It's taken 7 months (lockdown review processes are SLOW!) but the first paper from the Wellbeing in Distance Learning project is published! This paper covers the first stage of the study (interviews) and the taxonomy that was developed from the findings. It's called ‘Mental health in distance learning: a taxonomy of barriers and enablers to student mental wellbeing,’ and is published in Open Learning: The Journal of Open, Distance and e-Learning (DOI: 10.1080/02680513.2021.1899907.) A PDF of the paper is at the bottom of this post, in case you can't access Open Learning. Hope you enjoy it! AbstractStudent mental health is a critical issue in higher education. It is understood that higher education can act to trigger or exacerbate mental health difficulties, but research in this area has focused primarily on campus environments, identifying stressors such as halls of residence. Since distance learning students disclose mental health issues at a higher rate than campus students, and completion and progression gaps are on a par with the sector, it is critical that the barriers and enablers to mental wellbeing in distance learning are understood. This paper reports on a qualitative study that investigated barriers and enablers to mental wellbeing and study success that students experienced in distance learning. 15 distance learning students and 5 tutors were interviewed using narrative enquiry; students told their own stories and tutors told stories of students they had supported. Barriers and enablers were identified across different aspects of study, skills-development and the distance learning environment, and are presented in a taxonomy of barriers and enablers that suggest a range of implications for distance learning educators and policy developers.
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AuthorKate Lister is a lecturer in inclusive education at the Open University, UK, and is an associate for Advance HE. Categories
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August 2021
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