This resource will provide you with an overview of some of the challenges faced by students with mental health issues. It outlines approaches you can use to support students and enable them to succeed and flourish at university.
This resource will provide you with an overview of some of the challenges faced by students with mental health issues. It outlines approaches you can use to support students and enable them to succeed and flourish at university.
Overview
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Student mental health Strengths-based approaches Wellbeing, success, retention and flourishing Curriculum design for wellbeingThe incidence of mental health issues facing students engaged in higher education has steadily increased in recent years. This increase in prevalence has also been accompanied by an increase in the severity and complexity. This trend is a critical issue in higher education.
Most mental health conditions emerge prior to the age of 25 years. This peak onset for mental health issues often coincides with participation in higher education for young people. Current statistics indicate that over 50% of people aged 18-24 are engaged in higher education in Australia. This therefore represents an opportunity for early action to provide mental health support for this group.
Evidence indicates that university students both in Australia and Internationally have an ‘extremely high’ incidence of mental illness. These students have higher incidence of mental illness than same age peers not attending university and report a lower sense of personal wellbeing than the general population. Conservative estimates indicate that upwards of 210,000 Australian university students aged 18-25 years will experience complex and severe mental ill-health annually. As such, some researchers assert that student wellbeing is the central challenge facing higher education.
Some of the major risk factors facing students include academic pressure, financial pressure, relocation, transition to independence, drug and alcohol use, poor diet associated with financial constraints, and lack of sleep. Compounding this, it is generally accepted that students can expect to enter an increasingly competitive and unpredictable environment as graduates.
The massification of higher education and consequent increased participation of non-traditional groups can have a further complicating impact in terms of student wellbeing. Direct evidence indicates higher risks to mental wellbeing are associated specifically within particular ‘non-traditional’ groups.
These include –
People must be in good mental health to thrive, flourish and contribute to the good of the community. However, mental health remains one of the Australian Federal Government’s eight national health priorities. Given the impact of poor mental health on the community, all measures to reduce the burden of disease in this category have broad benefit.
Known determinants of mental wellbeing, most notably social connection, have been disrupted in line with mass transition to online interaction as the dominant form of communication. Compounding the social disconnection’s impact, several other determinants of health have also been touched by the pandemic. These include dislocation, economic burden and physical health. This results in a complex system of interdependent challenges to mental wellbeing which is likely to have a lasting effect beyond the ‘COVID era’.
Strengths-based, wellness, recovery and self-deterministic approaches have been demonstrated to promote mental wellbeing. These approaches privilege the promotion of mental health literacy and the development of factors known to be protective.
These factors include –
Such models assist individuals to flourish, maintain dignity and connect to the community to contribute to the common good. Adoption of these models can assist our students to engage and develop within their lifecycle as a student, and beyond into life as a graduate.
Higher education providers have a critical role to play in promoting the wellbeing of their students as individuals connected to the community. As wellbeing is one critical co-determinant to the capacity to learn, addressing issues compromising wellbeing is critical to success and completion. Poor mental health has a direct impact upon academic performance and completion. This has a clear flow on effect on the community.
Improved wellbeing and retention can be promoted through an effective partnership between students and higher education providers. Transition Pedagogy Frameworks aimed at improving retention have previously focussed around the first-year experience. The principles of transition pedagogy, however, are equally applicable to all students at all stages of their experience as they are always in a state of transition.
The transition pedagogy framework identifies the value of teaching practices which are supportive of diversity and inclusivity. These features align to the principles of inclusion known to promote wellbeing. Moreover, a number of these principles align to aspects of adult learning theory which recognise the value of building upon the lived experience of the student and empowering them through promoting active learning. As such, student wellbeing and retention can be as simple as applying sound andragogy within a safe learning environment.
Many Australian Universities currently have well established student wellbeing plans. Although several of these are more focused around extra-curricular support services some are notable for their deeper focus on the teaching and curriculum space. This is where the primary interaction with students takes place. It is therefore the primary opportunity to embed strategies which promote student mental wellbeing. If curriculum design and teaching practices do not include features which promote wellbeing, they can inadvertently undermine student mental health.
Student centred approaches to curriculum design, teaching and assessment can promote social inclusion and support increasingly diverse student groups.
Some key critical features in this area include –
Curriculum is developed, delivered and engaged with at a range of levels. These include the ‘intended’ level of design through the governance process, the ‘enacted’ level of resource development and teaching and the ‘experienced’ level at which students engage. For students to experience learning which promotes wellbeing, curriculum needs to be consciously constructed at both the intended (governance) and enacted (implementation) levels.
Opportunities to integrate mental wellbeing into curriculum and teaching occur in -
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