Collaborative knowledge-making in the everyday practice of youth suicide prevention education |
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Authors: | Jennifer White Jonathan Morris Jerry Hinbest |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Child and Youth Care , University of Victoria , Victoria , BC , Canada jhwhite@uvic.ca;3. School of Child and Youth Care , University of Victoria , Victoria , BC , Canada;4. Sociology Department , Vancouver Island University , Nanaimo , BC , Canada |
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Abstract: | The development and implementation of a new school‐based suicide prevention education programme in one secondary school in Vancouver, British Columbia, recently provided us with an opportunity to conduct an in‐depth, qualitative case study. The purpose of our study was to deepen our understanding of how school‐based suicide prevention education programmes like this one get planned and enacted in particular, local settings. We argue that the narrow range of methodologies that have traditionally been deployed to study school‐based youth suicide prevention education programmes have hindered our ability to see the complexities and potentialities of this work. Through the presentation of a sub‐set of findings, we aim to show the possibilities for fresh thinking and contextualized understandings that a qualitative case study, informed by a constructionist methodology, invites. |
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Keywords: | suicide prevention education youth school‐based prevention collaborative inquiry case study constructionist research |
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