.

IPD Sharing Access Criteria

Data set from the ANTI-VEA task will only be shared anonymized.

Study Data/Documents

  1. Summary and comparison of mindfulness based programs
    Information identifier: clinicaltrialsCRAFT
    Information comments: This is not a comprehensive description of any of the programs, but rather a schematic outline with the most salient similarities and differences between them.
  2. Human Subjects Review
    Information identifier: clinicaltrialsCRAFT
    Information comments: Human Subjects Review approval and its translation into English
  3. Informed Consent Form
    Information identifier: clinicaltrialsCRAFT
    Information comments: This document contains the welcome email, the informed consent form and the demographic survey. Please, bear in mind that this is the English version of the text in Spanish uploaded to the LimeSurvey platform.
  4. Official CRAFTftiugr logo
    Information identifier: clinicaltrialsCRAFT
    Information comments: This is the official logo of the project. It represents a way of communication that goes beyond words. Earphones are a special reference to interpreters.

Drug and device information, study documents

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product

No

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product

No

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

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