Cultivating child and youth decision‐making: The principles and practices of the ReSPECT approach to professional development

Author:

Michail Samia123ORCID,Grace Rebekah23ORCID,Ng Jonathan2ORCID,Shier Harry4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Social Sciences Western Sydney University Liverpool New South Wales Australia

2. Transforming early Education And Child Health (TeEACH) Research Centre Western Sydney University Westmead New South Wales Australia

3. Translational Health Research Institute (THRI) Liverpool New South Wales Australia

4. CESESMA ‐ Centre for Education in Health and Environment Matagalpa Nicaragua

Abstract

AbstractParticipatory approaches are important to ensuring that the involvement of children in decision‐making is normalised in service provision. Participation work requires that professionals have well‐developed engagement skills, and a commitment to the right of the child or young person to participate. Effective participatory approaches also require that organisations provide active support for child‐centred practice. The Reconceptualising Services from the Perspectives of Experienced Children and Teens (ReSPECT) approach is an Australian professional development (PD) program that addresses these key aspects of participation work. It offers professionals a way to:(1) increase their awareness of the complex issues, challenges and benefits surrounding participation; and (2) develop a sense of empowerment and competence in the ‘doing’ of participation work. The PD program encourages professionals to understand their own position in relation to participation work with children, develop bespoke strategies that account for their unique practice context and assemble support structures that can maintain their participation strategies beyond the training. The principles and practices of the ReSPECT PD program are outlined and positioned within the existing literature on theoretical and practice approaches. The paper contributes to critical debate on the mechanisms that can lead to changes in professional practice and organisational culture, for the meaningful engagement of children as stakeholders in decision‐making. It is shared as a way of supporting others designing professional development approaches for child and youth decision‐making.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Life-span and Life-course Studies,Education,Health (social science)

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