How can students-as-partners work address challenges to student, faculty, and staff mental health and well-being?

  • Sarah Slates
  • , Alison Cook-Sather
  • , Sima Aghakhani
  • , Ali Al-Humuzi
  • , Dulce Alonso
  • , Karin Borgstrom
  • , Fiona Boyle
  • , Chris Cachia
  • , Elisabeth Carlson
  • , Jonathan Cole
  • , Tadhg Dennehy
  • , Marie Väfors Fritz
  • , Marlene Gadzirayi
  • , Loretta Goff
  • , Petri Gudmundsoon
  • , Yang Han
  • , Peter Hellman
  • , Kal Holder
  • , Sixun Hou
  • , Julie Hughes
  • Jimmy Jennings, Wiki Jegliska, Amrita Kaur, Lu Kehan, Andrew Kelly, Carrie Lee, Constance Leonard, Rachael Lewitzky, Asia Majeed, Matthea Marquart, Joshua Marsden, Lia Marshall, Florina Matu, Tsholo Molefe, Yoko Mori, Nicola Morrell-Scott, Elizabeth Mullenger, Monica Obregon, Matt Pearce, Claire Pike, Hurshal Pol, Elena Riva, Caitlin Sands, Rachel Sinanan, Kelsey Smart, Sandra Smeltzer, Abi Spence, Teresa Maggard Stephens, Maria Stollenwerk, Kiu Sum, Josephine Van-Ess, Dustin Vick, Michael Wong, Heather Wright, Jasmine Wright, Wei Zou

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Articlepeer-review

Abstract

Mental health has emerged as a critical area of attention in higher education, and educational research over the last 15 years has focused increasingly on emotions and wellbeing at all stages of education (Hill et al., 2021). While definitions of well-being vary, most are premised on “good quality of life” (Nair et al., 2018, p. 69). Within the last few years, we have experienced an intersection of several forces that undermine or threaten good quality of life. These include the uncertainties prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic (Hews et al., 2022, U.S. Surgeon General, n.d.), climate change (Charlson et al., 2021), racism and social injustices (Williams & Etkins, 2021), the cost-of-living crisis (Montacute, 2023), and the lack of motivation and higher incidence of mental health issues associated with growing concerns about job prospects and income (Chowdhury et al., 2022). This fifth iteration of Voices from the Field explores some of the ways in which students-as-partners work can address challenges to the mental health and well-being of students, faculty, and staff. This focus, proposed by members of the IJSaP Editorial Board, both responds to the intersecting realities named above and remains true to the goal of this section of the journal, which is to offer a venue for a wide range of contributors to address important questions around and aspects of students-as-partners work without going through the intensive submission, peer-review, and revision processes. The prompt we included in the call for this iteration of Voices was: “In what ways can students-as-partners work address challenges to the mental health and well-being of students, staff, and faculty posed by the current realities in the wider world (socio-political, environmental, economic, etc.) that affect higher education?”
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)221-240
Number of pages20
JournalInternational Journal for Students as Partners
Volume7
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished online - 16 Oct 2023

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