Evaluating the Impacts of an Undergraduate Mental Health Literacy Course

Mental health literacy is an important factor in caring for mental health; however, in the post-secondary student population, mental health literacy is reported to be low. To address these issues, in 2020, one of the authors [CZ] developed an undergraduate mental health literacy (MHL) course offere...

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Main Authors: Christine Zaza, Ryan Christopher Yeung, Gitanjali Shanbhag
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education 2024-12-01
Series:Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
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Online Access:https://ojs.lib.uwo.ca/index.php/cjsotl_rcacea/article/view/16349
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author Christine Zaza
Ryan Christopher Yeung
Gitanjali Shanbhag
author_facet Christine Zaza
Ryan Christopher Yeung
Gitanjali Shanbhag
author_sort Christine Zaza
collection DOAJ
description Mental health literacy is an important factor in caring for mental health; however, in the post-secondary student population, mental health literacy is reported to be low. To address these issues, in 2020, one of the authors [CZ] developed an undergraduate mental health literacy (MHL) course offered through the Faculty of Health, University of Waterloo, to undergraduate students in all Faculties. Building on promising early research conducted by two of the authors in 2021, we conducted three studies to evaluate the impacts of the fully online version of this MHL course. Study #1 was a pre-post study to examine knowledge and attitudes related to mental health literacy (n = 162). Study #2 was a one-month follow-up study to assess continued use of mental wellness strategies practiced during the course (n = 18), and study #3 was a content analysis of part one of the final reflection assignment of the course (n = 32). The pre-post study did not reveal any meaningful changes in knowledge and attitude from Time 1 to Time 2. However, the one-month follow-up study and the content analysis of the final reflection assignment showed multiple meaningful and positive shifts in knowledge, attitudes, and behaviours related to mental health, stigma, self-care, well-being, supporting others with mental health concerns, and the meaning of resilience. In addition, the content analysis revealed that students were sharing course resources with peers, friends, family members and with their community at large. In addition to guiding revisions to strengthen the MHL course under investigation, our findings are relevant to other MHL education initiatives in this population.
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spelling doaj-art-0d3ae3d16921453ea7a2ac0c7907d72c2025-01-28T20:30:06ZengSociety for Teaching and Learning in Higher EducationCanadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning1918-29022024-12-0115310.5206/cjsotlrcacea.2024.3.16349Evaluating the Impacts of an Undergraduate Mental Health Literacy CourseChristine Zaza0Ryan Christopher Yeung1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6966-6834Gitanjali Shanbhag2https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2443-3172University of WaterlooRotman Research Institute, Baycrest Health SciencesUniversity of Waterloo Mental health literacy is an important factor in caring for mental health; however, in the post-secondary student population, mental health literacy is reported to be low. To address these issues, in 2020, one of the authors [CZ] developed an undergraduate mental health literacy (MHL) course offered through the Faculty of Health, University of Waterloo, to undergraduate students in all Faculties. Building on promising early research conducted by two of the authors in 2021, we conducted three studies to evaluate the impacts of the fully online version of this MHL course. Study #1 was a pre-post study to examine knowledge and attitudes related to mental health literacy (n = 162). Study #2 was a one-month follow-up study to assess continued use of mental wellness strategies practiced during the course (n = 18), and study #3 was a content analysis of part one of the final reflection assignment of the course (n = 32). The pre-post study did not reveal any meaningful changes in knowledge and attitude from Time 1 to Time 2. However, the one-month follow-up study and the content analysis of the final reflection assignment showed multiple meaningful and positive shifts in knowledge, attitudes, and behaviours related to mental health, stigma, self-care, well-being, supporting others with mental health concerns, and the meaning of resilience. In addition, the content analysis revealed that students were sharing course resources with peers, friends, family members and with their community at large. In addition to guiding revisions to strengthen the MHL course under investigation, our findings are relevant to other MHL education initiatives in this population. https://ojs.lib.uwo.ca/index.php/cjsotl_rcacea/article/view/16349mental health literacyeducationresilience
spellingShingle Christine Zaza
Ryan Christopher Yeung
Gitanjali Shanbhag
Evaluating the Impacts of an Undergraduate Mental Health Literacy Course
Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
mental health literacy
education
resilience
title Evaluating the Impacts of an Undergraduate Mental Health Literacy Course
title_full Evaluating the Impacts of an Undergraduate Mental Health Literacy Course
title_fullStr Evaluating the Impacts of an Undergraduate Mental Health Literacy Course
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating the Impacts of an Undergraduate Mental Health Literacy Course
title_short Evaluating the Impacts of an Undergraduate Mental Health Literacy Course
title_sort evaluating the impacts of an undergraduate mental health literacy course
topic mental health literacy
education
resilience
url https://ojs.lib.uwo.ca/index.php/cjsotl_rcacea/article/view/16349
work_keys_str_mv AT christinezaza evaluatingtheimpactsofanundergraduatementalhealthliteracycourse
AT ryanchristopheryeung evaluatingtheimpactsofanundergraduatementalhealthliteracycourse
AT gitanjalishanbhag evaluatingtheimpactsofanundergraduatementalhealthliteracycourse