我们的健康:在高等教育科学商店探索跨学科和基于社区的参与性研究

Liam Gilchrist, Alette Willis, Helen Szoor-McElhinney
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文提出了一个定性的案例研究,在一个课外高等教育科学商店的背景下,学生和社区合作伙伴参与合作健康研究:我们的健康。我们的健康社区合作伙伴围绕健康和福祉设置研究问题,并使用基于社区的参与式研究模式与跨学科学生小组进行研究。我们的案例研究探讨了这种方法为学生和社区合作伙伴带来的好处和挑战,因为他们需要跨越学科界限和关系,以开发新的研究见解和方法。这个定性案例研究借鉴了:扎根理论来分析参与的本科生和社区合作伙伴的在线焦点小组;研究生和大学主要工作人员的半结构化访谈;以及在线项目会议。对于后者,我们使用非参与性观察来观察在线会议中工作的社区成员和学生,共同创造关于健康问题生活经验的不断发展的知识。通过这些方法,我们对社区参与式研究中社区-学生合作的关系模式有了更深入的了解。我们的研究结果表明,跨学科在以社区为基础的参与性研究方法的背景下发挥了关键作用,使学生和社区合作伙伴能够发展他们的人际交往技能、卫生研究技能和知识整合技能,同时加强学院与更广泛社区之间的联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Our Health: exploring interdisciplinarity and community-based participatory research in a higher education science shop
This paper presents a qualitative case study of the experiences of student and community partners involved in collaborative health research in the context of an extra-curricular higher education science shop: Our Health. Our Health community partners set research questions around health and well-being, and conduct research with interdisciplinary groups of students using a community-based participatory research model. Our case study explores the benefits and challenges that this approach raises for students and community partners as they navigate the complexities of stepping beyond disciplinary boundaries and relationships to develop new research insights and methodologies. This qualitative case study draws on: grounded theory to analyse online focus groups with participating undergraduate students and community partners; semi-structured interviews with graduate students and key university staff members; and online project meetings. For the latter, we used non-participant observation to observe community members and students at work in online meetings, co-creating evolving knowledge around the lived experiences of health issues. Through these methods, we developed a deeper understanding of the relational modes of community–student collaboration in community-based participatory research. Our findings demonstrate the key role played by interdisciplinarity in the context of a community-based participatory research approach in enabling students and community partners to develop their intrapersonal skills, health research skills and knowledge integration skills, while strengthening connections between the academy and wider communities.
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