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Travellers programme appeals to staff and students |
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News Release June 28 2010
Travellers programme appeals to
staff and students alike
The effects of sad and traumatic events earlier this year among high school students were echoed in a recent Victoria University report. Author, Dr Nathan McCluskey, from the Roy McKenzie Centre for the Study of Families, commented that it “…was recognised that students were struggling to deal with a range of transitional stresses and traumas irrespective of socio-economic status. In this sense, the ‘teenage condition’ was no respecter of decile.”
The pointed and timely statement came from a review of the Ministry of Health funded Travellers programme, run by children and young people’s charity Skylight.
Travellers aims to provide students with the skills and resources they need to “travel well” through their young life. The report found that “notwithstanding the incredible diversity that exists in New Zealand Schools, Travellers has widespread appeal amongst staff and students alike and crosses racial, cultural, gender, decile and learning ability boundaries.”
Travellers is a school-based scheme currently running in 94 schools throughout the country. On average 20 schools take up the programme per year. The current schools range from decile one to decile 10, with nearly 50% falling within the decile four to seven range.
Based on an initial online survey of all year nines at participating schools, the programme recognises those young people that need the help and support of the Travellers eight-week programme. In 2009, Travellers online screening tool (which was described by some review participants as “the bomb”) had 12400 individual student entries.
Most schools run the Travellers programme in terms 2 and 3 when they have identified the students who would benefit from the programme. Trained facilitators from within the school environment guide small groups of students through fun yet relevant activities, using “the journey” metaphor as the key link between all sessions and activities. The programme aims to foster the healthy development of young people by:
• Providing a supportive
environment
• Developing appropriate coping skills and
strategies
• Exploring ways of thinking about stressful
situations that are manageable for themselves
• Gaining
a sense of empowerment by adopting behaviours that will
result in an increased sense of self-worth
• Being able
to access additional help and support when necessary.
As
the Travellers programme entered its third year of being
nationally funded, a review was necessary to see if the
resources and approach used were still relevant to young
people and how it was helping them deal with the stresses of
modern life. The report, from the Roy McKenzie Centre for
the Study of Families, audited the programme which has been
running in schools since 2001.
The study involved
qualitative interviews with 22 programme facilitators, 10
school principals and focus groups with 32 students who had
been through the programme. Participants thought it was a
winner.
“Finding praise for the programme amongst key informants with the greatest interaction with it was not difficult and it was sometimes hard work evoking criticism,” wrote McCluskey.
The reviewer also found
much to like about the programme:
It is clear that the
programme works best between Deciles 2 – 9 while at the
extremes, it is stretched to comfortably meet the needs of
literary and intellectual impoverishment on the one hand and
linguistic and educational super-competence on the other.
However, all of these schools, regardless of decile found
that the programme was hugely beneficial and helpful
notwithstanding these challenges. Selecting the aspects of
the programme that are best suited to given groups of
students, facilitators are managing to adapt the programme
in a flexible manner so that it can reach, touch and affect
the psychology of many of their charges.
From within
their extensive interviews, the reviewers received many
anecdotal success stories. In a section entitled Stories
from the Front, they included some of these:
• Participants said that they were going to teach the
programme to their parents because ‘they really need this
stuff’
• In one case a student changed a 20%
attendance rate to an 80% rate after completing the
programme
• Because of the increased confidence and
linguistic ability one participant had developed through the
programme, they were able to avoid being suspended.
The
conclusion was emphatic: “Results would suggest that the
current content and operation of the Travellers programme is
a well-liked and received model that would benefit from some
cosmetic surgery rather than a major facelift.”
Phil
Smith, National Travellers Manager, welcomed the result,
saying “the survey result certainly reflects the feedback
we are getting from participating schools, and the
comprehensive nature of the audit means we can address the
details that need adjusting. We are always looking to
improve Travellers so that it continues to meet the
expectations and needs of schools and young people.”
ENDS
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