Title: School Health Promotion
1School Health Promotion
- The Evidence, Issues and the Future
- Professor Lawrence St.Leger
- Vilnius June 2009
2What really works
3Sources of evidence
4Prerequisites for Health
- Shelter
- Education
- Food
- Income
- Stable ecosystem
- Peace
- Sustainable resources
- Social justice
- Equity
5Determinants of Health
- Biological
- Behavioural
- Environmental
- Social
6The Purpose of School Health?
- Education outcomes?
- Health behaviours?
7School Health Dilemmas
- External pressures
- Ideologies eg behaviourists
- A fun add on
- BUTHealth underpins learning
8What works
- Empowerment
- in action
- realistic
- Gale et al (2008)
9Bjarne Bruun Jensens Concepts
- Empowerment
- Four types of knowledge
- Genuine participation
- Action competence
10Major findings from the evidence
- Education sector
- good teaching
- quality
schools - leadership
- Health Sector
- whole school
approach (HPS/CSH) - dose of the
initiative
11Learning outcomes for students improve if they
- Are happy in their schoolwork
- Believe in themselves
- Like and respect teachers
- Attend a supportive school
12Promoting Health in Schools- from evidence to
action
- an international document containing an
advocacy argument with supportive evidence
primarily for the Education sector - International testing and review in Canada,
Europe, New Zealand, Singapore, Australia, USA. - Sponsored by IUHPE with financial support from
CDC - Draft
authors..Ian Young and Lawry StLeger
13Effective Schools
- utilise learning and teaching methods that are
evidence based - facilitatecooperationamongstudents
- provide prompt feedback to students
- invest in capacity building experiences for all
staff
14Effective schools
- establish and promote high expectations
- respect diverse talents and ways of learning
permit adequate time for learning tasks - ensure there is consultation between parents,
students and teachers in establishing the
schools direction - establish programmes and facilities for students
with special needs and - provide clear leadership from the
Principal/Director in establishing a school
climate of trust, respect, collaboration and
openness
15Mental Health
- The number one health area for effective outcomes
- See Blum et al (2002), Browne, et al
(2004),Green et al (2005), Stewart Browne
(2006), Weare and Markham (2005), Wells et al
(2003)
16Mental Health
- Successful initiatives .
- are well designed and grounded in tested theory
and practice - link the school, home and community
- address the school ecology and environment
- combine a consistency in behavioural change goals
through connecting students, teachers, family and
community
17Mental Health
- Successful initiatives
- foster respectful and supportive relationships
among students, teachers and parents - use interactive learning and teaching approaches
and - increase the connections for each student
18(No Transcript)
19Healthy eating and nutrition
- Initiatives and programs that follow
evidence-based teaching practices and a whole of
school approach have been shown to regularly
increase student knowledge about food and diet. - However, changes in student eating behaviours
have been less successful. Girls tend to benefit
more than boys and some quality initiatives have
reported a modest increase in vegetable
consumption.
20Healthy eating and nutrition
- Those initiatives which did achieve some
biological and behavioural changes had some or
all of the following features - a whole of school approach
- links with parents and food preparation at home
- consistency between the taught curriculum and
food availability in the school - program longevity (over three years) and regular
inputs by staff and students in planning and
implementing activities and - on-going capacity building opportunities for
staff.
21(No Transcript)
22Physical activity
- The evidence suggests that
- physical activity initiatives in schools are most
effective if they adopt a comprehensive approach
e.g. the development of skills, establishing and
maintaining suitable physical environments and
resources, upholding supportive policies to
enable all students to participate - there is a strong direct correlation between
being physically active at school and undertaking
physical activity in adult hood - students gain more benefit from physical activity
if they have opportunities to be active at
regular times during the school day
23Physical activity
- The evidence suggests that
- if students collaborate with school staff in
deciding the type of physical activity to be
undertaken, which could include other activities
not viewed as sport, like dance, then they will
be more committed to participation - biological measures, e.g. BMI, blood pressure
measures and VO2 max, have limitations and may
be ineffective in assessing physical fitness
levels of growing young people and other outcomes
of school-based physical activity and - programs that cater for student diversity in
areas such as ethnicity, physical ability, gender
and age are more effective in terms of student
participation and engagement than those that
dont.
24Benefits of physical activity at schools
- Taras (2005)
- Improved social skills
- Enhanced mental health
- Better concentration
- Associated with fewer risk taking behaviours
- But of low frequency and dosage
- No substantiation of improved academic achievement
25(No Transcript)
26Substance use
- School-based drug reduction initiatives are
effective if the programs - are interactive rather than teacher-centred
- focus on life skills, e.g. refusal skills,
assertiveness - take a whole of school approach
- link with the family and local community and
- address the improvement of connections for
students.
27Substance use
- The evidence also shows.
- effect sizes (at best) are modest, but compare
well with results of clinical trials - some successful gains may include a short term
delay in use and or short term reduction in
usage - positive effects are more likely to occur
influencing tobacco, than alcohol or illicit
drugs - specific programmes are more likely to have no
effects or harmful effects on alcohol use and - teaching staff, who understand mental health
issues, achieve higher health and educational
outcomes for the students than those staff who
dont.
28Sleep and Student Performance
- Taras (April 06, 2006)
- of all the health issues investigated, poor
sleep was among the most unexpected and
definitive causes of poor academic achievement - Adolescents and the starting time of schools
29Sexuality and Relationships
- Sexuality education programs, when conducted by
empathic and trained staff - increase sexual knowledge
- may increase safe sex practices
- may delay the time of first sexual intercourse
- result in young people reporting on better
communication in their relationships.
30Sexuality and Relationships
- Sexuality education programs, when conducted by
empathic and trained staff - Evidence indicates such programs do not promote
earlier or increased sexual activity in young
people. - Initiatives in schools that explicitly promote
and build school connectedness for students are
strongly associated with reduced sexual activity
in adolescence.
31The Issues of School Health
- For
- teachers
- schools
- education sector
- health sector
32External (Educational ? ) Assumptions
- Telling Teaching
- Listening Learning
33Important for teachers
- Structure
- Resources
- Curriculum, guidelines, prescriptions
34Some issues for teachers
- Accountability
- Performance indicators
- Time demands
- etc
35Curriculum intentions
- Analyse
- Explore
- Recognise
- Apply
- Practise
- Promote
- Develop
- Determine
- Evaluate
- Compare
- Identify
- Describe
- Examine
- source Country and regional curriculum
guidelines
36Curriculum in Action
Cognitive
Affective
Educational Outcomes
37External Assumptions of Curriculum
38External Shapers
Internal Shapers
Classroom management
Curriculum guidelines
Environmental factors
Resources
Time
HPS guidelines
School policies
Learning orientations
Accountability
Parental expectations
Government policies
Organisation planning
Standards measures
Knowledge Skills
HEALTH ISSUES
39Factors Influencing Students
40The Future?
- Disseminating evidence to policy makers
- Mediating and disseminating evidence to
practitioners - Working across the curriculum
- Using educational evidence e.g. effective
schools, quality teaching practices, integrated
curriculum, leadership, etc - Professional development to professional learning
41Curriculum in Action
Cognitive
Affective
Educational and Health Outcomes
42Rethinking curriculum
- Action competencies for all students
- means..
43assets/attributes to.
- Understand, know, think ,reason, analyse,
synthesise, evaluate, create, plan, advocate,
negotiate, take action.. - Action competencies