THE CUTTING EDGE RESOURCES
Explore scientific studies, conscious change frameworks, mindfulness practices, and other tools that can support your investment in a more mindful approach to social change.
Relevant Studies
The following list of scientific and scholarly papers help provide insights and evidence for aspects of the relationship between personal transformation and social change.
Mindfulness Practices
Use these free tools to explore mindfulness and cultivate self-awareness.
Conscious Change Frameworks
Here is a sample of tools for integrating mindfulness as a design tool in engaging stakeholders and solving social issues.
Leading from Within: Leading from Within offers a roadmap for integrating mindfulness into every aspect of social change design. Steidle offers personal practices, presents the neuroscientific evidence for its benefits, explains the theory and provides the tools of this innovative approach to social transformation.
Toolkit for Conscious Social Change: The Toolkit for Conscious Social Change, a companion to the book, is a practical “how-to” guide to this mindfulness-based design methodology composed of over 60 mindfulness tools, frameworks and practices that will help change agents cultivate self-awareness, forge better relationships, understand change from the inside out, and incorporate mindfulness into the process of designing more sustainable and impactful solutions.
Measurement Tools
The following resources provide key instruments for measuring different forms of personal transformation.
39-Item Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire, FFMQ Baer, Smith, Hopkins, Krietemeyer & Toney, 2006
24-item short form version of FFMQ (FFMQ-SF) developed by Bohlmeijer, 2011 : After evaluating all of the seven most utilized mindfulness scales, Baer created the FFMQ to integrate the most important and validated features to measure the five facets of mindfulness: observing, describing, acting with awareness, non-judging of inner experience, and nonreactivity to inner experience.
12-item Cognitive & Affective Mindfulness Scale – Revised, CAMS-R, Feldman, Hayes, Kumar, Greeson & Laurenceau 2007: Measures attention, present-focus, awareness and acceptance.
7-item Mindfulness Process Questionnaire, MPQ, Erisman & Roemer, 2012: This new mindfulness questionnaire was developed to assess the extent to which mindfulness is intentionally practiced, to assess switching ability, and evaluate judgment
Quality of Life, WeD-QoL, Laura Camfield and Teresa King, 2006: A measure of an individual’s perceived Quality of Life. The purpose is to be able to compare how people experience and evaluate their lives, including the level of satisfaction felt in relation to values aspects of their lives
Satisfaction with Life Scale, SWLS, Diener, Emmons, Larson & Griffin 1985: A global assessment of ones’ quality of life according to their own chosen criteria, SCS has strong correlations with self-compassion and emotional intelligence, and negative correlations with self-judgment.
Flourishing Scale, Diener et al., 2010: Designed to measure social-psychological prosperity defined by positive social relationships, purposeful and meaningful life, engagement and interest in one’s activities, and feeling competent and capable in activities that are important to the person
Pemperton Happiness Index, Hervas & Vazquez, 2013: Covers multiple elements of well-being (general, hedonic, eudaimonic, social), assesses overall memory of wellbeing yesterday, and is validated in multiple countries and languages.
6-Item Brief Resilience Scale,, BRS, Smith, Dalen, Wiggins, Tooley, Christopher & Bernard, 2008: Assesses the ability of a person to bounce back.
The Community Assessment of Resilience Tool, CART, Pfefferbaum, Pfefferbaum, Van Horn, Klomp, Norris & Reissman, 2006: Assesses community resilience.
PTSD Check List – 17, PCL – 17: A 17-question measure for self-report symptoms of PTSD using a 5-part Likert scale. Scores range from 17-85, with measures of 50 or higher indicating PTSD
Self-Compassion Scale, SCS, Neff, 2003: Self-compassion is correlated with wellbeing, social connectedness, self-determination and emotional balance.
Mayer, Salovey, and Caruso Emotional Intelligence Scales, MSCEIT, Mayer, Salovey, & Caruso, 2002 a,b; 2003: A refined and better normed successor to the Multi-Factor Emotional Intelligence Scale (MEIS, Mayer, Caruso, & Salovey, 1998, 1999). Recommended as the best test for measuring ability EI.
Emotional and Social Competence Inventory, ESCI, Boyatzis and Goleman, 2007: The ESCI measures the demonstration of individuals’ behaviors, through their perceptions and those of their raters, making it distinct from measures of EI that assess ability or personality preferences.
Growth Mindset Scale, Dweck, 2006: A 3-item scale to measure if people believe that can get smarter if they work at it.
Grit Scale, Duckworth, 2007: A 12-item scale to measure trait-level perseverance and passion for long-term goals.
Tromsø Social Intelligence Scale, TSIS, Silvera, Martinussen & Dahl, 2001: A self-report scale that evaluates social information processing, social skills and social awareness
Emotional support subscale of the Interpersonal Competence Questionnaire, ICQ, Buhrmester 1988: Measures facilitating reappraisals
Active-Empathic Listening Scale, AELS, Bodie 2011: Active listening has cognitive, affective and behavioral processes