|
NEWS FROM
CAMBRIDGE HEALTH ALLIANCE
August 8, 2008
New Study Outlines Formula for Effective Community Partnerships
with a Lens on Mental Health of Students
in Urban Schools
Cambridge, MA……Addressing and improving mental health outcomes
for students is a particularly complex issue in urban public schools.
Proposed solutions to critical situations are usually prepackaged
suggestions from research conducted outside of the communities seeking
help.
A new study approaches community partnerships and their ability
to problem-solve in-depth right in their own backyards. In an article
published this month in the Journal of Community Psychology, a community-based
research group composed of a child psychiatrist, two researchers,
and a school principal analyze the key principles to establish successful
partnerships and build an alliance for educational systemic change.
Three guidelines - attachment theory, use of authentic self, and
learned optimism - were derived from the authors' work over four
years with an urban public school system focused on improving the
behavioral and academic functioning of immigrant students.
The researchers were driven to action by the significant learning
gaps seen in immigrant students. Frustrated by the lack of services
available to address the achievement gap, the researchers worked
to define problems in collaboration with school staff. Interventions
were piloted, school resources were reviewed, and many project participants
were interviewed at length to identify the barriers in serving these
students.
"Community-based partnerships are often touted as encouraging
collective problem-solving while capturing the complexity of educational
settings, yet we found challenges when engaging in such research,"
said Nancy Rappaport, MD, the study's lead author and director of
school-based programs at Cambridge Health Alliance. "It became
clear that participants held different pictures of how the group
should address the immigrant students' achievement gap."
Co-author and school principal Barbara Boyle discussed the dynamic
between teachers and researchers: "The pot boiled in our meetings.
All these ideas, solutions, and strategies were talked about and
this provided a catalyst for us to take it another step. The think-tank
approach allowed us to develop trust, listen to each other and no
one was the 'authority with the answer.' But the thoughtful reflection
affected how we made decisions."
The researchers found the management of expectations, particularly
maintaining optimism in the face of negative experiences, to be
a key component of successful community-based partnerships. Learned
optimism is a concept that helps to counteract feelings of despair
by challenging the belief that a situation is permanent and pervasive.
By reframing disappointments and identifying incremental positive
change, this allows progress on seemingly large and entrenched problems.
The study, titled "Staying at the Table: Building Sustainable
Community-Research Partnerships," appears in the August 2008
issue of the Journal of Community Psychology (Vol. 36, No. 6). Authors:
Nancy Rappaport, MD, director of school-based programs at Cambridge
Health Alliance and assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard
Medical School; Margarita Alegría, PhD, director of the Center
for Multicultural Mental Health Research at Cambridge Health Alliance
and professor of psychology at Harvard Medical School; Norah Mulvaney-Day,
PhD, research associate at the Center for Multicultural Mental Health
Research and instructor in psychology at Harvard Medical School;
and Barbara Boyle, principal at a public elementary school in Cambridge,
MA. This research was supported by a grant to the Center for Multicultural
Mental Health Research at Cambridge Health Alliance from the National
Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities at the National
Institutes of Health.
Cambridge Health Alliance is an innovative, award-winning health
system that provides high quality care in Cambridge, Somerville,
and Boston's metro-north communities. It includes three hospital
campuses, more than 20 primary care and specialty practices, the
Cambridge Public Health Dept., and the Network Health plan. CHA
is a Harvard Medical School teaching affiliate and is also affiliated
with Harvard School of Public Health, Harvard School of Dental Medicine,
and Tufts University School of Medicine.
See also ARCHIVES of Press Releases
|
|
Media Contact
David Cecere
Media Relations Manager
Phone: 617-503-8428
Cell: 617-921-9613
Pager: 617-546-1879
dcecere@challiance.org
|