Belonging and connection of children with disability and their families are contested and fragile in many regional communities. This article reports on a project that aimed to better understand and strengthen belonging and connection for young children with disability and their families within a regional Australian community. The project involved a series of community capacity building initiatives which were grounded in participatory research about facilitators and barriers to belonging and connection. It used co-design principles to involve children and their families in the research design and collection of information, and in the direction of project resources post-research. This article describes the research, reviews the effectiveness of the methods used to facilitate involvement of children with disability and family members at a range of points in the project, and discusses the innovative way the project extends participatory methods used in research into project management and community development with a group not often included in either participatory research or community development.
Journal article
Building belonging and connection for children with disability and their families: a co-designed research and community development project in a regional community
Community Development Journal, Vol.50(4), pp.724-741
2015
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Source: InCites
Abstract
Details
- Title
- Building belonging and connection for children with disability and their families: a co-designed research and community development project in a regional community
- Creators
- Sally Robinson - Southern Cross UniversityDanielle Notara - Southern Cross University
- Publication Details
- Community Development Journal, Vol.50(4), pp.724-741
- Identifiers
- 2276; 991012822174802368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Education; Centre for Children and Young People; School of Education
- Resource Type
- Journal article