Davies Alun, Mwango Grace, Appiah Bernard, Callery James J, Duy Thanh Vu, Gumede Nozibusiso, Inglis Robert, McCracken Shane, Mkoola Kestern, Montjane Kagisho, Ochanda Alice, Shonai Charity, Woods-Townsend Kathryn
Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) Wellcome Trust Research Institute, PO Box 230, Kilifi, 80108, Kenya.
Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Nuffield Department of Medicine, The University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Wellcome Open Res. 2020 Jul 7;4:180. doi: 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.15556.2. eCollection 2019.
Engagement between health researchers and local schools, or School Engagement, has become incorporated into the engagement strategies of many research institutions worldwide. Innovative initiatives have emerged within Wellcome Trust-funded African and Asian Programmes (APPs) and elsewhere, and continued funding from the Wellcome Trust and other funders is likely to catalyse further innovation. Engagement between and schools is well-described in the scientific literature (1-4), however, engagement between and schools is much newer, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, and rarely documented. In November 2018 the KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme (KWTRP) hosted an international workshop in Kilifi, Kenya, drawing on an emerging community of School Engagement practitioners towards exploring the broad range of goals for School Engagement, learning about the breadth of evaluation approaches and exploring the potential usefulness of establishing a practitioner network. The workshop was attended by 29 engagement researchers/practitioners representing 21 institutions from 10 countries in sub-Saharan Africa and South East Asia and the UK. Workshop sessions combining small group discussions with plenary presentations, enabled a range of goals, activities and evaluation approaches to be shared. This report summarises these discussions, and shares participant views on the possible functions of a network of School Engagement practitioners. A breadth of 'deep' and 'wide' engagement activities were described addressing four broad goals: contributing to science education; capacity strengthening for health research; contributing to goals of community engagement; and health promotion. While wide approaches have greater outreach for raising student awareness, deeper approaches are more likely enable informed student views to be incorporated into research. All activities ultimately aimed at improving health, but also at supporting development in low- and middle-income countries through promoting science-career uptake. Participants identified a range of potential benefits which could emerge from a practitioner network: sharing experiences and resources; facilitating capacity strengthening; and fostering collaboration.
卫生研究人员与当地学校之间的合作,即学校合作,已被纳入全球许多研究机构的合作战略之中。在惠康信托基金会资助的非洲和亚洲项目(APPs)以及其他地方出现了创新举措,惠康信托基金会和其他资助者的持续资金投入可能会催生更多创新。科学文献中对与学校的合作已有详尽描述(1-4),然而,与学校的合作则更新颖,尤其是在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,且鲜有记录。2018年11月,肯尼亚医学研究学会-惠康信托研究项目(KWTRP)在肯尼亚基利菲举办了一次国际研讨会,吸引了一批新兴的学校合作从业者群体,共同探讨学校合作的广泛目标,了解评估方法的广度,并探索建立从业者网络的潜在用途。来自撒哈拉以南非洲、东南亚和英国10个国家的21个机构的29名合作研究人员/从业者参加了此次研讨会。研讨会通过小组讨论与全体会议相结合的形式,分享了一系列目标、活动和评估方法。本报告总结了这些讨论内容,并分享了参与者对学校合作从业者网络可能发挥的作用的看法。会上描述了一系列“深度”和“广度”合作活动,这些活动旨在实现四个广泛目标:促进科学教育;加强卫生研究能力;推动社区合作目标的实现;以及促进健康。虽然广度方法在提高学生意识方面有更大的覆盖面,但深度方法更有可能将学生的明智观点纳入研究。所有活动最终都旨在改善健康状况,同时也通过促进科学职业发展来支持低收入和中等收入国家的发展。参与者确定了从业者网络可能带来的一系列潜在好处:分享经验和资源;促进能力建设;以及促进合作。