Mentoring up-cycled: creating a community-based intervention for sexually abused adolescents
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to detail a project that created a community-based mentoring intervention for sexually abused children and adolescents. The project features the use of family and community strengths, trauma sensitivity, current research and ecological theory to develop a curriculum for training mentors. Design/methodology/approach – This study used Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) methods to create a community-based intervention designed for sexually abused children and adolescents. This model supports the building and maintenance of the often fluid and relationship-driven processes that are characteristic of CBPR. The stages included: identification of research questions; assessment of community strengths, assets and challenges; defining priorities; developing research and data collection methodologies; collecting and analysing data; interpretation of findings; dissemination of findings; and applying findings to address action. Findings – The results include a recommendation to include community members in interventions for sexually abused adolescents. Research limitations/implications – The results of this study include recommendations for a culturally relevant training curriculum for mentors of sexually abused children and adolescents. Hallmarks of the resulting curriculum included using a hybrid of natural and programme mentors and inclusion of trauma sensitivity in training the mentors. The results from the pilot study are not generalisable since the pilot only included a small number of mentors and the effectiveness of the intervention was not tested. Further research is needed to determine the effectiveness of the intervention. Practical implications – The paper includes implications for further development of a mentoring curriculum for sexually abused children and adolescents. This curriculum promotes several potential benefits, including: incorporation of families and communities in discussion and awareness of sexual abuse and trauma sensitivity; and formal training for individuals who have the potential to remain important in the life of the child or adolescent long after formal services have ceased. Originality/value – The literature shows a lack of community level interventions for sexually abused children and adolescents. The focus of this project was to expand the traditional ecological context of mentoring from a micro or individual level intervention to a community level intervention.
Year of publication: |
2014
|
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Authors: | Williams, Javonda ; Nelson-Gardell, Debra |
Published in: |
Journal of Children's Services. - Emerald Group Publishing Limited, ISSN 2042-8677, ZDB-ID 2394352-X. - Vol. 9.2014, 3, p. 235-247
|
Publisher: |
Emerald Group Publishing Limited |
Subject: | Mentoring | Children | Sexual abuse | Adolescents | Community-Based Participatory Research | Trauma sensitivity | Community-based mentoring intervention |
Saved in:
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