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Featured researches published by Sofia Kvist Lindholm.


Research Papers in Education | 2015

Bullying the Meek: A Conceptualisation of Vietnamese School Bullying.

Paul Horton; Sofia Kvist Lindholm; Thu Hang Nguyen

Drawing on ethnographic research conducted at three lower secondary schools in the northern Vietnamese cities of Hanoi and Haiphong, this article provides a contextually nuanced conceptualisation of Vietnamese school bullying. In doing so, the article not only addresses the lack of knowledge about Vietnamese school bullying, but also poses a number of critical questions about how school bullying is more widely understood. The descriptions of school bullying provided by teachers and students in this article suggest that school bullying cannot be reduced to the negative actions and aggressive intentionality that are so often used to define it in the mainstream literature. Instead, these actions are perceived as instruments for bullying that serve a function in the social and institutional context of the school. Furthermore, the descriptions provided by teachers and students challenge the view of meekness (the passive victim) as an individual personal trait. While they suggest that students who are perceived as meek in the social context of the school are most likely to be bullied, they also highlight that some students accede to the demands of their peers in order to escape being subjected to more direct negative actions. The study thus suggests that a key for understanding the role that bullying plays in students’ day-to-day life at school is to acknowledge the function of ‘meekness’ in bullying situations and to thus place more focus on the social and institutional context within which bullying occurs.


Health Promotion Practice | 2015

Upgrading Preschool Environment in a Swedish Municipality Evaluation of an Implementation Process

Carolina Altin; Sofia Kvist Lindholm; Mats Wejdmark; Robert Lättman-Masch; Cecilia Boldemann

Redesigning outdoor preschool environment may favorably affect multiple factors relevant to health and reach many children. Cross-sectional studies in various landscapes at different latitudes have explored the characteristics of preschool outdoor environment considering the play potential triggering combined physical activity and sun-protective behavior due to space, vegetation, and topography. Criteria were pinpointed to upgrade preschool outdoor environment for multiple health outcomes to be applied in local government in charge of public preschools. Purposeful land use policies and administrative management of outdoor land use may serve to monitor the quality of preschool outdoor environments (upgrading and planning). This study evaluates the process of implementing routines for upgrading outdoor preschool environments in a medium-sized municipality, Sweden, 2008-2011, using qualitative and quantitative analysis. Recorded written material (logs and protocols) related to the project was processed using thematic analysis. Quantitative data (m2 flat/multileveled, overgrown/naked surface, and fraction of free visible sky) were analyzed to assess the impact of implementation (surface, topography, greenery integrated in play). The preschool outdoor environments were upgraded accordingly. The quality of implementation was assessed using the theory of policy streams approach. Though long-term impact remains to be confirmed the process seems to have changed work routines in the interior management for purposeful upgrading of preschool outdoor environments. The aptitude and applicability of inexpensive methods for assessing, selecting, and upgrading preschool land at various latitudes, climates, and outdoor play policies (including gender aspects and staff policies) should be further discussed, as well as the compilation of data for monitoring and evaluation.


Advances in school mental health promotion | 2015

Schoolgirls’ perspectives on self-disclosure in a group-based mental health intervention at school: acquiring friends or risking harassment?

Sofia Kvist Lindholm; Karin Zetterqvist Nelson

The article draws on interviews with participants in a psychotherapeutic education programme, called Depression in Swedish Adolescents, which has seen wide distribution within Swedish schools. We d ...The article draws on interviews with participants in a psychotherapeutic education programme, called Depression in Swedish Adolescents, which has seen wide distribution within Swedish schools. We demonstrate how, in their accounts, self-disclosure in front of classmates is made into a central and both positive and problematic aspect of the programme. Sharing private matters in a group setting consisting of classmates might strengthen their interpersonal relations; but at the same time, it carries the risk of triggering already ongoing destructive interactions such as bullying and harassment. Voluntary participation, group composition and paying attention to how members respond to one another and make use of the private information shared stand out as important criteria to consider. However, in order to meet these criteria, an intervention involving self-disclosure in front of classmates needs to challenge the tradition in school of practising mandatory participation, as well as the class structures with their predefined group composition.


Ethnography and Education | 2017

Students’ reproduction and transformation of norms incorporated into a programme for social and emotional learning

Sofia Kvist Lindholm

ABSTRACT The present ethnographic study aims to explore how students reproduce and make use of a programme for social and emotional learning to create their own moral orders and routines for interaction in their local school context. The study demonstrates that the students made use of routines and norms conveyed by the programme to negatively position and exclude peers as well as to reproduce discourses of ‘blaming the victim’. The results highlight the inappropriateness of implementing a programme that strips emotions and behaviours of their meaning and that fails to situate emotions within students’ actual social and cultural contexts. The study demonstrates how such an approach relocates the responsibility for dealing with socially and culturally situated problems to the individual and denies teachers the opportunity to respond to problematic situations that give rise to emotions of anger and that emerge in social and cultural contexts at school.The present ethnographic study aims to explore how students reproduce and make use of a programme for social and emotional learning to create their own moral orders and routines for interaction in ...


Children & Society | 2015

“Apparently I've Got Low Self-Esteem”: Schoolgirls' Perspectives On a School-Based Public Health Intervention

Sofia Kvist Lindholm; Karin Zetterqvist Nelson


Archive | 2015

The Paradoxes of Socio-Emotional Programmes in School : Young people’s perspectives and public health discourses

Sofia Kvist Lindholm


Svenska Dagbladet | 2015

DISA är ett problematiskt verktyg i skolan

Anette Wickström; Sofia Kvist Lindholm; Karin Zetterqvist Nelson


Svenska Dagbladet | 2015

Fel förstärka negativa tankar hos unga

Anette Wickström; Sofia Kvist Lindholm; Karin Zetterqvist Nelson


SocialPolitik | 2015

Elever tvingas leta efter negativa tankar : Forskare kritiserar program som används i skolan

Anette Wickström; Sofia Kvist Lindholm; Karin Zetterqvist Nelson


Socialmedicinsk tidskrift | 2013

Uppgradering av förskolemiljöer i Nynäshamn. Utvärdering av en implementeringsprocess

Carolina Altin; Cecilia Boldemann; Sofia Kvist Lindholm

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