| Literature DB >> 35769740 |
Michael J Wilson1,2, Kate Gwyther1,2, Magenta Simmons1,2, Ray Swann3,4, John L Oliffe5,6, Kate Casey3, Simon M Rice1,2.
Abstract
The capacity for boys' and young men's mental health promotion to act via shifting masculine norms that are linked to poor mental health outcomes, highlights the need to improve the extent to which school-based programs can promote mental health through leveraging more positive embodiments of masculinity. To-date, the perspectives of parents and teachers on such processes are understudied. This qualitative study presents teacher and parent views regarding adolescent masculinities and avenues for school-based developmental programming for boys and young men. In this study, 16 individual qualitative interviews were undertaken with 10 parents (six females, four males), and six teachers (three females, three males), recruited from an independent all-boys' grammar school in Melbourne, Australia. Thematic analysis of parents' and teachers' perspectives indicated their perception of the role of context-dependent "public" and "private" masculinities, the influence of Australian masculinity norms, and the role of private boys' school cultures in the development of adolescent masculinities. Additionally, strategies for development encompassed participants' appetite for boys' exposure to positive role models, in addition to consistent and relevant developmental programming to support positive masculinity development. Findings have implications for efforts to support prosocial masculine identity development via school-based initiatives, as an avenue to promoting mental health of boys and young men.Entities:
Keywords: adolescent; intervention; masculinity; mental health; school
Year: 2022 PMID: 35769740 PMCID: PMC9235819 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.864124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Summary of participant demographics.
| Demographic | Statistic |
| Age (range, | 32–73 years, 49.19, 10.35 |
|
| |
| Man | 43.8 (7) |
| Woman | 56.2 (9) |
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| |
| Heterosexual | 100.0 (16) |
|
| |
| Yes | 43.8 (7) |
| No | 56.2 (9) |
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| |
| Australia | 56.2 (9) |
| United Kingdom | 31.3 (5) |
| New Zealand | 12.5 (2) |
|
| |
| No | 100.0 (16) |
|
| |
| Yes | 6.2 (1) |
| No | 93.8 (15) |
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| |
| Parent | 62.5 (10) |
| Staff | 37.5 (6) |
Summary of themes with exemplar quotes.
| Category | Theme | Exemplar quote |
| Influencing factors | Public and private masculinities | |
| Prevailing Australian masculinities | ||
| Private boys school culture | ||
| Strategies for development | Exposure to positive masculinities | |
| Transforming masculinities |
Recommendations for future research.
| Category | Recommendations |
| General recommendations | More diverse participant sampling to allow explorations between masculinities, mental health promotion and other social subgroup memberships (i.e., race, class, gender, sexuality). |
| More direct exploration of links between masculinity norms, help-seeking and mental health symptom profiles (e.g., whether masculinity carries differential influences on help-seeking for anxiety relative to suicidality), and how programming to promote positive masculinities can apply across symptom profiles. | |
| Influencing factors | Qualitative research with parents and teachers to better understand their (inadvertent) role in perpetuation of traditional masculinity norms per-context, particularly in relation to mental health and help-seeking. |
| Qualitative group-based research with boys and young men to better identify the specific contexts and social mechanisms (e.g., the “perception gap”) that lead to perpetuation of traditional masculine norms, even when this is not conducive to wellbeing. | |
| Co-design curriculum for parents and teachers that complements programming for boys and young men, focused on modeling healthy embodiments of masculinity, alongside promoting reflection on inadvertent reinforcement of traditional masculine norms. | |
| Strategies for development | Further research to define the characteristics of “healthy masculine role models” and explore the kinds of exposure needed (e.g., story-telling, experiential programs) to achieve positive benefits to promotion of positive masculinities among boys and young men. |
| Work with school leadership to explore implementation avenues for promotion of school-based positive masculinities alongside, but not at the expense of, academic pursuits at school. |