Understanding interventions as social practices: How a school-based mental health intervention for migrant adolescents in Denmark interacted with context

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Understanding interventions as social practices: How a school-based mental health intervention for migrant adolescents in Denmark interacted with context. / Borsch, Anne Sofie; Verelst, An; Jervelund, Signe Smith; Derluyn, Ilse; Skovdal, Morten.

In: Children and Youth Services Review, Vol. 153, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Borsch, AS, Verelst, A, Jervelund, SS, Derluyn, I & Skovdal, M 2023, 'Understanding interventions as social practices: How a school-based mental health intervention for migrant adolescents in Denmark interacted with context', Children and Youth Services Review, vol. 153. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2023.107109

APA

Borsch, A. S., Verelst, A., Jervelund, S. S., Derluyn, I., & Skovdal, M. (2023). Understanding interventions as social practices: How a school-based mental health intervention for migrant adolescents in Denmark interacted with context. Children and Youth Services Review, 153. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2023.107109

Vancouver

Borsch AS, Verelst A, Jervelund SS, Derluyn I, Skovdal M. Understanding interventions as social practices: How a school-based mental health intervention for migrant adolescents in Denmark interacted with context. Children and Youth Services Review. 2023;153. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2023.107109

Author

Borsch, Anne Sofie ; Verelst, An ; Jervelund, Signe Smith ; Derluyn, Ilse ; Skovdal, Morten. / Understanding interventions as social practices: How a school-based mental health intervention for migrant adolescents in Denmark interacted with context. In: Children and Youth Services Review. 2023 ; Vol. 153.

Bibtex

@article{80e8a84d870b481f8441324e11784d4b,
title = "Understanding interventions as social practices: How a school-based mental health intervention for migrant adolescents in Denmark interacted with context",
abstract = "The rise of school-based mental health interventions calls for an understanding of how such interventions interact with context as well as analytical tools for examining these interactions. This article explores how learners and teachers in two classrooms for newly-arrived migrant adolescents in Denmark (one urban, highly diverse classroom and one small-town classroom mainly serving youth who had fled armed conflict) experienced and implemented the same teacher-led, classroom-based intervention differently. Based on participant observations and interviews with three teachers and 12 learners, we draw on practice theory to disentangle how the same intervention came to life differently in the two classrooms. First, there were important differences in how teachers and learners in the two classrooms made sense of their participation in the intervention, reflecting the different life situations and psychosocial needs of the learners. Second, local ways of structuring educational practices (weekly schedules, expectations about homework, and different local educational policies) critically shaped intervention experiences and implementation. Third, the possibility of establishing a safe social space during the intervention depended on the stability of existing social relationships and conditions for teachers{\textquoteright} relational work in the classrooms. To aid analyses of how school-based interventions interact with classroom practices, and to help identify ways of consolidating interventions with their contexts, we propose future avenues for examining school-based mental health interventions in context from a social practice perspective.",
keywords = "School, Mental health intervention, Refugee, Immigrant, Practice theory, Denmark",
author = "Borsch, {Anne Sofie} and An Verelst and Jervelund, {Signe Smith} and Ilse Derluyn and Morten Skovdal",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.childyouth.2023.107109",
language = "English",
volume = "153",
journal = "Children and Youth Services Review",
issn = "0190-7409",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Understanding interventions as social practices: How a school-based mental health intervention for migrant adolescents in Denmark interacted with context

AU - Borsch, Anne Sofie

AU - Verelst, An

AU - Jervelund, Signe Smith

AU - Derluyn, Ilse

AU - Skovdal, Morten

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - The rise of school-based mental health interventions calls for an understanding of how such interventions interact with context as well as analytical tools for examining these interactions. This article explores how learners and teachers in two classrooms for newly-arrived migrant adolescents in Denmark (one urban, highly diverse classroom and one small-town classroom mainly serving youth who had fled armed conflict) experienced and implemented the same teacher-led, classroom-based intervention differently. Based on participant observations and interviews with three teachers and 12 learners, we draw on practice theory to disentangle how the same intervention came to life differently in the two classrooms. First, there were important differences in how teachers and learners in the two classrooms made sense of their participation in the intervention, reflecting the different life situations and psychosocial needs of the learners. Second, local ways of structuring educational practices (weekly schedules, expectations about homework, and different local educational policies) critically shaped intervention experiences and implementation. Third, the possibility of establishing a safe social space during the intervention depended on the stability of existing social relationships and conditions for teachers’ relational work in the classrooms. To aid analyses of how school-based interventions interact with classroom practices, and to help identify ways of consolidating interventions with their contexts, we propose future avenues for examining school-based mental health interventions in context from a social practice perspective.

AB - The rise of school-based mental health interventions calls for an understanding of how such interventions interact with context as well as analytical tools for examining these interactions. This article explores how learners and teachers in two classrooms for newly-arrived migrant adolescents in Denmark (one urban, highly diverse classroom and one small-town classroom mainly serving youth who had fled armed conflict) experienced and implemented the same teacher-led, classroom-based intervention differently. Based on participant observations and interviews with three teachers and 12 learners, we draw on practice theory to disentangle how the same intervention came to life differently in the two classrooms. First, there were important differences in how teachers and learners in the two classrooms made sense of their participation in the intervention, reflecting the different life situations and psychosocial needs of the learners. Second, local ways of structuring educational practices (weekly schedules, expectations about homework, and different local educational policies) critically shaped intervention experiences and implementation. Third, the possibility of establishing a safe social space during the intervention depended on the stability of existing social relationships and conditions for teachers’ relational work in the classrooms. To aid analyses of how school-based interventions interact with classroom practices, and to help identify ways of consolidating interventions with their contexts, we propose future avenues for examining school-based mental health interventions in context from a social practice perspective.

KW - School

KW - Mental health intervention

KW - Refugee

KW - Immigrant

KW - Practice theory

KW - Denmark

U2 - 10.1016/j.childyouth.2023.107109

DO - 10.1016/j.childyouth.2023.107109

M3 - Journal article

VL - 153

JO - Children and Youth Services Review

JF - Children and Youth Services Review

SN - 0190-7409

ER -

ID: 361075885