Sustainable Collaboration to Support Vulnerable Youth: Mental Health Support Teams in Upper Secondary School

Schools play a central role in preventing mental health problems from affecting the development and educational opportunities of youth. While school health and social pedagogical support services have expanded in many countries, they are still not considered sufficient in meeting the needs of vulner...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cecilie Anvik, Ragnhild Holmen Waldahl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2018-09-01
Series:Social Inclusion
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/1525
id doaj-535ae9bcecc94edfb11f3a494cb64bbc
record_format Article
spelling doaj-535ae9bcecc94edfb11f3a494cb64bbc2020-11-25T00:49:00ZengCogitatioSocial Inclusion2183-28032018-09-016328228810.17645/si.v6i3.1525818Sustainable Collaboration to Support Vulnerable Youth: Mental Health Support Teams in Upper Secondary SchoolCecilie Anvik0Ragnhild Holmen Waldahl1Nordland Research Institute, NorwayNordland Research Institute, NorwaySchools play a central role in preventing mental health problems from affecting the development and educational opportunities of youth. While school health and social pedagogical support services have expanded in many countries, they are still not considered sufficient in meeting the needs of vulnerable youth. We find particular challenges in the development of sustainable collaboration to support the target group. In this article, we present and analyze empirical data from ongoing trailing research on an interprofessional team focusing on the health and psychosocial conditions of students in various upper secondary schools in Norway. In the article, we discuss what conditions need to be in place for inter-professional collaboration to succeed in the efforts to support students at risk of dropping out of upper secondary school. The article is theoretically influenced by boundary literature and analyzes challenges and opportunities in boundary crossing between different professions and service areas. In the article, we argue for the need to spend time on establishing a reflecting understanding of which qualities the various actors possess and what they should contribute with to create a collaboration that constitutes more than the coordination of what already exists, thereby creating intersecting practices; so-called third spaces.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/1525collaborationdrop outinterprofessional teammental healthNorwayschoolstudentsupportvulnerable youth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cecilie Anvik
Ragnhild Holmen Waldahl
spellingShingle Cecilie Anvik
Ragnhild Holmen Waldahl
Sustainable Collaboration to Support Vulnerable Youth: Mental Health Support Teams in Upper Secondary School
Social Inclusion
collaboration
drop out
interprofessional team
mental health
Norway
school
student
support
vulnerable youth
author_facet Cecilie Anvik
Ragnhild Holmen Waldahl
author_sort Cecilie Anvik
title Sustainable Collaboration to Support Vulnerable Youth: Mental Health Support Teams in Upper Secondary School
title_short Sustainable Collaboration to Support Vulnerable Youth: Mental Health Support Teams in Upper Secondary School
title_full Sustainable Collaboration to Support Vulnerable Youth: Mental Health Support Teams in Upper Secondary School
title_fullStr Sustainable Collaboration to Support Vulnerable Youth: Mental Health Support Teams in Upper Secondary School
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable Collaboration to Support Vulnerable Youth: Mental Health Support Teams in Upper Secondary School
title_sort sustainable collaboration to support vulnerable youth: mental health support teams in upper secondary school
publisher Cogitatio
series Social Inclusion
issn 2183-2803
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Schools play a central role in preventing mental health problems from affecting the development and educational opportunities of youth. While school health and social pedagogical support services have expanded in many countries, they are still not considered sufficient in meeting the needs of vulnerable youth. We find particular challenges in the development of sustainable collaboration to support the target group. In this article, we present and analyze empirical data from ongoing trailing research on an interprofessional team focusing on the health and psychosocial conditions of students in various upper secondary schools in Norway. In the article, we discuss what conditions need to be in place for inter-professional collaboration to succeed in the efforts to support students at risk of dropping out of upper secondary school. The article is theoretically influenced by boundary literature and analyzes challenges and opportunities in boundary crossing between different professions and service areas. In the article, we argue for the need to spend time on establishing a reflecting understanding of which qualities the various actors possess and what they should contribute with to create a collaboration that constitutes more than the coordination of what already exists, thereby creating intersecting practices; so-called third spaces.
topic collaboration
drop out
interprofessional team
mental health
Norway
school
student
support
vulnerable youth
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/1525
work_keys_str_mv AT cecilieanvik sustainablecollaborationtosupportvulnerableyouthmentalhealthsupportteamsinuppersecondaryschool
AT ragnhildholmenwaldahl sustainablecollaborationtosupportvulnerableyouthmentalhealthsupportteamsinuppersecondaryschool
_version_ 1725253742071119872