Engaging youth in research planning, design and execution: Practical recommendations for researchers

December 1st, 2018 | RESEARCH

Context

Engaging youth as partners in academic research projects offers many benefits for the youth and the research team. However, it is not always clear to researchers how to engage youth effectively to optimize the experience and maximize the impact.

Objective

This article provides practical recommendations to help researchers engage youth in meaningful ways in academic research, from initial planning to project completion. These general recommendations can be applied to all types of research methodologies, from community action-based research to highly technical designs.

Results

Youth can and do provide valuable input into academic research projects when their contributions are authentically valued, their roles are clearly defined, communication is clear, and their needs are taken into account. Researchers should be aware of the risk of tokenizing the youth they engage and work proactively to take their feedback into account in a genuine way. Some adaptations to regular research procedures are recommended to improve the success of the youth engagement initiative.

Conclusions

By following these guidelines, academic researchers can make youth engagement a key tenet of their youth-oriented research initiatives, increasing the feasibility, youth-friendliness and ecological validity of their work and ultimately improve the value and impact of the results their research produces.

Document

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Team Members

Lisa Hawke, Author, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Jacqueline Relihan, Author, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Joshua Miller, Author, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Emma McCann, Author, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Jessica Rong, Author, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Karleigh Darnay, Author, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Samantha Docherty, Author, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Gloria Chaim, Author, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Joanna Henderson, Author, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

Citation

Identifier Type: DOI
Identifier: 10.1111/hex.12795

Publication: Health Expectations
Volume: 21
Number: 6
Page(s): 944-949

Related URLs

Full Text

Tags

Audience: Scientists | Youth | Teen (up to 17)
Discipline: Education and learning science | Health and medicine
Resource Type: Peer-reviewed article | Research Products
Environment Type: Higher Education Programs | Informal | Formal Connections | Laboratory Programs | Public Programs