TAMPA, Fla. – This spring, about 100 students in the College of Education are providing school-aged youth with evidence-based tools to improve their overall happiness.
Shannon Suldo, PhD, a professor in the School Psychology program at USF, says the
                     class, “Positive Psychology in Schools,” was created with a two-fold purpose: to share
                     the field of positive psychology with USF students and to serve children in the Tampa
                     Bay community.
 
“Positive psychology is a newer discipline within psychology that’s preventative,
                     promotive and wellness-enhancing,” Dr. Suldo said. “By having a service-learning component
                     in the course, students are able to apply the strategies they learn and develop professionalism.”
 
Since its launch in 2014, students in the course have served as counselor trainees
                     to students in seven partner schools in Hillsborough County. Last year, due to the
                     coronavirus pandemic, the project shifted to a virtual model and is now open to any
                     child in grades 3-12 who wants to increase their personal happiness.
 
USF graduate student Alexis Elvy, a course instructor working alongside Dr. Suldo,
                     says child participants will engage in a 30-minute session with a counselor trainee
                     once a week for 10 weeks.
 
Sessions will take place on Zoom and activities follow a timeline that focuses on
                     fostering happiness in the past, present and future.
 
“So, when we talk about promoting happiness in the past, we do activities that are
                     related to gratitude,” Elvy said. “Keeping a gratitude journal and doing a gratitude
                     visit, which involves (having participants) write a letter of gratitude to someone
                     in their life and then delivering it, is how we can start promoting happiness in our
                     present lives.”
 
In the “present” period of the project, children participate in activities like choosing
                     one day to practice five acts of kindness, taking a survey to identify their strengths
                     and brainstorming ways to use those strengths more often and creatively.
 
In the final weeks of the project, participants are guided by their USF student counselor
                     to think about what happiness could look like in the times ahead.
 
“There’s an optimism session that we often reserve for middle school and high school
                     children, and it’s focused on reframing the way we think about certain events,” Elvy
                     said. “We then do a hope activity where they imagine their best possible self in the
                     future, and we create goals so that they can work to achieve that best possible self.”
 
The tools past participants received gave them opportunities to appreciate the individuals
                     around them. They also gained a clear understanding of what happiness is and how it’s
                     attained.
 
For USF students who take the course, their experience in the service-learning project
                     is just as rewarding.
 
Teaching participant Yamilex Bardales, a senior who’s majoring in Psychology, says
                     the time she spent with her six-year-old student has motivated her to think about
                     the impact she wants to make in her life. 
 
“Though I still have plenty to learn, I feel as though I have a greater sense of what
                     school psychologists do and how they work towards supporting students in an academic
                     setting,” Bardales said. “(The project) has pushed me to consider a career in the
                     field.”
 
Alexa Petrie, a school psychology graduate student who was a former participant in
                     the project as an undergraduate, said the intervention allowed her to witness her
                     student become more positive and happier each week.
 
“I think the hands-on experience with students is very important,” Petrie said. “I
                     probably benefitted from it just as much as my child did.”
To sign-up your child for the Happiness Tools Project, please contact Dr. Shannon Suldo at promotingyouthhappiness@gmail.com by Friday, Feb. 5, 2021.
