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News20 November 2024

New partners to evaluate mental health and wellbeing interventions using theory-based methods

TASO, Bath Social & Development Research, Tharani Learning and Research and two universities will work together to explore the impact of mental health and wellbeing interventions.
Mental health and wellbeingSmall cohorts

Following an open call in spring 2024, TASO has selected and funded two universities to participate in a project that will evaluate student mental health and wellbeing interventions they deliver. The universities will work with the independent evaluators to explore the impact of their interventions using theory based evaluation methods, with the intention of providing robust evidence on mental health and wellbeing interventions delivered in the higher education sector to small cohorts of students.

This project is one of three TASO flagship student mental health projects. Each project involves different evaluation methodologies: randomised controlled trials, quasi-experimental designs, and evaluation with small cohorts.

The interventions being evaluated are:

Tharani Learning and Research, which is made up of two independent evaluators, Amira Tharani and Emma Roberts, will be exploring whether the coaching intervention has improved students’ wellbeing and engagement, and, if so, how it has worked and under what circumstances, using a realist evaluation approach.

Bath Social and Development Research are evaluating The Boundary Spanner Project. They will be using the Qualitative Impact Protocol (QuIP) which is an eclectic approach which draws on aspects of Process Tracing, Contribution Analysis, Most Significant Change and Realist Evaluation. QuIP is a non-experimental, qualitative approach, designed as a way for small and medium sized organisations  to address the ‘attribution problem’ without relying on large-scale quantitative, counterfactual data.”

The final reports will be published in Autumn 2025.