Abstract

Currently due to the COVID-19 pandemic, young people are experiencing a decrease in self-efficacy and an increase in mental illness. Though previous studies have shown that self-efficacy and divergent thinking training are positively related, little is known about the impact of divergent thinking training on self-efficacy and emotions. Therefore, our study seeks this answer to support teenagers injured psychologically during disastrous periods. We randomly assigned 70 students to a 2 (time: pretest, post-test) × 2 (groups: divergent thinking training, controlled) mixed design. Participants in the experimental group were given a 9-day divergent thinking training with the theme of “writing down 10 novel functions of the mask,” while those in the control group spent 10 min each day recording what they ate. The self-efficacy, anxiety, depression, and stress of two groups were measured before and after training. Results showed that, compared to the control group, self-efficacy ceased decreasing while anxiety decreased for the experimental group. These findings confirm the positive effect of divergent thinking on teenagers. Implications and limitations are discussed.

Highlights

  • The outbreak of the novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) began in December 2019 in Wuhan, Hubei, China

  • A total of 393 Israeli veterans completed several questionnaires conducted by Ginzburg et al (2003); the results showed that those injured in war had low self-efficacy

  • Byrge and Tang (2015) implemented a complex creativity training program that consists of five sections, and the results showed increase in both creative self-efficacy and creativity ability

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Summary

Introduction

The outbreak of the novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) began in December 2019 in Wuhan, Hubei, China. COVID-19 is highly infectious and can be transmitted via respiratory droplets and close contact (National health commision of the People’s Republic of China, 2020c). Through August 19, 2020, China is still in the pandemic period, with 84,895 confirmed cases and 4,634 deaths (National health commision of the People’s Republic of China, 2020d). By conducting an online survey, researchers found that people aged 12–21.4 years scored higher on the IES-R scale (measuring PTSD symptoms) than those aged 49.6–59 years (Wang et al, 2020). Duan et al (2020) conducted a survey among young people aged 7–18 years in mainland China, and the results demonstrated that adolescents (aged 13–18 years) exhibited higher degrees of anxiety than children (aged 7–12 years).

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