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Exploring the feasibility of using Participatory Action Research (PAR) as a mechanism for school culture change to improve mental health

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Exploring the feasibility of using Participatory Action Research (PAR) as a mechanism for school culture change to improve mental health. / Spencer, Liam; Leonard, Naomi; Jessiman, Patricia et al.
In: Pastoral Care in Education, 03.03.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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APA

Spencer, L., Leonard, N., Jessiman, P., Kaluževičiūtė-Moreton, G., Limmer, M., & Kidger, J. (2024). Exploring the feasibility of using Participatory Action Research (PAR) as a mechanism for school culture change to improve mental health. Pastoral Care in Education. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/02643944.2024.2323134

Vancouver

Spencer L, Leonard N, Jessiman P, Kaluževičiūtė-Moreton G, Limmer M, Kidger J. Exploring the feasibility of using Participatory Action Research (PAR) as a mechanism for school culture change to improve mental health. Pastoral Care in Education. 2024 Mar 3. Epub 2024 Mar 3. doi: 10.1080/02643944.2024.2323134

Author

Spencer, Liam ; Leonard, Naomi ; Jessiman, Patricia et al. / Exploring the feasibility of using Participatory Action Research (PAR) as a mechanism for school culture change to improve mental health. In: Pastoral Care in Education. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{73638b6e6bb140fdb99b5c95325339aa,
title = "Exploring the feasibility of using Participatory Action Research (PAR) as a mechanism for school culture change to improve mental health",
abstract = "Adolescence is a key time to prevent or reduce poor mental health outcomes. Supportive school environments play an important role in this, and the concept of health-promoting schools have been supported globally. Participatory action research (PAR) combines theory, practice, action, and reflection by developing practical solutions to address concerns and issues within communities. Running four PAR groups across three secondary schools, we explored the feasibility of using the approach as a mechanism for bringing about culture change and improving mental health. We undertook interviews and focus groups with students (n = 24), school staff (n = 11), facilitators (n = 3), and parents/carers (n = 2). Findings are organised under five key headings: 1) Establishing PAR groups, and the PAR cycle; 2) PAR group impact; 3) Facilitators of PAR success; 4) Barriers to PAR success; 5) Future recommendations. This study demonstrated the feasibility of PAR as a tool to improve school culture. Students participating in PAR were engaged, passionate, and motivated to influence and transform school culture to improve mental health. Future research should aim to trial the PAR approach on a larger scale, to determine whether the barriers and facilitators of PAR success identified here are relevant and transferable to schools in other contexts, and to measure the impact of such initiatives on mental health outcomes.",
keywords = "Developmental and Educational Psychology, Education",
author = "Liam Spencer and Naomi Leonard and Patricia Jessiman and Greta Kalu{\v z}evi{\v c}iūtė-Moreton and Mark Limmer and Judi Kidger",
year = "2024",
month = mar,
day = "3",
doi = "10.1080/02643944.2024.2323134",
language = "English",
journal = "Pastoral Care in Education",
issn = "0264-3944",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Exploring the feasibility of using Participatory Action Research (PAR) as a mechanism for school culture change to improve mental health

AU - Spencer, Liam

AU - Leonard, Naomi

AU - Jessiman, Patricia

AU - Kaluževičiūtė-Moreton, Greta

AU - Limmer, Mark

AU - Kidger, Judi

PY - 2024/3/3

Y1 - 2024/3/3

N2 - Adolescence is a key time to prevent or reduce poor mental health outcomes. Supportive school environments play an important role in this, and the concept of health-promoting schools have been supported globally. Participatory action research (PAR) combines theory, practice, action, and reflection by developing practical solutions to address concerns and issues within communities. Running four PAR groups across three secondary schools, we explored the feasibility of using the approach as a mechanism for bringing about culture change and improving mental health. We undertook interviews and focus groups with students (n = 24), school staff (n = 11), facilitators (n = 3), and parents/carers (n = 2). Findings are organised under five key headings: 1) Establishing PAR groups, and the PAR cycle; 2) PAR group impact; 3) Facilitators of PAR success; 4) Barriers to PAR success; 5) Future recommendations. This study demonstrated the feasibility of PAR as a tool to improve school culture. Students participating in PAR were engaged, passionate, and motivated to influence and transform school culture to improve mental health. Future research should aim to trial the PAR approach on a larger scale, to determine whether the barriers and facilitators of PAR success identified here are relevant and transferable to schools in other contexts, and to measure the impact of such initiatives on mental health outcomes.

AB - Adolescence is a key time to prevent or reduce poor mental health outcomes. Supportive school environments play an important role in this, and the concept of health-promoting schools have been supported globally. Participatory action research (PAR) combines theory, practice, action, and reflection by developing practical solutions to address concerns and issues within communities. Running four PAR groups across three secondary schools, we explored the feasibility of using the approach as a mechanism for bringing about culture change and improving mental health. We undertook interviews and focus groups with students (n = 24), school staff (n = 11), facilitators (n = 3), and parents/carers (n = 2). Findings are organised under five key headings: 1) Establishing PAR groups, and the PAR cycle; 2) PAR group impact; 3) Facilitators of PAR success; 4) Barriers to PAR success; 5) Future recommendations. This study demonstrated the feasibility of PAR as a tool to improve school culture. Students participating in PAR were engaged, passionate, and motivated to influence and transform school culture to improve mental health. Future research should aim to trial the PAR approach on a larger scale, to determine whether the barriers and facilitators of PAR success identified here are relevant and transferable to schools in other contexts, and to measure the impact of such initiatives on mental health outcomes.

KW - Developmental and Educational Psychology

KW - Education

U2 - 10.1080/02643944.2024.2323134

DO - 10.1080/02643944.2024.2323134

M3 - Journal article

JO - Pastoral Care in Education

JF - Pastoral Care in Education

SN - 0264-3944

ER -