Effects of the teen resilience training on psychological wellbeing and resilience of teenagers in Kampala
Abstract
Resilience among adolescents has been found to be very low, with suicide reported as the
third leading cause of death (WHO, 2016) and depression as the fourth leading cause of
illness and disability in adolescents. Lack of proper psychoeducation on how to manage
various aspects of their developing life can further lead turn them towards unhelpful coping
mechanisms such as excessive use of alcohol and risky behavior. Trainings and interventions
in the past have shown some positive signs in improving resilience among various
populations. The Teen Resilience Training program (TRT) was created to provide
psychoeducation to teenagers on topics (stress management, emotional wellbeing, growth
mindset, self-esteem and self-awareness) which was tested to see its effect on resilience and
simultaneously, its effects on psychological wellbeing (PWB)were also being tested. A quasi-
experimental design was used on two classes of Year 12 students (N=33) with the training
delivered online. Pre- and post-evaluation scores were charted for both control and
experiment group, which reveal that the training didn’t have any significant effect on the
either resilience or psychological wellbeing of the students. The qualitative data analysis,
however, reveals that students in fact benefited from the program and the inability of this
change to reflect in statistics can be explained by the fact that the training structure was
compromised to fit into the school timetable, the study sample being too small and the
program being delivered only over three weeks. The results additionally confirmed that
resilience and psychological wellbeing are positively correlated given that P=0.000<0.05 at
r=0.779.