Learner Experience of an Online Co-Learning Model to Support Mental Health during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Recruitment Process
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Updating and Validating Your Mental Health Knowledge
(…) There were concepts I had never heard of. Of course, there are concepts you’re a little familiar with without being able to name them, but (…) it was still a concept that I never really grasped or that I never really paid attention to. (P10—Education professional)
(…) I was happy [to be] updated with new information (…) (P12—Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge)
(…) They [the trainers] taught me a lot of things. They made it easier for me to simplify some concepts better. (…) I was able to really understand and apply them. (…) (P4—Health professional)
(…) There were certain things that I thought (…) [and that] weren’t quite right (…) now I have actual definitions for all of that. (P3—University student)
(…) [it makes] it possible to share knowledge (…) at the end of the workshops, I even got the impression that I learned things or that it refreshed some things in my mind. (P9—Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge)
(…) I realized that the things I learned through the course, those were things that, in general, I was applying without knowing it. It highlighted processes (…) that I was already bringing up on my own. (P1—Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge)
I learned a lot (…) from what others shared, from the information being presented, and from the different ways we were answering questions (…) it made me think a lot. It made me feel like learning more (…) (P11—Health professional)
(…) just one course isn’t enough (…) even if the original subject isn’t the same, there’s meeting other people, sharing, the experience (…) [I want] to keep learning. (P6—Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge)
3.2. Taking Care of Yourself and Your Mental Health
It gave me tools (…) to live better every day, because I was in a phase where I was very anxious. (P9—Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge)
(…) and the tool set (…) was like having a lot of things that we can apply to our lives or in our workplace. (P3—University student)
Every method we named which I noted down (…) I keep in mind what I can refer to (…) I try to apply them to my life (…) I can also help my clients, my patients with that. (P5—Health professional)
One day this week, I felt very emotional or frustrated. I thought back to the resiliency methods (…) I tried drawing from the suggestions that were made. (…) (P2—Citizen)
This course allowed me to [realize] that we can put things in perspective in life (…) that we can take in the stress in a caring mood, rather than fight it. (P4—Health professional)
I am more conscious that I should make changes to my daily routine to improve my well-being (…) (P3—University student)
I learned that everyone, caregivers included, have to take care of themselves. I was saying that I worked a lot of hours each week. It reminded me that I need to find some kind of balance again. (P8 – Health professional)
It reminded me that I have power, that there are things I can do (…). (P9—Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge)
(…) it gave me a little boost to work on myself. (P10—Educational professional)
After two sessions, (…) I started looking at places where I could consult someone to talk about the problem I have interacting in groups (…) it inspired me to seek help. (P11—Health professional)
3.3. Improving and Modifying Your Behaviors and Practices
(…) the way I provide training… What I learned with you made me want to do it even more (…) differently. It changes some of the ways I was doing the training in that, while I covered the content that had to be covered, I should also emphasize lived experience. (P6—Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge)
(…) for my work (…) how to better integrate the experiences of the parents of my clients and the experiences of the clients themselves in (…) my clinical decisions (…) that’s an area where I could really improve (…) it encouraged me to really highlight all types of knowledge (…) (P11—Health professional)
(…) I think of young professionals who come out of school with the ambition of saving the world, knowing what’s good for [clients] and wanting to explain it to them (…) But it’s [more] like walking together, following the client (…) [the course] allows you to learn that, but from the inside. (…) open their minds (…) so that they see things from a different angle. (P14—Health manager)
I think it really made me become aware again [of] all the little things we might do every day that can stigmatize someone. We think of stigmatization as this big thing, but in fact, it’s all these little actions that everyone could be doing differently every day that would limit the big impact of stigmatization. It made me aware of the little things I could change or improve, ways of saying certain things differently to not hurt or stigmatize the other person. (P13—Health manager)
3.4. Changing How You Look at Yourself and Others
(…) What we learned isn’t so clear. You really have to think about it. (…) [those are] ways of looking at things (…) being less critical of yourself, more conscious of all the power we have in our lives (…) [those are] big lessons (…) I think that my professional life is where I’d try to promote that training. (…) I think there’s nothing like living it to (…) for it to make sense so that we remember later (…) (P14—Health manager)
I would say it’s the assessment. The assessment that I got to do of myself was very powerful (…) (P6—Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge)
[The course brought] other points of view. (P9—Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge)
Some of the sentences that other people said. By listening to their experience, there are certain things that stayed with me, that I still think about. It allows me another point of view. It’s another experience that I’ve lived. (P2—Citizen)
I’ll question myself, I’ll pay attention when I see someone who’s different from me (…) to put myself in that person’s shoes. I’ll tell myself: ‘they can also suffer from it’ (…) There’s a lot of personal questioning after this workshop (…) to become conscious again that how we look at others can influence how they feel. (P13—Health manager)
3.5. Interacting and Connecting with Others
I felt better seeing that I wasn’t the only one living through that [speaking of the isolation because of COVID] (P5—Health professional)
It allowed me to socialize (…) to see people, to interact (…) to recognize them, see them again (…) it made me feel much better. Because during the pandemic, (…) I was alone much more than usual. (P9—Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge
It’s always a challenge for me to share my point of view. I tend to withdraw into myself (…) [the course] forced me to organize my thinking, then to express it, share it, make myself understood by the others. (P9—Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge)
(…) I really felt [that I] brought something valuable to this group because of my personal experience (…) that boosted my confidence and my desire to share those experiences there (…) (P11—Health professional)
4. Discussion
- Improving mental health literacy (themes: “Acquiring new knowledge/Updating and expanding current knowledge”);
- Enhancing individual resilience and coping skills (themes: “Managing stress better and feeling more resilient and confident/Expressing yourself and becoming more confident”);
- Activating lifestyle habits, self-management strategies, and behaviors that support mental health (themes: “Using new tools daily to take care of you and your mental health/Becoming aware of the importance of taking care of yourself and your mental health”);
- Reducing prejudice, stigma, and epistemic inequities (themes: “Reflecting on and improving the way we deal with stigma/Recognizing the value of experiential knowledge”);
- Adopting attitudes and practices that support personal self-determination and make living together better (themes: “Modifying and refining your understanding of otherness/Becoming self-aware”).
Limits of the Study and Future Prospects
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Criterion 1: Course Attended A,B | Criterion 2: Gender C | Criterion 3: Age Group (Years) | Criterion 4: Learner Profile D |
---|---|---|---|
Course 1 | F | 20–30 | University student |
Course 2 | F | 30–40 | Peer worker or person with experiential knowledge |
Course 3 | F | 40–50 | Health or education manager |
Course 4 | F | 50–60 | Health or education professional |
Course 5 | F | 60+ | Community member (caregiver or citizen) |
Course 6 | F | 20–30 | University student |
Any | F | 30–40 | Peer worker or person with experiential knowledge |
Course 1 | M | 40–50 | Health or education manager |
Course 2 | M | 50–60 | Health or education professional |
Course 3 | M | 60+ | Community member (caregiver or citizen) |
Course 4 | M | 20–30 | University student |
Course 5 | M | 30–40 | Peer worker or person with experiential knowledge |
Course 6 | M | 40–50 | Health or education manager |
Any | M | 50–60 | Health or education professional |
Any | F/M | 60+ | Community member (caregiver or citizen) |
Participant | Gender | Age (Years) | Learner Profile | Course Attended |
---|---|---|---|---|
P1 | M | 44 | Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge | Increasing resilience |
P2 | F | 28 | Citizen | Increasing resilience |
P3 | F | 20 | University student | Increasing resilience |
P4 | F | 27 | Health professional | Toward well-being, dealing with stress |
P5 | F | 46 | Health professional | Talking health, talking mental health |
P6 | F | 66 | Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge | Talking health, talking mental health |
P7 | M | 61 | Education professional | Finding meaning and motivation at work |
P8 | F | 49 | Health professional | Talking health, talking mental health |
P9 | M | 61 | Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge | Let’s talk about anxiety |
P10 | F | 36 | Education professional | Finding meaning and motivation at work |
P11 | F | 38 | Health professional | Perspectives on stigma |
P12 | F | 65 | Peer worker, person with experiential knowledge | Let’s talk about anxiety |
P13 | F | 27 | Health Manager | Perspectives on stigma |
P14 | F | 44 | Health Manager | Talking health, talking mental health |
Categories | Themes |
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Updating and validating your mental health knowledge |
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Taking care of yourself and your mental health |
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Improving and modifying your behaviors and practices |
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Changing how you look at yourself and others |
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Interacting and connecting with others |
|
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Share and Cite
Briand, C.; Hakin, R.; Macario de Medeiros, J.; Luconi, F.; Vachon, B.; Drolet, M.-J.; Boivin, A.; Vallée, C.; Montminy, S. Learner Experience of an Online Co-Learning Model to Support Mental Health during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 2498. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20032498
Briand C, Hakin R, Macario de Medeiros J, Luconi F, Vachon B, Drolet M-J, Boivin A, Vallée C, Montminy S. Learner Experience of an Online Co-Learning Model to Support Mental Health during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(3):2498. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20032498
Chicago/Turabian StyleBriand, Catherine, Regis Hakin, Julio Macario de Medeiros, Francesca Luconi, Brigitte Vachon, Marie-Josée Drolet, Antoine Boivin, Catherine Vallée, and Sarah Montminy. 2023. "Learner Experience of an Online Co-Learning Model to Support Mental Health during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 3: 2498. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20032498
APA StyleBriand, C., Hakin, R., Macario de Medeiros, J., Luconi, F., Vachon, B., Drolet, M. -J., Boivin, A., Vallée, C., & Montminy, S. (2023). Learner Experience of an Online Co-Learning Model to Support Mental Health during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(3), 2498. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20032498