Working with Vulnerable Primary School Aged Children and their Families: A review of the Australian literature on key principles, issues, and community level approaches

Children's health and wellbeing in Australia is adversely affected by increasing disadvantage, social exclusion, and vulnerability, with numerous studies confirming the need for an improved societal response to the needs of children and their families. This review highlights the issues facing A...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gabrielle Le Bon, Jennifer Boddy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Griffith University 2010-04-01
Series:Journal of Social Inclusion
Online Access:https://josi.journals.griffith.edu.au/index.php/inclusion/article/view/110
id doaj-5c286c289dd64fd494d0c1fa9f9c8841
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5c286c289dd64fd494d0c1fa9f9c88412020-11-25T01:42:36ZengGriffith UniversityJournal of Social Inclusion1836-88082010-04-01115373104Working with Vulnerable Primary School Aged Children and their Families: A review of the Australian literature on key principles, issues, and community level approachesGabrielle Le BonJennifer BoddyChildren's health and wellbeing in Australia is adversely affected by increasing disadvantage, social exclusion, and vulnerability, with numerous studies confirming the need for an improved societal response to the needs of children and their families. This review highlights the issues facing Australian primary school aged children and their families, and it examines approaches for working with those from diverse backgrounds who have varying health needs. While there are considerable gaps in the literature, findings echo some of the preventative messages from early childhood studies which suggest that neighbourhoods and communities play a crucial role in promoting children's health, wellbeing, and social inclusion through the middle years. Research further suggests that practitioners should engage in a holistic approach to children’s health and welfare and offer support across multiple domains of development, giving attention to both cultural and contextual factors. This paper will conclude with some recommendations for future research and a discussion about the implications for practice.     Keywords: primary school aged children, key issues, community interventions, programs, approacheshttps://josi.journals.griffith.edu.au/index.php/inclusion/article/view/110
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gabrielle Le Bon
Jennifer Boddy
spellingShingle Gabrielle Le Bon
Jennifer Boddy
Working with Vulnerable Primary School Aged Children and their Families: A review of the Australian literature on key principles, issues, and community level approaches
Journal of Social Inclusion
author_facet Gabrielle Le Bon
Jennifer Boddy
author_sort Gabrielle Le Bon
title Working with Vulnerable Primary School Aged Children and their Families: A review of the Australian literature on key principles, issues, and community level approaches
title_short Working with Vulnerable Primary School Aged Children and their Families: A review of the Australian literature on key principles, issues, and community level approaches
title_full Working with Vulnerable Primary School Aged Children and their Families: A review of the Australian literature on key principles, issues, and community level approaches
title_fullStr Working with Vulnerable Primary School Aged Children and their Families: A review of the Australian literature on key principles, issues, and community level approaches
title_full_unstemmed Working with Vulnerable Primary School Aged Children and their Families: A review of the Australian literature on key principles, issues, and community level approaches
title_sort working with vulnerable primary school aged children and their families: a review of the australian literature on key principles, issues, and community level approaches
publisher Griffith University
series Journal of Social Inclusion
issn 1836-8808
publishDate 2010-04-01
description Children's health and wellbeing in Australia is adversely affected by increasing disadvantage, social exclusion, and vulnerability, with numerous studies confirming the need for an improved societal response to the needs of children and their families. This review highlights the issues facing Australian primary school aged children and their families, and it examines approaches for working with those from diverse backgrounds who have varying health needs. While there are considerable gaps in the literature, findings echo some of the preventative messages from early childhood studies which suggest that neighbourhoods and communities play a crucial role in promoting children's health, wellbeing, and social inclusion through the middle years. Research further suggests that practitioners should engage in a holistic approach to children’s health and welfare and offer support across multiple domains of development, giving attention to both cultural and contextual factors. This paper will conclude with some recommendations for future research and a discussion about the implications for practice.     Keywords: primary school aged children, key issues, community interventions, programs, approaches
url https://josi.journals.griffith.edu.au/index.php/inclusion/article/view/110
work_keys_str_mv AT gabriellelebon workingwithvulnerableprimaryschoolagedchildrenandtheirfamiliesareviewoftheaustralianliteratureonkeyprinciplesissuesandcommunitylevelapproaches
AT jenniferboddy workingwithvulnerableprimaryschoolagedchildrenandtheirfamiliesareviewoftheaustralianliteratureonkeyprinciplesissuesandcommunitylevelapproaches
_version_ 1725035303933050880