A beacon for information: youth narratives on school-based anxiety prevention

The newly revised 2017-2018 British Columbian high school curriculum, as a prevention education response to a growing concern around children and youths’ mental health, indicates that students will learn the signs and symptoms of stress, anxiety and depression and be able to explain strategies to pr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Felix, Andrea
Other Authors: Hoskins, Marie L.
Language:English
en
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/8004
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-80042017-04-30T17:55:07Z A beacon for information: youth narratives on school-based anxiety prevention Felix, Andrea Hoskins, Marie L. anxiety youth narrative methodology FRIENDS for Life school-based prevention BC Schools mental health social constructionism peer counsellors youth leadership anxiety prevention narrative analysis The newly revised 2017-2018 British Columbian high school curriculum, as a prevention education response to a growing concern around children and youths’ mental health, indicates that students will learn the signs and symptoms of stress, anxiety and depression and be able to explain strategies to promote mental well-being (Province of British Columbia, 2016). Youth voices may help in shaping this curriculum objective. This study explores the meaning that five high school students, who were trained to facilitate an anxiety-prevention program, make of the problem of anxiety and prevention through their narratives, applying a narrative methodology and analysis. These youth narratives do not provide a singular explanation, truth or understanding of anxiety; like all narratives, they hold multiple truths. The youth narratives are drawn from the participants’ local experiential knowledge as well as prevailing discourses that shape their understanding. The types of narratives in this inquiry include: i) the quest for problem-free childhoods; ii) the genesis of knowledge; and iii) overcoming giant stigma by connecting. There are implications and considerations pulled from the narratives, including how a prevailing psychologized discourse may obscure contextual factors in making sense of anxiety and prevention. This inquiry may help educators and other professionals to imagine what else could be possible in conceptualizing the problem of anxiety and implementing prevention programs. It is hoped that this study will add to the current dialogue around prevention and support strategies in British Columbian schools and beyond. Graduate 0525 0680 0519 0533 0347 arfelix3@gmail.com 2017-04-27T18:41:35Z 2017-04-27T18:41:35Z 2017 2017-04-27 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/8004 English en Available to the World Wide Web
collection NDLTD
language English
en
sources NDLTD
topic anxiety
youth
narrative methodology
FRIENDS for Life
school-based prevention
BC Schools
mental health
social constructionism
peer counsellors
youth leadership
anxiety prevention
narrative analysis
spellingShingle anxiety
youth
narrative methodology
FRIENDS for Life
school-based prevention
BC Schools
mental health
social constructionism
peer counsellors
youth leadership
anxiety prevention
narrative analysis
Felix, Andrea
A beacon for information: youth narratives on school-based anxiety prevention
description The newly revised 2017-2018 British Columbian high school curriculum, as a prevention education response to a growing concern around children and youths’ mental health, indicates that students will learn the signs and symptoms of stress, anxiety and depression and be able to explain strategies to promote mental well-being (Province of British Columbia, 2016). Youth voices may help in shaping this curriculum objective. This study explores the meaning that five high school students, who were trained to facilitate an anxiety-prevention program, make of the problem of anxiety and prevention through their narratives, applying a narrative methodology and analysis. These youth narratives do not provide a singular explanation, truth or understanding of anxiety; like all narratives, they hold multiple truths. The youth narratives are drawn from the participants’ local experiential knowledge as well as prevailing discourses that shape their understanding. The types of narratives in this inquiry include: i) the quest for problem-free childhoods; ii) the genesis of knowledge; and iii) overcoming giant stigma by connecting. There are implications and considerations pulled from the narratives, including how a prevailing psychologized discourse may obscure contextual factors in making sense of anxiety and prevention. This inquiry may help educators and other professionals to imagine what else could be possible in conceptualizing the problem of anxiety and implementing prevention programs. It is hoped that this study will add to the current dialogue around prevention and support strategies in British Columbian schools and beyond. === Graduate === 0525 === 0680 === 0519 === 0533 === 0347 === arfelix3@gmail.com
author2 Hoskins, Marie L.
author_facet Hoskins, Marie L.
Felix, Andrea
author Felix, Andrea
author_sort Felix, Andrea
title A beacon for information: youth narratives on school-based anxiety prevention
title_short A beacon for information: youth narratives on school-based anxiety prevention
title_full A beacon for information: youth narratives on school-based anxiety prevention
title_fullStr A beacon for information: youth narratives on school-based anxiety prevention
title_full_unstemmed A beacon for information: youth narratives on school-based anxiety prevention
title_sort beacon for information: youth narratives on school-based anxiety prevention
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/8004
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