Abstract
Background
Recovery colleges are an education-based approach to supporting mental health recovery that incorporate the voice of both lived and living experience, and experience by training in their design, production, and delivery.
Aims
To understand students’ experiences of attending a youth-focused ‘discovery college’ course. Specifically, to see whether students were satisfied with the course, whether the learning goals of the courses were met, and what students felt makes discovery college different.
Methods
A mixed methods design analysed quantitative data on students’ ratings of the course and their learning goals. A co-produced thematic analysis, incorporating the voice of lived and living experience, was also conducted on students’ responses to the question “what makes discovery college different?”
Results
Overall, students rated their experience with the course very positively, and mostly met the learning goals of courses. The co-produced thematic analysis revealed students valued the incorporation of lived and living experience in courses, the lack of power imbalance between teachers and students, and felt it was a safe space to share and learn.
Conclusions
Findings support the delivery of the recovery college model within a youth setting, and highlights this as a useful initiative in engaging people from a range of perspectives in education about mental health.
Disclosure statement
All authors certify that they take responsibility for this manuscript, and declare they have no conflict of interest.
Notes
1 The name ‘discovery college’ was also co-designed by young people who connected more with this terminology than the previous ‘recovery college’.