ASU doctoral student Rebecca Heller focuses on mindfulness for student success at high-performing independent school
When Rebecca Heller was admitted to the Doctorate of Educational Leadership and Innovation program in the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College in 2021, she knew that mindfulness would be a cornerstone of her practice-based research.
As both a yogi and an avid surfer, Heller first developed her own mindfulness practice upon returning to California from New York in the early 2000s. Something just clicked into place for her, and the mind-body connection she found when practicing was cathartic.
“The breathwork and movement [of yoga] allowed me to be in the moment, calmed my nervous system, and cleared my mind,” Heller recounts.
Over the years, Heller incorporated simple breathwork and mindfulness practices into her work with students as a college counselor at Viewpoint School, a transitional Kindergarten through Grade 12 independent school for high-achieving students in Calabasas, California – and when the opportunity to teach a yoga class at the school arose, she jumped at the opportunity.
At Viewpoint, students have an annual physical education requirement, and yoga is offered as one of the options students can choose from alongside traditional sports and PE classes. Students have responded positively to the mindfulness lessons incorporated into the yoga, she says, and notes these calming practices are what they appreciate the most about the class.
Heller’s journey to ASU – and the Center for Mindfulness, Compassion and Resilience – began several years ago, when she noticed her students becoming increasingly stressed and anxiety-prone.
“I noticed a rise in anxiety and depression among students even before COVID-19 came along, and the pandemic only exacerbated issues,” she recalled. “These problems are not unique to Viewpoint, there is a national crisis around youth mental health.” When she suggested creating a new position to oversee the development of a school-wide holistic wellness program, school administrators agreed, and assigned Heller the new role of Director of Student Wellness.
Viewpoint has always had strong social-emotional learning programming, but they have four disparate divisions who were each doing their own thing. The vision of the new position is to unite the wellness programming and create scope and sequence from TK to 12th Grade. The goal is to deliver a strong wellness curriculum that addresses students’ physical and mental health in the hopes of raising the levels of well-being for all students.
Now, as a second-year student in the MLFTC online doctoral program, Heller is researching and developing a mindfulness-based intervention for use within her school to test the efficacy of mindfulness on anxiety, depression and the general well-being of her students.
“There is much evidence-based research that supports mindfulness for mitigating anxiety and depression and raising overall levels of well-being,” she notes.
She continues, “research also supports the positive effects of mindfulness on adolescent psychological health and academic success.”
This summer, Heller completed a thirty-hour practicum with Center, where she has fine-tuned her intervention and implementation strategy with Center staff. Aware that one of the keys to creating and sustaining a holistic, mindfulness-based wellness strategy is an in-depth understanding of the inciting factors of and solutions to teenage anxiety and stress, Heller’s practicum has included self-directed research into mindfulness strategies for classroom success and improved student well-being.
As part of her practicum, Heller has also been engaged in the initial phases of action research alongside Center staff on loneliness, social isolation, and health challenges to Arizona communities, part of a multi-year consulting and development partnership between Center and the Maricopa County Department of Health Services.
“We’re examining loneliness and isolation as a stressor with very real impacts on individual and community health,” notes Dr. Nika Gueci, Center’s executive director.
“Rebecca’s research is helping us better understand dimensions of loneliness not just as a stressor in relation to academic performance for the high school student population, but in regards to span-of-life health outcomes for other demographics, too.”
“Our mission is to support mindfulness and mindfulness-based thought leadership throughout our communities,” adds Dr. Zachary Reeves-Blurton, who oversees student internships and practicum experiences within Center.
“As a leader in her school, Rebecca is in the perfect position to effect really meaningful change for her students, and we look forward to watching and supporting her as she embarks on this journey.”