Past Activities and Events
Beyond the HYPE
Beyond the HYPE was a podcast co-created by the HYPE Project research team and young people involved in the project. The series presents discussion around young people’s health and well-being including the link between physical exercise and health, social welfare issues, discrimination, inequalities and much more!
IOPPN Youth Awards HERON and the Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre 2022
3 awards were offered in the following subjects;
Chemistry, Biology and Psychological Health
Health Inequalities: Sociology, Psychology and Health
Maths, Computer Science and Health
HERON and the Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) provides interdisciplinary skills in public health, primary care, epidemiology, statistics, health economics and social sciences for research and training. The BRC offered three awards. All awards have a specific focus on social problems and psychological health.
IOPPN Youth Awards Summer 2021
Due to the ongoing pandemic, this year we ran an online joint Youth Awards programme across King’s College London’s Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience.
If you would like to read the evaluation and report from the 2021 awards, please click here
47 students received an award in 2021. The awards were hosted online via a series of evening workshops in June, by researchers working on the following topics:
- Neuroimaging
- Women’s Mental Health
- Health and Society
- Psychiatric Genetics
Biomedical Research Centre Youth Awards
The Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) Youth Awards are part of the wider Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN) Youth Awards, established in 2013 and set up by Dr Margaret Heslin. The awards are open to all young people aged 15 to 18 attending schools in South East London. The winners receive a £50 book token and two days of work experience at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King’s College London. HERON took the lead on the development of the BRC Youth Awards programme which aims to encourage young people from the local area to stay in education and develop a career in science, with a specific focus on social problems and psychological health.
For more information and to apply for the award please visit the IoPPN website here.
2019 BRC Youth Award in Chemistry, Biology and Psychological Health (8)
Euan Dadzie-Walker (Ark Globe Academy)
Sehar Fatima (Norbury Manor Business and Enterprise College)
Madiha Jalali (Norbury Manor Business and Enterprise College)
Thi-Hoa Nguyen (St Savoiur’s and St Olave’s)
Racine Morgan (Sydenham School)
Isis Fyffe-Collier (Dunraven Sixth Form)
Awaatif Muktar (Norbury Manor Business and Enterprise College)
Tsion Dawit (Pimlico Academy)
2019 Heron-BRC Youth Award in Sociology, Psychology and Health (5)
Iqra Abdi (Norbury Manor Business and Enterprise College)
Thakia Jahan Azad (Mulberry School)
Adeleye Temilade (Dunraven Sixth Form)
Alisha Osman (Dunraven Sixth Form)
Hamnah Kashif (Norbury Manor Business and Enterprise College)
2019 BRC Youth Award in Maths, Computer Science and Health (3)
Cheryl Adamson-Crete (La Retraite Sixth Form)
XueJun Wang (Harris Academy, Bermondsey)
Marta Sanchez Perez (Ark Globe Academy)
HERON Conference
HERON hosted two conferences , the first in 2014 and another in 2018.
HERON Conference 2018
The 2018 HERON conference included presentations, workshops, discussion, art and more on the theme of ‘current and future directions in health equity research and action’ from researchers, community organisations, and healthcare representatives. The conference took a future-orientated perspective to explore how we can learn from present research and tackle inequalities through future research and action.
Keynote Speakers:
Dr Denese Shervington – Institute of Women and Ethnic Studies, New Orleans, US
Cllr Jacqui Dyer – Black Thrive, London, UK
Dr Rakhee Shah – Association of Young People’s Health, London, UK
HERON Conference 2014
This was the first HERON conference – which included sessions and posters and discussions – provided a forum in which health practitioners, researchers and community members could share their experiences and information in order to further understand inequalities in health and healthcare.
Professor David R William – Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, US
HERON Origami
HERON Origami was launched on World Mental Health Day 2019 at a Maudsley Charity event in south London.
Origami is the Japanese art of folding paper into decorative shapes and figures.
Origami is a great way to help manage stress. It engages both the mind and hands to produce a calming effect.
Following a successful initial workshop, additional workshops were held for staff at King’s College London and for mental health nurses at the South London and Maudsley NHS Trust.
What is SELPh?
South East London Photography (SELPh)’s mission is to use photography so that marginalised groups have the opportunity to represent themselves and voice their opinions to contribute to a dialogue on health and well-being. SELPh’s current main focus is on mental health and wellbeing. Their work is based on photovoice; a participatory research method in which people are given a voice through using photography to communicate issues important to them and to effect change.
Research Methods in School Education (RISE)

RISE (Research methods In School Education) is funded by King’s Widening Participation and was established in 2016 as a collaboration between researchers from HERON and The REACH (Resilience, Ethnicity and AdolesCent mental Health) Study. RISE aims to engage young people on the topic of health inequalities, deliver research methods training and inspire young people to think critically about local community health. By creatively engaging local secondary school and sixth form students currently underrepresented on KCL undergraduate psychology and other health-related programmes, including nursing and medicine, the project also aims to encourage young people to stay in education and develop a career in science and health-related professions. Using a Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR) framework, students from the RISE pilot course contributed to co-producing and improving the intervention so that an effective learning experience could be rolled out more widely in secondary schools and colleges. Please follow the link below to our paper describing and evaluating the process of co-producing RISE using a YPAR approach and the key learning points derived from this process.
Involving young people through co-production and widening participation approaches: Reflections from school-based engagement
RISE 2020
- January-February: RISE are held a 4-week course with Year 9 Psychology students at Harris Girls’ Academy East Dulwich. The course aims to build on the students’ existing knowledge of psychological research by providing illustrative examples of how to apply research methods to real data, relevant to their community.
- January-February 2019: RISE held a 4-week course with Year 9 Psychology students at Harris Girls’ Academy East Dulwich. The course aimed to build on the students’ existing knowledge of psychological research by providing illustrative examples of how to apply research methods to real data, relevant to their community.
- April-June 2019: In the summer term, we ran a 7-week RISE course with A-Level Psychology students at St-Martin-in-the-Field High School for Girls. Students received in-depth research methods training and, at the end of the course, they designed and presented their own research study at a half-day Psychological Research Conference held at the school.
- October – December 2019: RISE held 6 week course at Holy Family School in Walthamstow. Students presented in three teams, and they delivered presentations on the topics of sickle cell disease, perceptions of schizophrenia, and research into substance misuse in young people.
Following the success of the workshop series at CTK Aquinas Sixth Form College in 2016 (see below), HERON was awarded further funding by King’s Widening Participation to run an extended version of the course from September to December 2017. The workshops were incorporated as a 10-week cross-discipline elective module; an official part of the college curriculum as part of CTK’s aim of providing key skills for university and employment. The course consists of 9 one-hour interactive workshops elaborating and extending upon the A-level Sociology and Psychology curricula by teaching research methods in an engaging way. At the end of the course, students were invited to deliver a short presentation on what they learned in front of a panel of academic researchers from KCL. This event was held on the 13th December 2017. All students received certificates and book vouchers for completing the course, and special certificates were awarded for the best group presentation, and best individual speaker.
In August 2016, HERON was awarded funding by King’s Widening Participation to expand on work with local colleges and implement a series of workshops. The educational intervention, RISE, was piloted at Christ The King (CTK) Aquinas Sixth Form College which has a high number of ethnic minority pupils often under-represented in higher education. Using a Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR) framework, students contributed to co-producing and improving the intervention so that an effective learning experience could be rolled out more widely in secondary schools and colleges.
16 students applied and were accepted onto the course which consisted of three 2-hour interactive workshops elaborating and extending upon the A-level Sociology and Psychology curricula by teaching statistics and research methods in an engaging way. Throughout the three workshops, published studies of local community health data, including the South East London Community Health study (SELCoH), were used as illustrative examples of how to apply research methods to real data, relevant to their community. Themes covered a range of health related topics including mental health, illicit drug use, health service use, and discrimination. Using the skills gained from the workshops students used the presented ideas on community health to inspire their own research designs to tackle health problems most important to them. Facilitators mentored four separate groups to prepare their research design for presentation at a final event on the 8th February 2017, where students presented their work to an expert panel of researchers at King’s College London. At the end of each workshop and the final event, researchers collected feedback from students through feedback questionnaires in order to improve the pilot intervention and gauge the success of the public engagement activity. In addition, a focus group was conducted with seven students two weeks after the final event.
The RISE course at CTK was co-presented at the Engaged Learning Conference in Sheffield by RISE members Sanchika Campbell and Dr Stephanie Beards on 6th-7th July 2017. See here for our paper describing and evaluating the process of co-producing RISE using a YPAR approach and the key learning points derived from this process.
On the 26th April 2012, HERON ran interactive workshops with Health and Social Care BTEC (level 3) 1st and 2nd year students at Lambeth College. Titled ‘Understanding inequalities and the impact they have on health: findings from a community sample’, the sessions aimed to disseminate findings from the South East London Community Health Study (SELCoH) and stimulate wider discussion as to what the main factors causing health inequalities may be. The sessions were delivered by SELCoH research assistants, Bwalya Kankulu, Billy Gazard and Natasha Smyth.
The session focused on looking at the socio-demographic and socioeconomic determinants of health inequalities in South East London with the aim to provide:
- An overview of the prevalence of health problems and risk behaviours’ in the community
- An insight into the impact of demographic and socioeconomic factors, such as age, gender, income and education status on health and wellbeing
- An exploration and discussion of what may be the main factors that cause inequalities in health and health service use
What the students say....
Soothsayers Music Workshops
Acclaimed Brixton based band Soothsayers, who’s music combines afrobeat, dub/reggae and jazz – in association with NIHR Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre – offer workshops comprising of learning songs, and taking part in activities that involve quick to learn percussion parts, instrumental parts and singing as a group.
Workshops took place in November 2019 and January 2020.
South East London Photography (SELPh)
What is SELPh?
South East London Photography (SELPh)’s mission is to use photography so that marginalised groups have the opportunity to represent themselves and voice their opinions to contribute to a dialogue on health and well-being. SELPh’s current main focus is on mental health and wellbeing. Their work is based on photovoice; a participatory research method in which people are given a voice through using photography to communicate issues important to them and to effect change.
If you are interested in taking part, or know someone who is, please contact us for more information at [email protected] or visit the group’s website at www.selphgroup.wordpress.com, or click on the button below for all upcoming HERON events.
Interested in running your own photovoice group?
Since photography is an excellent way to capture people’s stories and raise awareness of community health problems, the SELPh team and researchers at the Heath Inequalities
Research Network (HERON) have developed this toolkit to guide other researchers, health
practitioners, service users and community organisations to set up their own photovoice groups and projects.
The SELPh Toolkit aims to:
1. Provide information on setting up your own community photovoice group
2. Outline the process of facilitating a photovoice group
3. Provide a framework for evaluating your photovoice project
The SELPh Toolkit can be downloaded here: SELPh Toolkit
In summer 2019 SELPh ran a course of six workshops, with weekly themes relating to physical health, identity, community, dreams, and mental health generally. This event exhibited photos produced by the group members, who each brought their own unique perspective to these facets of mental health. It was accompanied by a collection of poems and photos from our partner project Spoken Word in the Community Hubs (S.W.I.T.C.H), which explores how to increase arts participation.
We held an exhibition at the HERON Conference 2018, where work of the BRC Youth Award Winners group and the open community members group was showcased.
SELPh exhibitions have taken place to showcase the work of the groups in 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2015 at New Gallery Peckham, 198 Gallery, House Gallery and Photofusion respectively.
SELPh has also collaborated with 4in10, an LGBT service user led group at the Maudsley, hosting exhibitions for LGBT History Month 2014 and Snowfields ward at the Maudsley Hospital.
Spoken Word In The Community Hubs (S.W.I.T.C.H)
In collaboration with Battersea Arts Centre, poet Jemilea Wisdom-Baako of Writerz and Scribez and artist Kay Rufai, S.W.I.T.C.H. was a project aimed at reaching audiences that feel excluded from conventional arts organisations, exploring how to increase arts participation. It involves removing barriers by placing the art in community hubs such as barbershops, youth provisions, salons and restaurants – going to people rather than expecting them to come to us. HERON and the HYPE project are supporting the formative evaluation of S.W.I.T.C.H. to explore whether and why people experiencing community-based projects are more likely to engage with creative arts workshops or events in future.
S.W.I.T.C.H aims to:
- Improve and increase the involvement and engagement of young people in art and culture
- Develop community spaces as venues for showcasing art
- Facilitate a dialogue around barriers to engagement
- Pilot (proof of concept) for further funding to enable expansion of the S.W.I.T.C.H. programme
Following the S.W.I.T.C.H series of activities and events, members from the HERON research team carried out a focus group aimed to understand how artists involved in S.W.I.T.C.H perceived the project. This explored their experiences of, and thoughts about performing in non-conventional spaces, their ideas about existing barriers to engaging with art and how they thought the S.W..I.T.C.H project overcomes these barriers.
Writez and Scribez Remote Workshops
Writerz and Scribez are passionate about using art to reach people during times of chaos and crisis. They do this through community workshops in collaboration with other partner organisations as well as events and poetry groups. They want to still create safe spaces for people to express themselves during this time. Please fill in the survey linked below to receive more information.
Past events and activities:
- Word Up Project – March 2020
- Pupil Referral Unit workshops
- Musician at London Barberhood – 3rd May 2019
- Spoken word street performances on 4th and 5th May 2019
- Community Workshop at BAC 4th May 1-3pm 2019
- Photographer at London Barberhood – 10th May2019
- Exhibition/Showcase at Fresh Ground London 10th May 2019
- Spoken Word at Clean Cuts – 17th May 2019
Jemilea and Kay also commissioned artists to draw images of barbershops/hairdressers which was exhibited on the 10th May at the Showcase and also in Tooting Market alongside photography and spoken word.
For more information on the events above contact:
Jemilea: [email protected] or Kay: [email protected]
United. One For All
United. One For All was a partnership between HERON and three London-based organisations. Each member organisation works with young people and others to engage them in physical activity to support their wellbeing in different ways. This includes:
- Action Youth Boxing Intervention
- 108 Ateliers
- FOCUS CIC
- UP&RUNNING (HERON)
The aims of United. One for All were to raise awareness of the role of physical activity in supporting wellbeing for the mind, body and soul; and, to engage and empower young people collectively to take up, lead, and engage others in physical activity.