Article type: Original Research
29 April 2016
Volume 41 Issue 2
Article type: Original Research
29 April 2016
Volume 41 Issue 2
Young Children's Health and Wellbeing Across the Transition to School: A Critical Interpretive Synthesis
Affiliations
1 School of Education, Adelaide, Flinders University, Australia
2 Discipline of Public Health, Adelaide, Flinders University, Australia
3 School of Social and Policy Studies, Adelaide, Flinders University, Australia
Correspondence
* Jennifer Fane
Contributions
Jennifer Fane -
Colin MacDougall -
Gerry Redmond -
Jessie Jovanovic -
Paul Ward -
Jennifer Fane1 *
Colin MacDougall2
Gerry Redmond3
Jessie Jovanovic1
Paul Ward2
Affiliations
1 School of Education, Adelaide, Flinders University, Australia
2 Discipline of Public Health, Adelaide, Flinders University, Australia
3 School of Social and Policy Studies, Adelaide, Flinders University, Australia
Correspondence
* Jennifer Fane
CITATION: Fane J., MacDougall C., Redmond G., Jovanovic J., & Ward P. (2016). Young Children's Health and Wellbeing Across the Transition to School: A Critical Interpretive Synthesis. Children Australia, 41(2), 2020. doi.org/10.1017/cha.2016.4
Abstract
This paper reports on the systematic search and review of the literature relating to the health and wellbeing of young children across the transition to school. It identified 56 papers (including empirical studies, reviews, commentaries, and reports) relevant to the research questions and completed an interpretive systematic review to ascertain the current state of the literature. The review employed the Critical Interpretive Synthesis (CIS) method to allow for a rigorous and systematic review of a disparate literature which stretches across several disciplines. The findings are presented in seven thematic categories: current conceptualisations of health and wellbeing, assessment and measurement, ‘school readiness’, service integration, transition actors, ‘at risk’ children, and child voice. These findings illustrate the ways in which concepts have been constructed, identified, and operationalised in early years research, practice, and policy. Moreover, it highlights that ‘what is known’ can be used to inform the review or implementation of services, practices, and partnerships that support child health and wellbeing during the transition to school.