Pilot Study of a Student-led Peer Support Wellbeing Programme, 2021

McLafferty, Margaret (2022). Pilot Study of a Student-led Peer Support Wellbeing Programme, 2021. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Service. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-855366

Many students find the transition to university life difficult, and often struggle with their mental health and wellbeing during this time. Ulster University have developed several initiatives to help address this transition. For example, several Schools within Ulster University run a scheme called Peer Assisted Study Sessions (PASS) which is student led and aims to aid the first-year transition into higher education whereby higher year students (mentors) facilitate weekly study sessions with lower year students (mentees). The aim of the current study was to design, develop, implement and evaluate a 12-week student-led peer wellbeing programme for first year undergraduate students attending the PASS programme in the School of Psychology, Ulster University (mentees). These sessions focused on enhancing the wellbeing and resilience of students during semester two. Mentors and mentees were surveyed, and the top 12 wellbeing topics were included in the programme. Trained PASS mentors delivered the programme and sessions were evaluated each week by both mentors and mentees. At the end of the programme, focus groups were held with mentors and mentees to gain feedback on the wellbeing programme. Overall, all those involved reported that they had benefited from the programme and recommended that it should be continued. It is hoped that the findings from this pilot study will lead to the wellbeing sessions being rolled out within the university and other institutions.

Data description (abstract)

Many students find the transition to university life difficult, and often struggle with their mental health and wellbeing during this time. Ulster University have developed several initiatives to help address this transition. For example, several Schools within Ulster University run a scheme called Peer Assisted Study Sessions (PASS) which is student led and aims to aid the first-year transition into higher education whereby higher year students (mentors) facilitate weekly study sessions with lower year students (mentees). The aim of the current study was to design, develop, implement and evaluate a 12-week student-led peer wellbeing programme for first year undergraduate students attending the PASS programme in the School of Psychology, Ulster University (mentees). These sessions focused on enhancing the wellbeing and resilience of students during semester two. Mentors and mentees were surveyed, and the top 12 wellbeing topics were included in the programme. Trained PASS mentors delivered the programme and sessions were evaluated each week by both mentors and mentees. At the end of the programme, focus groups were held with mentors and mentees to gain feedback on the wellbeing programme. Overall, all those involved reported that they had benefited from the programme and recommended that it should be continued. It is hoped that the findings from this pilot study will lead to the wellbeing sessions being rolled out within the university and other institutions.

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
McLafferty Margaret Ulster University http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8133-9353
Sponsors: Smarten, UK Research and Innovation
Grant reference: ES/S00324X/1
Topic classification: Psychology
Keywords: STUDENTS (COLLEGE), MENTAL HEALTH, PSYCHOLOGICAL WELL-BEING
Project title: Pilot Study of a Student-led Peer Support Wellbeing Programme
Grant holders: Margaret McLafferty, Kelly Norwood, Siobhan O'Neill, Elaine Murray, Melanie Giles
Project dates:
FromTo
19 May 202030 September 2021
Date published: 28 Jan 2022 16:01
Last modified: 28 Jan 2022 16:02

Available Files

Data and documentation bundle

Documentation

Read me

Downloads

data downloads and page views since this item was published

View more statistics

Altmetric

No resources to display

Edit item (login required)

Edit Item Edit Item