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Mental Health Promotion and Early Intervention in Early Childhood and Primary School Settings: A Review
Author(s) -
Frances KayLambkin,
Elizabeth Kemp,
Karen Stafford,
Trevor Hazell
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
the journal of student wellbeing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1835-7806
DOI - 10.21913/jsw.v1i1.115
Subject(s) - mental health , scope (computer science) , promotion (chess) , intervention (counseling) , medical education , early childhood , psychology , government (linguistics) , health promotion , medicine , nursing , political science , public health , psychiatry , developmental psychology , linguistics , philosophy , politics , computer science , law , programming language
Response Ability is an initiative of the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing (the Department). Since 2000, the project team has provided free multimedia resources and practical support for universities and teacher educators, addressing pre-service education for secondary teachers. The focus of the existing Response Ability resources is on the mental health and wellbeing of secondary school students. The use of these resources is designed to encourage pre-service teachers to engage with and promote social and emotional health in their teaching practices. In 2006, the Response Ability project was directed by the Department to advise how the scope of these resources could be broadened to support primary and early childhood teacher education. As part of this, a large-scale scoping study was undertaken to inform discussions about mental health promotion and early intervention strategies in primary and early childhood settings. A structured literature review was completed as part of this process, examining three key questions:

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