International Collaboration Opportunities in Men's Sheds Research

undefined
 
Researching Men’s Sheds
 
Opportunities for international collaboration
 
Federation University School of Education
2020 OctoberVET by ZOOM
Wed, Monday 16 Nov 6-8pm AEST
Professor (Adjunct) Barry Golding AM
b.golding@federation.edu.au
 
Intentions
 
Introduce ‘Men’s Sheds’ in community settings.
Identify how Men’s Sheds research:
 
cuts across disciplines
uses diverse methodologies
lends itself to publishing and blogging
leads to local and internationally impact
connects with other researchers.
 
Barry Golding: Introduction
 
Retired’ from paid Fed Uni (Mt Helen) for 5+ years.
Still Federation University Professor (Adjunct).
Main research adult, community & informal learning.
Dreamed up ‘OctoberVET’ many years ago …
Specialist in older men’s learning & Men’s Sheds.
Books: 
Men learning through life
 (2013) with Annette Foley and Rob
Mark & 
Men’s Shed Movement: The Company of Men 
(2015).
Currently researching & writing new book, 
Shoulder to Shoulder:
Broadening the Men’s Shed Movement 
for publication in 2021.
Actively researching & publishing with Annette Foley.
Maintain an active WordPress website
www.barrygoanna.com
  & regularly post blogs.
 
Tongala Men’s Shed, Victoria
Opened as 
Dick McGowan Men’s Shed
, July 1998: First in the world by that name.
 
Clem’s Shed, Minlaton South Australia (open 2001)
Illustrating intersection between gender, age, health, war service, work for the dole
 
Early New Zealand Sheds
 
B
l
o
k
e
s
 
S
h
e
d
s
,
 
T
a
i
e
r
i
&
 
D
u
n
e
d
i
n
 
S
o
u
t
h
,
2
0
0
7
 
H
a
m
i
l
t
o
n
 
C
o
m
m
u
n
i
t
y
M
e
n
s
 
S
h
e
d
,
 
2
0
0
8
 
Louth & North Belfast Men’s Sheds, Ireland
Now community collaboration in communities both sides of the border
wracked by sectarian violence until two decades ago.
 
To 2020, approx. 2,670 Men’s Sheds open
approx., pre-COVID
 
Australia * 1,258
UK * 750+
Ireland * 450+
NZ * 108
Denmark * 40
Canada * 35
US  * 17
Kenya 8
Iceland 4
* with National Men’s Shed Associations; also Scotland & Wales
 
Men’s Shed basics
 
All
 men are welcome to participate (sometimes also women).
There is no ‘right’ way or preferred activity aside from what
participants & local community decides.
It is a creative, participative journey for men & communities.
The benefit is from active, positive connection & participation,
not information or shame about health problems or deficit.
Men are empowered as equal participants in an activity: not
customers, clients, patients or students.
Men generously share what they know & 
can
 do.
Men’s Sheds reflect the diverse communities, men 
and
women, that support them.
It works because there is no prescription or obligation.
It is safe, homely & salutogenic (health-promoting).
It involves mainly older men in communities of practice
It reaches and engages men who have proved difficult to reach
by top-down, programmatic interventions.
 
Research from Men’s Sheds shows that:
 
Men most in need are those less likely to access or respond to
highly literate, online message.
Missionary approaches from reformed men, academics,
governments & experts are likely to turn older men off.
Publicity to participate should encourage men to have a look
informally, not to sign up.
Images and messages should be inclusive of and attractive to
the diversity amongst men.
Top down health information & exhortations are less effective
than local, informal shared experience
.
Research participants and the Shed must be empowered and
involved in the research process.
T
h
e
 
M
e
n
s
 
S
h
e
d
 
w
o
r
k
s
 
b
e
c
a
u
s
e
 
a
l
l
 
t
h
a
t
 
i
s
 
d
e
f
i
n
e
d
 
i
s
 
t
h
e
 
p
l
a
c
e
(
a
 
l
o
c
a
l
i
t
y
 
&
 
S
h
e
d
)
 
a
n
d
 
(
t
h
e
 
c
o
m
p
a
n
y
 
o
f
 
o
t
h
e
r
)
 
M
e
n
.
 
 
 
Men’s Sheds lend themselves to:
 
research cutting across disciplines
diverse methodologies
making research impactful
publishing and blogging
negotiating the academic / proponent interface
with Sheds, Shed Associations
acting locally
collaborating internationally
connecting with researchers from other
disciplines.
 
Some emerging opportunities?
 
‘Women’s Sheds internationally’ (see our new blog with Lucia
Carragher in Ireland 
https://wp.me/p3nVDL-ub
Men’s Sheds in Aged Care and Retirement Villages
Cross cultural Movement comparisons (e.g. Denmark, UK,
Ireland, NZ, Australia).
Men’s Sheds and dementia.
Shedder and significant other research
Ethnographic community case studies
Gender perspectives on health & service provision.
History of new and emerging Movements (e.g. US, Canada,
Iceland, Kenya).
‘Shed Wars’: The tussle between local autonomy and national
associations (within Australia & UK in particular).
Sheds and their community adaptation & responses to COVID.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Slide Note
Embed
Share

Delve into the world of Men's Sheds and their impact on communities globally, guided by Professor Barry Golding. Discover the diverse research methodologies and interdisciplinary connections of Men's Sheds while exploring their local and international reach through active collaboration and publishing efforts.

  • Mens Sheds
  • Research
  • Community Impact
  • International Collaboration
  • Adult Learning

Uploaded on Aug 26, 2024 | 1 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Researching Mens Sheds Opportunities for international collaboration Federation University School of Education 2020 OctoberVET by ZOOM Wed, Monday 16 Nov 6-8pm AEST Professor (Adjunct) Barry Golding AM b.golding@federation.edu.au

  2. Intentions Introduce Men s Sheds in community settings. Identify how Men s Sheds research: cuts across disciplines uses diverse methodologies lends itself to publishing and blogging leads to local and internationally impact connects with other researchers.

  3. Barry Golding: Introduction Retired from paid Fed Uni (Mt Helen) for 5+ years. Still Federation University Professor (Adjunct). Main research adult, community & informal learning. Dreamed up OctoberVET many years ago Specialist in older men s learning & Men s Sheds. Books: Men learning through life (2013) with Annette Foley and Rob Mark & Men s Shed Movement: The Company of Men (2015). Currently researching & writing new book, Shoulder to Shoulder: Broadening the Men s Shed Movement for publication in 2021. Actively researching & publishing with Annette Foley. Maintain an active WordPress website www.barrygoanna.com & regularly post blogs.

  4. Tongala Mens Shed, Victoria Opened as Dick McGowan Men s Shed, July 1998: First in the world by that name.

  5. Clems Shed, Minlaton South Australia (open 2001) Illustrating intersection between gender, age, health, war service, work for the dole

  6. Early New Zealand Sheds Bloke s Sheds, Taieri & Dunedin South, 2007 Hamilton Community Men s Shed, 2008

  7. Louth & North Belfast Mens Sheds, Ireland Now community collaboration in communities both sides of the border wracked by sectarian violence until two decades ago.

  8. To 2020, approx. 2,670 Mens Sheds open approx., pre-COVID Australia * 1,258 UK * 750+ Ireland * 450+ NZ * 108 Denmark * 40 Canada * 35 US * 17 Kenya 8 Iceland 4 * with National Men s Shed Associations; also Scotland & Wales

  9. Mens Shed basics All men are welcome to participate (sometimes also women). There is no right way or preferred activity aside from what participants & local community decides. It is a creative, participative journey for men & communities. The benefit is from active, positive connection & participation, not information or shame about health problems or deficit. Men are empowered as equal participants in an activity: not customers, clients, patients or students. Men generously share what they know & can do. Men s Sheds reflect the diverse communities, men and women, that support them. It works because there is no prescription or obligation. It is safe, homely & salutogenic (health-promoting). It involves mainly older men in communities of practice It reaches and engages men who have proved difficult to reach by top-down, programmatic interventions.

  10. Research from Mens Sheds shows that: Men most in need are those less likely to access or respond to highly literate, online message. Missionary approaches from reformed men, academics, governments & experts are likely to turn older men off. Publicity to participate should encourage men to have a look informally, not to sign up. Images and messages should be inclusive of and attractive to the diversity amongst men. Top down health information & exhortations are less effective than local, informal shared experience. Research participants and the Shed must be empowered and involved in the research process. The Men s Shed works because all that is defined is the place (a locality & Shed) and (the company of other) Men.

  11. Mens Sheds lend themselves to: research cutting across disciplines diverse methodologies making research impactful publishing and blogging negotiating the academic / proponent interface with Sheds, Shed Associations acting locally collaborating internationally connecting with researchers from other disciplines.

  12. Some emerging opportunities? Women s Sheds internationally (see our new blog with Lucia Carragher in Ireland https://wp.me/p3nVDL-ub Men s Sheds in Aged Care and Retirement Villages Cross cultural Movement comparisons (e.g. Denmark, UK, Ireland, NZ, Australia). Men s Sheds and dementia. Shedder and significant other research Ethnographic community case studies Gender perspectives on health & service provision. History of new and emerging Movements (e.g. US, Canada, Iceland, Kenya). Shed Wars : The tussle between local autonomy and national associations (within Australia & UK in particular). Sheds and their community adaptation & responses to COVID.

Related


More Related Content

giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#