Deadline: 25-Jun-23
Orygen is seeking applications for the ASEAN-Australia Youth Mental Health Fellowships Program to build the capacity, skills and voices of young people to create positive change in mental health awareness, policy and systems reform.
This fellowship program is hosted by Orygen Global in partnership with the Australian Government.
Twelve fellowships are offered for young people aged 18 to 30 from Australia and the ASEAN countries. The fellowships are for young people who are passionate about youth mental health and want to create change in the mental health landscape within the region.
The program also supports participants to further develop their youth mental health project plan designed around the needs of their communities.
The program runs for six months and is comprised of weekly online sessions and additional mentoring opportunities. There is also the potential to attend a four-day in-person forum in Jakarta, Indonesia.
The fellowship is a six-month program. Fellows will need to be able to commit approximately eight to 10 hours of time each month to fellowship activities, including a consistent weekly online session. Activities include a combination of educational modules and individual or group-based work.
Modes of Learning
- The program consists of five modes of learning:
- Education modules are a core part of the fellowship and provide the platform to develop knowledge and insights for mental health advocacy. The modules are composed of lectures, panel discussions and practical workshops. The modules build on each other and include a strong emphasis on interaction between fellows. The modules follow the Global Youth Mental Health Advocacy Toolkit which was developed by Orygen in 2020 as part of the global youth mental health partnership project with the World Economic Forum.
- Module 1: Defining mental ill-health, advocacy and personal development.
- Module 2: Safety in advocacy and sharing your personal mental health story.
- Module 3: Preparing for advocacy and developing a proposal for change.
- Module 4: Doing advocacy part 1: public speaking, policy and fundraising.
- Module 5: Doing advocacy part 2: media and responding to risk.
- Module 6: After advocacy, creating sustainable change.
- Expert mentoring is used to help fellows develop skills and expertise tailored to their learning needs. Expert mentoring also encourages the fellow to explore the resources and networks to enact their proposal for change. Each fellow will be assigned their own expert mentor who they’ll meet with monthly. These sessions are designed to be dynamic, personal and informal.
- Peer mentoring is an invaluable opportunity for the fellows to provide each other with strategic and emotional support. Fellows from diverse backgrounds and geographical areas will be paired together and will meet monthly.
- Contact with leaders in global youth mental health. Beyond the impact of implementing their own proposal for change, fellows will be able to network with international leaders in youth mental health.
- Contribution: A key component of the program is experiential learning which allows fellows to engage with the established work of Orygen.
- Education modules are a core part of the fellowship and provide the platform to develop knowledge and insights for mental health advocacy. The modules are composed of lectures, panel discussions and practical workshops. The modules build on each other and include a strong emphasis on interaction between fellows. The modules follow the Global Youth Mental Health Advocacy Toolkit which was developed by Orygen in 2020 as part of the global youth mental health partnership project with the World Economic Forum.
Eligibility Criteria
- They would love to hear from you if you:
- are aged 18 to 30 years old at the time of application
- self-identify as having lived experience of mental ill-health, which can be personal experience or through family members or friends, or have a specific interest or skill in youth mental health
- are from Australia or any ASEAN country (Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam)
- are interested in changing your community’s policies or practices to create change in youth mental health
- have a clearly defined challenge related to youth mental health that you wish to address with a viable advocacy plan.
For more information, visit Orygen.