Recent research with adults by Pennebaker and his colleagues has found that emotional
disclosure through writing about stressful events appears to have significant benefits in terms
of psychological and physical health outcomes. This report describes a controlled trial of
emotional disclosure, adapted for school children, with the major hypothesis that the
repeated description of negative events will have beneficial effects on measures of mental
health, attendance, and school performance. The sample consisted of children aged 8–13
years from four schools, a primary and a secondary school both from a suburban and an
inner-city area. Children were randomly assigned to one of three conditions: writing about
negative events, writing about nonemotional events, and a non-writing control group.
Children in all groups were seen four times during a single week and were then followed up
after 2 months with measures of health and school performance. The intervention was well
received by both schools and children, and the scripts written by the emotional and
nonemotional writing groups differed in content in the predicted ways. Contrary to
expectation, there was little evidence of a specific effect of emotional disclosure, and several
possible reasons for this are discussed. Nevertheless, there was a general reduction in
symptom measures, indicating that children may have benefited from their involvement in
the study. Although there are several possible explanations for our findings, they indicate
that it is both feasible and potentially valuable to give children opportunities to engage in
discussion about sources of stress and their reactions to them.