Staff Perspectives: Defining the Types, Challenges and Lessons Learnt of University Peer Support for Student Mental Health and Wellbeing
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. What Is a Peer?
…it’s…the journey of a student…it’s…quite different from another same-age student who isn’t at university, so it’s having people that have been on the same journey…it’s kind of ‘been there, done that, got the T-shirt. Your T-shirt might be a different shape, size, colour, whatever to mine, but…we’re still wearing the T-shirt…(Participant 14B)
…it’s just students using their lived experience to create a sense of community… it’s… ‘been there done that’ kind of sharing process that I think is really, really valuable…(Participant 5)
3.2. What Is Peer Support?
3.3. Approaches: Types and Structure of Peer Support
3.3.1. Peer Mentoring
3.3.2. Peer-Led Support Groups
3.3.3. Peer Learning
3.3.4. One-to-One Peer Support
we are able to connect with students living off campus, and we found that’s been brilliant, because we’ve had a lot of contact from students who are feeling isolated and just feeling a bit lonely, which maybe is more of a function of the last year(Participant 14B)
3.3.5. Uncategorised Peer Support
3.4. Challenges and Lessons Learnt
3.4.1. Engagement
…we had basically no attendance…we transitioned to doing peer support online, and we did actually have attendees. Generally, it was a single person attending…. the training was designed for group sessions in person, and we had to have some conversations about how do you do a one-to-one session online, and that presented its own kind of challenges that we had to work through(Participant 12)
…each mentor would have a few mentees, and it would be a group setting, and they met a lot in…the beginning of the year…they had a lot of questions, but (it) kind of just fizzled out across the first term…from what I gathered from the students… It was kind of something that happened over the first few weeks, but it wasn’t something that they really sought support from across the year.(Participant 2B)
We’ve piloted doing some support in the second semester…we called them peer mentors…where we would buddy people up just to kind of have a bit of extra support, and we basically got zero take up from it…I think after they had the first semester with peer learning, they (students) just didn’t see the need to reach out to the students and have like one to one support.(Participant 13)
Sometimes the students are just not chatty or talkative. And, that’s nobody’s fault…there’s no particularly pressing topics, or people have just had a tough week, and they’re feeling…a bit sort of burned out, and they’re just not…up to talk in that session.(Participant 7)
…I think we’ve created a really nice structure where different programmes and different things that we run feed into one another… we are offering resources to a narrow field of students who see the value and want to engage, but those students are engaging fully. They’re invested.(Participant 12)
… ‘are you more comfortable just in a casual group setting?’ or ‘is there something really focused that you want to talk about, and you feel better talking to one person about that?’ …the aim for both of those groups to exist… they satisfy different sorts of things, so that’s why the peer mentoring schemes tend to be a lot more like identity based and experiential… it can be a lot more difficult for those students sometimes to want to come and talk to someone…whereas the peer support groups are a lot more casual… you’re not committing to anything by turning up, you just …(are) hopefully getting something out of it, even if that means that you never come again and that’s OK.(Participant 5)
…my colleague…put together a one-to-one scheme that would still enable us to continue even in a pandemic… we were a little bit worried that it wasn’t going to be as effective and that we were not reaching as many students. But the learning for us out of that was that some students appreciated it more…were able to get more out of it, so once we had kind of developed both types, there was absolutely no reason for why we should then go back and say ‘Oh no, we’re just going to be doing group-based.’(Participant 1)
… the institution is now going to commit…to demonstrate how they have built peer support into their programme…we expect it to be seen in their curriculum, so that’s…a sort of massive step forward for us… getting buy-in and lecturers in faculty saying ‘yes, we want this, we see the value’…students on their programme saying ‘we want this, can you implement it?’… we’re hopefully…not that many years now away from having full undergraduate coverage. And we’re also aiming to expand the postgraduate coverage as well.(Participant 4)
… my view was you’re better off focusing on something like PAL, which is embedded into the structure and bringing a wellbeing element into that rather than trying to set up yet another group that’s labelled peer support.(Participant 4)
… one of the key things to success is to have academic staff who are really on the ball when it comes to the PAL programme, and that they want to make it a success…in the timetabling, that they allow for us to come to induction events, that we have a presence…in the school and that all helps. So the better the connections are with the school, the better the programmes tend to run.(Participant 1)
…if we’ve got a staff member who really sees the benefit of this and gets excited about it, you know, even if in principle…I think that it’s probably gonna do better in that collect were we’ve got a really invested staff member.(Participant 6)
3.4.2. Resource and Capacity
…2019 turned out to be a really busy year…really there wasn’t any opportunity…to put enough welly into persuading the executive team of the university that they needed to resource a peer support programme.(Participant 9)
although…my manager was brilliant, and she was like,’ Take the time you need out to do it.’ It was actually, in reality, hard to make that happen.(Participant 8)
…to get to that full 100% coverage, it does need more people, but it’s not just about that. It’s like you can have a PAL scheme, and it operates, and it’s there, but if very few students…are engaging with it, that needs time and resource to work on that programme to try to…rectify that…we’re missing that because of a lack of resource at the moment.(Participant 4)
There have been conversations about new and different peer support models. We’re not in a position with sort of staff resource to take on anything that’s completely new because…of workload that is required to set that up… evaluate it and pilot it without having anything to kind of start with.(Participant 3)
…they (the institution) would want to know…that they were being used by students who need support but may not access other types of support. That this was doing something different from what…everything else we’re doing.(Participant 9)
…I would have had an understanding before the training… what is the time commitment that most people have found is necessary after doing the training to put this into practice? You know, in hard FTE terms…is it one person’s job for six months or…we would have been able to discuss with him (the manager)…’ realistically, we’re gonna have to take one of us out of action for two days a week for the next three months to make this a reality,’ or whatever it would be, and have had that conversation before we did the training.(Participant 9)
…I would have to be…clear ‘like…this is your responsibility for this part of it. This is the responsibility that I hold. This is what you’re doing. This is what I’m doing.’ And, kind of try and make it much more of a joint venture… the…relationship with the SU would need to be a lot tighter from the offset…I just think like they’re key, really, to getting students involved…(Participant 8)
3.4.3. Evaluation
…is success a big number? … is success supporting a student to succeed and develop?… It’s quite hard to…see…the true impact ‘cause we don’t see it every step of the student journey… if you say to students… ‘why don’t you contact X service’ to then find out if they go to X service…And then find out what they do from there…actually they don’t need to go to a service. They just needed to have a chat. So I think success is really hard to define.(Participant 14B)
So, at the moment, we’re measuring how many students we’re reaching, but perhaps not how we’re reaching them…and the impact of something like PAL is often ephemeral, things that cannot be measured as easily. And I think that’s important.(Participant 1)
…it’s a nightmare to report on this sort of stuff ‘cause everything is so nuanced…that is the way peer support should be because it’s about individual…or group experience, but it makes it really hard to find a narrative of what works…If they come to a session and they’re like ‘OK, either I’ve got what I needed’ or identify that this isn’t really right for me … it does…mean that it’s very hard for us to measure a benchmark of… how well received it was…we would be focusing a lot on how the peer mentors themselves felt about the process or whether they felt they were supported in it.(Participant 5)
We don’t have…anything around that… I think having a question in there without probing too deeply into (a) student, that would be quite useful ‘cause…students find it hard, I think, to admit sometimes that they need help or that they’ve been struggling. So it’s kind of how to delicately phrase that question, really.(Participant 13)
…the anecdotal stories of ‘my peer mentor really helped me with this’ or ‘I couldn’t have got through this year without my peer mentor; they’ve helped me so much’. That is really great to see, and there is a lot of success…it’s just a shame that we…haven’t been able to have the wider evaluation of that yet.(Participant 3)
… success for us… because we do invest so much in the leaders, is how the leaders feel…not so much the attendees that they’re reaching…a measure of success is like how valued the leaders have felt, how much they engage in our reward and recognition programmes. When they do the reflections for us at the end of the year, how did they feel about the role?(Participant 5)
…debrief programmes are part of the evaluation design … we have the questionnaires for both the leaders and the students, and… we have our own staff observations from our interactions with them. But also we…go in and do observations and then we have…the academics, we ask for their feedback as well, and we triangulate and pull all of those together…that’s how we evaluate.
…something that comes up in our…application process where we ask that question: ‘Why have you applied?’—particularly from some of our international students, we get quite detailed answers where they say ‘I came to a country I’d never been to before. Felt really lonely, didn’t know what to do, and my peer leaders…lifted me up and gave me that safe space where I felt welcome.’ So I think that’s the only thing I could reference to…(Participant 13)
‘…you have to think about it as planting a seed. You might not see the results for a while to come, but… that doesn’t mean that you should stop doing it.’ So with pretty much everything that we do, I try to take that mentality that it’s a seed. And that we’re trying to decrease stigma and increase literacy with every single person that kind of passes through our door…(Participant 12)
4. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ancient | Federal Public Research | Plate Glass/1960s | New/Post-92 | Russell Group |
---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 1 | 5 | 3 | 2 |
Peer Support Term | Definition |
---|---|
Student Peer | A fellow university student who may share additional lived experiences or identities (i.e., living off campus, studying abroad, international, mature, LGBTQIA+, parent, being on same course, etc.) or who may be from a different year of study. |
Peer Mentoring | Higher year or more experienced student peers supporting lower year or less experienced students. |
Peer-Led Support Groups | A group of student peers gathered for mutual support. |
Peer Learning | Convening student peers based on academic objectives. |
One-to-one Peer Support | One-to-one approach for student peers in need of support. |
Uncategorised | A peer support type described by participants that researcher was not able to categorise because of staff member presence. |
Ancient (n = 2) | Federal (n = 1) | International (n = 1) | Plate Glass (n = 5) | Post-92 (n = 3) | Russell Group (n = 2) | 14 Universities | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
City-Based or Campus-Based | City (All) | City | City | Campus (All) | City (All) | City-Based (n = 1) | Campus-Based (n = 1) | City = 8 Campus = 6 |
Number of Peer Mentoring | 1 | 0 | 1 | 7 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 12 |
Number of Peer Learning | 1 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
Number of Peer-Led Support Groups | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 7 |
(attempted) | (1 attempted) | |||||||
Number of One-to-One Peer Support | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 4 |
Number of Uncategorised Peer Support | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Total Number of Peer Support Programmes | 4 | 1 | 2 | 15 | 4 | 4 | 1 | 31 |
(attempted) | (1 attempted) | (2 attempted) | ||||||
Russell Group (RG) | All RG | - | - | 2 RG |
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Pointon-Haas, J.; Byrom, N.; Foster, J.; Hayes, C.; Oates, J. Staff Perspectives: Defining the Types, Challenges and Lessons Learnt of University Peer Support for Student Mental Health and Wellbeing. Educ. Sci. 2023, 13, 962. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13090962
Pointon-Haas J, Byrom N, Foster J, Hayes C, Oates J. Staff Perspectives: Defining the Types, Challenges and Lessons Learnt of University Peer Support for Student Mental Health and Wellbeing. Education Sciences. 2023; 13(9):962. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13090962
Chicago/Turabian StylePointon-Haas, Julia, Nicola Byrom, Juliet Foster, Chloe Hayes, and Jennifer Oates. 2023. "Staff Perspectives: Defining the Types, Challenges and Lessons Learnt of University Peer Support for Student Mental Health and Wellbeing" Education Sciences 13, no. 9: 962. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13090962
APA StylePointon-Haas, J., Byrom, N., Foster, J., Hayes, C., & Oates, J. (2023). Staff Perspectives: Defining the Types, Challenges and Lessons Learnt of University Peer Support for Student Mental Health and Wellbeing. Education Sciences, 13(9), 962. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13090962