Effects of supervised movie appreciation on the improvement of college students’ life meaning sense
Xinqiang Wang, Dajun Zhang, Jinliang Wang, Hui Xu, Min Xiao
DOI: 10.4236/health.2010.27121   PDF    HTML     6,419 Downloads   10,712 Views   Citations

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to explore the effects of supervised movie appreciation on improving the life meaning sense among college students. The intervention combined by “pre-video, post counseling” was conducted on the experimental group, while the control group received no intervention. Results have shown that the scores on the subscales of will to meaning, life purpose, life control, suffer acceptance and on the total scale have improved significantly. No gender difference was found on the intervention effect, and participants receiving intervention maintained higher level on related subscales a week later, indicating that supervised movie appreciation is an effective way to improve the life meaning sense among college students.

Share and Cite:

Wang, X. , Zhang, D. , Wang, J. , Xu, H. and Xiao, M. (2010) Effects of supervised movie appreciation on the improvement of college students’ life meaning sense. Health, 2, 804-810. doi: 10.4236/health.2010.27121.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

References

[1] Jia, L.X. and Shi, C. (2007) Study on college students’ mental health and its education from the view of meaning in life. Heilongjiang Researches on Higher Education, 9, 142-145.
[2] Ho, Y.-C. (1990) The life attitude profile: A study of reliability and validity. Bulletin of National Taiwan Normal University, 35, 71-94.
[3] Li, H. (2006). Self-transcendence meaning of life moderates in the relation between college stress and psychological well-being. Acta Psychologica Sinica, 38(3), 422- 427.
[4] Jia, L.X. and Shi, C. (2008) Perception on meaning of life and influencing factors among 307 college students in Xuzhou. Chinese Journal of School Health, 29(5), 420-421.
[5] Fahlman, S.A., Mercer, K.B., Gaskovski, P., Eastwood, A.E. and Eastwood, J.D. (2009) Does a lack of life meaning cause boredom? Results from psychometric, longitudinal, and experimental analyses. Journal of social and clinical psychology, 28(3), 307-340,
[6] Keyes, C.L.M. and Lopez, S.J. (2002) Toward a science of mental health: Positive directions in diagnosis and interventions. in: Snyder, C.R. and Lopez, S.J., Eds., Handbook of Positive Psychology, Oxford University Press, New York, 45-59.
[7] Keyes, C.L.M. (2007) Promoting and protecting mental health as flourishing a complementary strategy for improving national mental health. American Psychologist, 62(2), 95-108.
[8] Chen, X. and Zhang, D.J. (2002) An exploration on integrated model of mental health education. Educational Research, 1, 71-75.
[9] Zeng, X.Q. and Zhang, D.J. (2008) A methodological reflection on mental health education and research in china simultaneously with a discussion about the methodological value of “people in the environment”. Psychological Science, 31(4), 992-994.
[10] Wang, X.Q. (2009) Application of bibliotherapy in mental health education for middle school students. Journal of Gannan Normal University, 1, 95-97.
[11] Yuan, Z.Z. (2000) On the process of movie appreciation. Journal of Southwest University for Nationalities Philosophy and Social Sciences, 3, 77-80.
[12] Schulenberg, S.E. (2003) Psychotherapy and movies: On using films in clinical practice. Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy, 33(1), 35-48.
[13] Bu, H. (2005) Effects of excellent films on facilitating students’ mental health. Mental health education for primary and middle school student, 1, 34-35.
[14] Song, Y.F. and Xue, X.P. (2008) Appreciate psychological film and improve your mental health. Movie Literature, 22, 161-162.
[15] Zhou, S.Z. (2005) A commentary on Viktor Frankl’s meaning treatment. Journal of Yangtze University (Social Sciences), 28(6), 105-108.
[16] Marlowe, M. and Maycock, G. (2000) Phenomenology of bibliotherapy in modifying teacher puntitiveness. The Journal of Genetic Psychology, 161(3), 325-336.
[17] Wang, T., Zhang, D.J. and Chen, J.W. (2003) A study on the developmental characteristics of present-day university students’ mental quality. Psychological Science, 26(5), 847-850.

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.