是时候将心理健康素养教育纳入高等教育课程了

IF 0.5 Q4 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
C. Zaza, Ryan C. Yeung
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去的二十年里,对大专学生心理健康和幸福的研究有了实质性的增长,在过去的十年里,出版物急剧增加。同样,对校园心理健康状况下降的担忧也在上升;高等院校学生的心理健康现已被广泛认为是一个重大的公共卫生问题。在过去的二十年里,加拿大的高等教育通过课外手段提高心理健康意识,在很大程度上解决了这些问题。至关重要的是,全国各地出现了一场新的心理健康素养运动:不仅仅是补充外展,而是将教育融入课程。为了将这些建议付诸实践,2020年,作者之一[CZ]开发并教授了一门有106名学生的心理健康素养本科课程。在第一次提供中,我们进行了一项前后研究,以检查这门新课程是否与心理健康知识、耻辱感和寻求帮助的变化有关。在参与研究的40名学生中,有10名学生在课程开始(T1)和结束(T2)时都完成了测试。受试者内分析表明,学生在寻求心理健康服务的态度方面,从T1到T2取得了显著的收益,具有很大的效应量。对这门课程的反馈非常积极,无论是学生的评分还是他们的评论。展望未来,学生的福祉将取决于机构如何处理和参与心理健康素养。我们建议坚定地将心理健康素养教育纳入中学后课程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
It’s Time to Bring Mental Health Literacy Education into the Postsecondary Curriculum
In the last twenty years, research on post-secondary students’ mental health and well-being has grown substantially, with a dramatic increase in publications over the past decade. Likewise, concerns about declining mental health on our campuses have risen; the mental well-being of postsecondary students is now widely recognized as a major public health issue. Over the last two decades, Canadian higher education has largely addressed these concerns by promoting mental health awareness through extracurricular means. Critically, a new movement towards mental health literacy has emerged across the nation: not just supplementary outreach, but education embedded into the curriculum. To put recommendations into practice, in 2020, one of the authors [CZ] developed and taught an undergraduate course on mental health literacy with a class of 106 students. In the first offering, we conducted a pre-post study to examine if this new course would be associated with changes in mental health knowledge, stigma, and help-seeking. Of the forty students who participated in the study, ten completed measures at both the start (T1) and the end of the course (T2). Within-subjects analyses showed that students made significant gains from T1 to T2, with a large effect size, in terms of attitudes toward seeking mental health services. Feedback on the course was very positive, both in students’ ratings and their comments. Looking ahead, student well-being will depend on how institutions approach and engage with mental health literacy. We recommend firmly integrating mental health literacy education into the post-secondary curriculum.
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