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HMS, HIC 2012 HSC 29b

Assess the skills that enable young people to attain better health.   (12 marks)

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Assessment Statement

  • Individual health skills are highly effective in enabling young people to attain better health outcomes.
  • Assessment demonstrates significant value in developing self-efficacy, health literacy and resilience as primary factors for health improvement.

Self-efficacy and Resilience

  • Self-efficacy demonstrates strong effectiveness in empowering young people to make positive health decisions and maintain long-term behavioural changes.
  • Young people with high self-belief successfully manage stress, resist peer pressure and maintain healthy behaviours despite external challenges.
  • Evidence shows adolescents with developed self-efficacy achieve higher physical activity levels and better nutritional choices compared to those lacking confidence in their abilities.
      
  • Resilience produces substantial results in helping young people recover from health challenges and setbacks while building emotional strength.
  • Resilient teenagers effectively cope with mental health issues, family problems and academic stress without resorting to harmful behaviours such as substance abuse or self-harm.
  • Research indicates resilient youth demonstrate lower rates of depression and substance abuse across various socioeconomic backgrounds.

Health Literacy and Help-seeking

  • Health literacy shows considerable impact on young people’s ability to access, understand and interpret complex health information from multiple sources.
  • Students with strong health literacy skills make informed decisions about sexual health, nutrition and mental wellbeing while critically evaluating health information.
  • They effectively navigate healthcare systems and understand preventive health measures including vaccination and screening programs.
      
  • Help-seeking behaviours demonstrate high practical value when young people face health challenges requiring professional intervention or support.
  • Those comfortable seeking support from trusted adults, school counsellors or health professionals receive early intervention for emerging problems.
  • This prevents minor issues from developing into serious health conditions requiring intensive treatment and long-term management.

Overall Assessment

  • Assessment reveals excellent overall effectiveness of individual health skills in promoting better health outcomes for young Australians.
  • The combined development of multiple skills creates comprehensive protection against health risks while enabling proactive health management throughout adolescence and into adulthood.
Show Worked Solution

Assessment Statement

  • Individual health skills are highly effective in enabling young people to attain better health outcomes.
  • Assessment demonstrates significant value in developing self-efficacy, health literacy and resilience as primary factors for health improvement.

Self-efficacy and Resilience

  • Self-efficacy demonstrates strong effectiveness in empowering young people to make positive health decisions and maintain long-term behavioural changes.
  • Young people with high self-belief successfully manage stress, resist peer pressure and maintain healthy behaviours despite external challenges.
  • Evidence shows adolescents with developed self-efficacy achieve higher physical activity levels and better nutritional choices compared to those lacking confidence in their abilities.
      
  • Resilience produces substantial results in helping young people recover from health challenges and setbacks while building emotional strength.
  • Resilient teenagers effectively cope with mental health issues, family problems and academic stress without resorting to harmful behaviours such as substance abuse or self-harm.
  • Research indicates resilient youth demonstrate lower rates of depression and substance abuse across various socioeconomic backgrounds.

Health Literacy and Help-seeking

  • Health literacy shows considerable impact on young people’s ability to access, understand and interpret complex health information from multiple sources.
  • Students with strong health literacy skills make informed decisions about sexual health, nutrition and mental wellbeing while critically evaluating health information.
  • They effectively navigate healthcare systems and understand preventive health measures including vaccination and screening programs.
      
  • Help-seeking behaviours demonstrate high practical value when young people face health challenges requiring professional intervention or support.
  • Those comfortable seeking support from trusted adults, school counsellors or health professionals receive early intervention for emerging problems.
  • This prevents minor issues from developing into serious health conditions requiring intensive treatment and long-term management.

Overall Assessment

  • Assessment reveals excellent overall effectiveness of individual health skills in promoting better health outcomes for young Australians.
  • The combined development of multiple skills creates comprehensive protection against health risks while enabling proactive health management throughout adolescence and into adulthood.

♦♦♦♦ Mean mark 34%.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 5, Band 6, smc-5511-40-Skills application/impact

HMS, HIC 2013 HSC 29a

Explain the risk and protective factors associated with ONE health issue affecting young people.   (8 marks)

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  • Mental health issues among young people result from complex interactions between multiple risk and protective factors that influence psychological wellbeing.
  • Risk factors are circumstances that increase the likelihood of developing mental health problems. Social media exposure creates unrealistic comparisons and cyberbullying experiences that trigger anxiety and depression. Academic pressure produces chronic stress leading to overwhelm and reduced self-esteem. Family conflict generates unstable home environments that contribute to emotional distress. Substance use compounds existing vulnerabilities by affecting brain development and decision-making capabilities. Social isolation removes essential support networks, resulting in increased loneliness and reduced coping mechanisms.
  • Protective factors strengthen resilience and reduce vulnerability to mental health issues. Strong family relationships provide emotional security and unconditional support that buffers against external stressors. Peer connections offer belonging and understanding that helps young people navigate challenges. Physical activity releases endorphins that improve mood and reduce stress hormones. Effective coping strategies like mindfulness enable emotional regulation and stress management. School counselling services provide professional support and early intervention that prevents escalation of mental health concerns.
  • The interplay between risk and protective factors determines individual outcomes, with protective factors capable of moderating the impact of risk factors when present in sufficient strength and number.
Show Worked Solution
  • Mental health issues among young people result from complex interactions between multiple risk and protective factors that influence psychological wellbeing.
  • Risk factors are circumstances that increase the likelihood of developing mental health problems. Social media exposure creates unrealistic comparisons and cyberbullying experiences that trigger anxiety and depression. Academic pressure produces chronic stress leading to overwhelm and reduced self-esteem. Family conflict generates unstable home environments that contribute to emotional distress. Substance use compounds existing vulnerabilities by affecting brain development and decision-making capabilities. Social isolation removes essential support networks, resulting in increased loneliness and reduced coping mechanisms.
  • Protective factors strengthen resilience and reduce vulnerability to mental health issues. Strong family relationships provide emotional security and unconditional support that buffers against external stressors. Peer connections offer belonging and understanding that helps young people navigate challenges. Physical activity releases endorphins that improve mood and reduce stress hormones. Effective coping strategies like mindfulness enable emotional regulation and stress management. School counselling services provide professional support and early intervention that prevents escalation of mental health concerns.
  • The interplay between risk and protective factors determines individual outcomes, with protective factors capable of moderating the impact of risk factors when present in sufficient strength and number.

♦♦ Mean mark 48%.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 5, smc-5511-20-Health management

HMS, HIC 2015 HSC 29b

To what extent can young people enjoy better health by developing their resilience, coping and health literacy skills?   (12 marks)

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Judgment Statement

  • Young people can achieve significantly better health by developing resilience, coping and health literacy skills.
  • Effectiveness will however, depend on individual circumstances and support systems.

Resilience and Coping Benefits

  • Evidence supporting this includes resilience enabling young people to bounce back from setbacks and maintain positive mental health during challenging developmental periods.
  • One major reason why these skills prove effective is their ability to significantly reduce anxiety and depression rates among adolescents facing academic pressure or complex family difficulties.
  • For instance, young people with strong coping strategies use problem-solving techniques and seek appropriate support rather than turning to harmful behaviours like substance use or self-harm.
      
  • Resilience training programs in schools demonstrate measurable improvements in student wellbeing and academic performance across diverse populations.
  • The main factors supporting this include enhanced emotional regulation, improved social connections and increased help-seeking behaviours when problems arise.
  • This demonstrates that coping skills provide practical tools for managing stress before it negatively impacts physical and mental health.

Health Literacy Impact

  • Health literacy significantly enhances young people’s ability to make informed decisions about their wellbeing because it enables critical evaluation of health information from multiple sources including healthcare providers.
  • However, it is important to consider that digital age challenges include distinguishing reliable health websites from misleading social media content and peer influences.
      
  • An alternative perspective is that health literacy alone proves insufficient without supportive family and community environments that encourage healthy choices.
  • Despite this, young people with strong health literacy skills demonstrate better nutrition choices, increased physical activity participation and more responsible sexual health decisions throughout adolescence.

Reaffirmation

  • The evidence indicates that developing these skills creates substantial health improvements for young people.
  • While individual and environmental factors influence effectiveness, the combination of resilience, coping strategies and health literacy provides essential foundations for lifelong health and wellbeing.
Show Worked Solution

Judgment Statement

  • Young people can achieve significantly better health by developing resilience, coping and health literacy skills.
  • Effectiveness will however, depend on individual circumstances and support systems.

Resilience and Coping Benefits

  • Evidence supporting this includes resilience enabling young people to bounce back from setbacks and maintain positive mental health during challenging developmental periods.
  • One major reason why these skills prove effective is their ability to significantly reduce anxiety and depression rates among adolescents facing academic pressure or complex family difficulties.
  • For instance, young people with strong coping strategies use problem-solving techniques and seek appropriate support rather than turning to harmful behaviours like substance use or self-harm.
      
  • Resilience training programs in schools demonstrate measurable improvements in student wellbeing and academic performance across diverse populations.
  • The main factors supporting this include enhanced emotional regulation, improved social connections and increased help-seeking behaviours when problems arise.
  • This demonstrates that coping skills provide practical tools for managing stress before it negatively impacts physical and mental health.

Health Literacy Impact

  • Health literacy significantly enhances young people’s ability to make informed decisions about their wellbeing because it enables critical evaluation of health information from multiple sources including healthcare providers.
  • However, it is important to consider that digital age challenges include distinguishing reliable health websites from misleading social media content and peer influences.
      
  • An alternative perspective is that health literacy alone proves insufficient without supportive family and community environments that encourage healthy choices.
  • Despite this, young people with strong health literacy skills demonstrate better nutrition choices, increased physical activity participation and more responsible sexual health decisions throughout adolescence.

Reaffirmation

  • The evidence indicates that developing these skills creates substantial health improvements for young people.
  • While individual and environmental factors influence effectiveness, the combination of resilience, coping strategies and health literacy provides essential foundations for lifelong health and wellbeing.

♦♦♦♦ Mean mark 39%.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, Band 5, smc-5511-40-Skills application/impact

HMS, HIC 2015 HSC 29a

How do perceptions of self-identity and self-worth affect the health of young people?   (8 marks)

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Overview Statement

  • Self-identity and self-worth perceptions fundamentally influence young people’s health choices and wellbeing outcomes through their direct impact on mental health stability and health-protective behaviours.

Self-Identity and Health Behaviours

  • Young people’s self-identity formation determines their health-related decision-making patterns because identity shapes personal values and lifestyle choices.
  • This occurs when adolescents who identify as athletes prioritise physical fitness and nutrition to maintain their self-image.
  • Conversely, those experiencing identity confusion may engage in risky behaviours like substance use to fit perceived social expectations or rebel against authority figures.
  • The underlying reason is that self-identity provides the framework through which young people interpret health information and make behavioural choices.

Self-Worth and Mental Health

  • Low self-worth directly contributes to increased rates of anxiety, depression and self-harm among young people because negative self-perception creates ongoing feelings of inadequacy and hopelessness.
  • This results in social withdrawal, poor academic performance and reduced help-seeking behaviours when health problems arise.
  • However, positive self-worth enables resilience against peer pressure and supports healthy coping strategies during stressful periods.

Health Impact Integration

  • Therefore, both self-identity and self-worth work together to shape young people’s health outcomes because they influence daily decisions about exercise, nutrition and risk-taking behaviours.
  • This shows how psychological wellbeing connects directly to physical health through the choices young people make about their lifestyle and relationships.
Show Worked Solution

Overview Statement

  • Self-identity and self-worth perceptions fundamentally influence young people’s health choices and wellbeing outcomes through their direct impact on mental health stability and health-protective behaviours.

Self-Identity and Health Behaviours

  • Young people’s self-identity formation determines their health-related decision-making patterns because identity shapes personal values and lifestyle choices.
  • This occurs when adolescents who identify as athletes prioritise physical fitness and nutrition to maintain their self-image.
  • Conversely, those experiencing identity confusion may engage in risky behaviours like substance use to fit perceived social expectations or rebel against authority figures.
  • The underlying reason is that self-identity provides the framework through which young people interpret health information and make behavioural choices.

Self-Worth and Mental Health

  • Low self-worth directly contributes to increased rates of anxiety, depression and self-harm among young people because negative self-perception creates ongoing feelings of inadequacy and hopelessness.
  • This results in social withdrawal, poor academic performance and reduced help-seeking behaviours when health problems arise.
  • However, positive self-worth enables resilience against peer pressure and supports healthy coping strategies during stressful periods.

Health Impact Integration

  • Therefore, both self-identity and self-worth work together to shape young people’s health outcomes because they influence daily decisions about exercise, nutrition and risk-taking behaviours.
  • This shows how psychological wellbeing connects directly to physical health through the choices young people make about their lifestyle and relationships.

♦♦ Mean mark 51%.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, Band 5, smc-5511-10-Personal empowerment

HMS, HIC 2019 HSC 32a

  1. Why are health promotion strategies more effective when they focus on skills, education and prevention?   (4 marks)

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  2. Explain how intersectoral collaboration has increased the potential for success of ONE health promotion strategy for a population group experiencing inequity.   (4 marks)

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i.    Sample Answer

  • Skills development enables individuals to make informed health decisions throughout their lives. This occurs because teaching practical skills like reading food labels empowers people to choose healthier options independently. For example, cooking skills help young people prepare nutritious meals rather than relying on processed foods.
  • Education increases health literacy and understanding of risk factors affecting wellbeing. This leads to better decision-making about lifestyle choices. Health education programs in schools teach students about the effects of substance use, enabling them to make informed choices about alcohol, smoking and drugs.
  • Prevention strategies are more cost-effective than treating diseases after they develop. This happens because preventing chronic conditions like diabetes costs less than ongoing medical treatment. Prevention programs focus on addressing risk factors early, reducing the burden on healthcare systems and improving quality of life.

ii.   Sample Answer

  • The National Tobacco Strategy demonstrates effective intersectoral collaboration for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Commonwealth, state and territory governments work together with Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations to reduce smoking rates.
  • Government legislation creates supportive policy environments through plain packaging laws and increased tobacco taxation. This combines with community-based smoking cessation programs delivered by Aboriginal health workers in local communities using culturally appropriate approachess.
  • This collaboration increases success potential because it addresses multiple levels simultaneously. Policy changes reduce tobacco appeal while community programs provide culturally safe support and education. The combined approach leads to greater smoking reduction than individual strategies working alone.

Show Worked Solution

i.    Sample Answer

  • Skills development enables individuals to make informed health decisions throughout their lives. This occurs because teaching practical skills like reading food labels empowers people to choose healthier options independently. For example, cooking skills help young people prepare nutritious meals rather than relying on processed foods.
  • Education increases health literacy and understanding of risk factors affecting wellbeing. This leads to better decision-making about lifestyle choices. Health education programs in schools teach students about the effects of substance use, enabling them to make informed choices about alcohol, smoking and drugs.
  • Prevention strategies are more cost-effective than treating diseases after they develop. This happens because preventing chronic conditions like diabetes costs less than ongoing medical treatment. Prevention programs focus on addressing risk factors early, reducing the burden on healthcare systems and improving quality of life.

ii.   Sample Answer

  • The National Tobacco Strategy demonstrates effective intersectoral collaboration for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Commonwealth, state and territory governments work together with Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations to reduce smoking rates.
  • Government legislation creates supportive policy environments through plain packaging laws and increased tobacco taxation. This combines with community-based smoking cessation programs delivered by Aboriginal health workers in local communities using culturally appropriate approachess.
  • This collaboration increases success potential because it addresses multiple levels simultaneously. Policy changes reduce tobacco appeal while community programs provide culturally safe support and education. The combined approach leads to greater smoking reduction than individual strategies working alone.

♦♦♦ Mean mark 42%.

Filed Under: Individual, organisational and community advocacy, Models of health promotion, Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, Band 5, smc-5510-10-ATSI model, smc-5512-10-Advocacy over time

HMS, HIC 2020 HSC 28b

Analyse how young people can attain better health by developing connectedness, resilience and coping skills, and health literacy skills.   (12 marks)

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Overview Statement:

  • Connectedness, resilience and coping skills, and health literacy work together to help young people overcome health challenges.
  • These skills combine to address mental health issues, substance use, and risk-taking behaviours that commonly affect youth populations.

Component Relationship 1:

  • Connectedness directly influences young people’s mental health outcomes through social support networks and meaningful relationships. This occurs because strong family relationships and peer connections provide emotional stability during adolescent transitions and identity formation.
  • A young person with close friendships experiences reduced isolation and gains access to help-seeking opportunities when facing difficulties. This relationship demonstrates that connectedness can prevent suicide ideation and promotes positive identity development through belonging.
  • Therefore, young people who maintain strong social bonds are more likely to seek help during crisis periods and develop healthier coping mechanisms for stress management.
  • Additionally, connected youth demonstrate lower rates of substance abuse and engage more frequently in protective health behaviours.

Component Relationship 2:

  • Health literacy skills enable young people to make informed decisions about substance use, sexual health and mental wellbeing. This works by providing knowledge about risks, protective strategies and available health services.
  • A health-literate teenager can evaluate information about alcohol effects and choose safer consumption levels or abstinence. This interaction connects to resilience development as young people learn to resist peer pressure through informed decision-making and critical thinking.
  • The significance is that health literacy empowers young people to navigate complex health information and apply evidence-based strategies to their lifestyle choices.
  • Furthermore, health-literate youth demonstrate improved help-seeking behaviours and utilise appropriate health services more effectively.

Implications and Synthesis:

  • These skills work as an integrated system where connectedness provides support networks, resilience offers coping capacity during challenges and health literacy supplies knowledge for informed decision-making.
  • The broader implication is that developing all three areas creates comprehensive protection against youth health risks and enables sustainable wellbeing throughout adolescence and into adulthood.
Show Worked Solution

Overview Statement:

  • Connectedness, resilience and coping skills, and health literacy work together to help young people overcome health challenges.
  • These skills combine to address mental health issues, substance use, and risk-taking behaviours that commonly affect youth populations.

Component Relationship 1:

  • Connectedness directly influences young people’s mental health outcomes through social support networks and meaningful relationships. This occurs because strong family relationships and peer connections provide emotional stability during adolescent transitions and identity formation.
  • A young person with close friendships experiences reduced isolation and gains access to help-seeking opportunities when facing difficulties. This relationship demonstrates that connectedness can prevent suicide ideation and promotes positive identity development through belonging.
  • Therefore, young people who maintain strong social bonds are more likely to seek help during crisis periods and develop healthier coping mechanisms for stress management.
  • Additionally, connected youth demonstrate lower rates of substance abuse and engage more frequently in protective health behaviours.

Component Relationship 2:

  • Health literacy skills enable young people to make informed decisions about substance use, sexual health and mental wellbeing. This works by providing knowledge about risks, protective strategies and available health services.
  • A health-literate teenager can evaluate information about alcohol effects and choose safer consumption levels or abstinence. This interaction connects to resilience development as young people learn to resist peer pressure through informed decision-making and critical thinking.
  • The significance is that health literacy empowers young people to navigate complex health information and apply evidence-based strategies to their lifestyle choices.
  • Furthermore, health-literate youth demonstrate improved help-seeking behaviours and utilise appropriate health services more effectively.

Implications and Synthesis:

  • These skills work as an integrated system where connectedness provides support networks, resilience offers coping capacity during challenges and health literacy supplies knowledge for informed decision-making.
  • The broader implication is that developing all three areas creates comprehensive protection against youth health risks and enables sustainable wellbeing throughout adolescence and into adulthood.

♦♦ Mean mark 52%.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 5, smc-5511-40-Skills application/impact

HMS, HIC 2022 HSC 27b

To what extent can a young person's health be affected by developmental aspects?   (12 marks)

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Judgment Statement

  • Developmental aspects significantly affect young people’s health, with the development of individual strengthening skills creating both opportunities and challenges that fundamentally shape health outcomes throughout adolescence.

Development of Individual Strengthening Skills

  • Young people’s developing self-efficacy creates confidence in their ability to make healthy choices and manage challenging situations.
  • Health literacy development enables better understanding of health information and decision-making about personal wellbeing. However, limited health literacy can result in poor choices regarding nutrition, exercise and substance use.
  • Help-seeking behaviours develop gradually as young people learn to access appropriate support systems.
  • Problem-solving skills strengthen during adolescence, allowing young people to navigate complex health challenges more effectively.
  • This cognitive development demonstrates how individual strengthening skills directly impact health outcomes.

Resilience and Coping Development

  • Growth of resilience enables young people to “bounce back” from adversity and maintain mental health during stressful periods. Coping strategies evolve as adolescents learn to manage emotions, stress, and peer pressure more effectively.
  • Sense of purpose development provides direction and motivation for healthy lifestyle choices and future planning.
  • Ethical behaviour formation influences decision-making about risky activities including substance use and sexual behaviour.
  • Building connectedness creates supportive relationships that protect against mental health issues and promote positive health behaviours. However, lack of connectedness can lead to social isolation and increased vulnerability to mental health problems.

Integration of Developmental Skills

  • These individual strengthening skills interact to create comprehensive health protection mechanisms. Self-efficacy combined with health literacy enables informed decision-making, whilst resilience paired with effective coping strategies provides emotional stability during challenging developmental transitions.

Reaffirmation

  • Evidence confirms that developmental aspects substantially affect young people’s health through the acquisition of individual strengthening skills. The development of self-efficacy, health literacy, resilience, and connectedness creates both significant opportunities and challenges requiring supportive environments.

Show Worked Solution

Judgment Statement

  • Developmental aspects significantly affect young people’s health, with the development of individual strengthening skills creating both opportunities and challenges that fundamentally shape health outcomes throughout adolescence.

Development of Individual Strengthening Skills

  • Young people’s developing self-efficacy creates confidence in their ability to make healthy choices and manage challenging situations.
  • Health literacy development enables better understanding of health information and decision-making about personal wellbeing. However, limited health literacy can result in poor choices regarding nutrition, exercise and substance use.
  • Help-seeking behaviours develop gradually as young people learn to access appropriate support systems.
  • Problem-solving skills strengthen during adolescence, allowing young people to navigate complex health challenges more effectively.
  • This cognitive development demonstrates how individual strengthening skills directly impact health outcomes.

Resilience and Coping Development

  • Growth of resilience enables young people to “bounce back” from adversity and maintain mental health during stressful periods. Coping strategies evolve as adolescents learn to manage emotions, stress, and peer pressure more effectively.
  • Sense of purpose development provides direction and motivation for healthy lifestyle choices and future planning.
  • Ethical behaviour formation influences decision-making about risky activities including substance use and sexual behaviour.
  • Building connectedness creates supportive relationships that protect against mental health issues and promote positive health behaviours. However, lack of connectedness can lead to social isolation and increased vulnerability to mental health problems.

Integration of Developmental Skills

  • These individual strengthening skills interact to create comprehensive health protection mechanisms. Self-efficacy combined with health literacy enables informed decision-making, whilst resilience paired with effective coping strategies provides emotional stability during challenging developmental transitions.

Reaffirmation

  • Evidence confirms that developmental aspects substantially affect young people’s health through the acquisition of individual strengthening skills. The development of self-efficacy, health literacy, resilience, and connectedness creates both significant opportunities and challenges requiring supportive environments.

♦♦ Mean mark 27%.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 6, smc-5511-40-Skills application/impact

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 444

Analyse how cultural identity and traditional practices protect and promote the mental health and wellbeing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people.   (8 marks)

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*Recommended words/phrases to convey relationships and implications are bolded.

Overview Statement

  • Cultural identity and traditional practices strengthen mental health through three key pathways: creating belonging, providing healing methods, and fostering community connections.
  • These factors create holistic wellbeing systems for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (ATSI) young people.

Cultural Identity and Belonging 

  • Strong cultural identity promotes strong mental health in an individual by providing purpose and cultural connection.
  • When young people participate in ceremonies and learn traditional languages, this prevents the isolation that leads to mental health challenges
  • Research reveals Aboriginal youth engaged in cultural activities exhibit much higher self-esteem than disconnected peers.
  • This indicates that cultural grounding functions as protective armour against psychological distress.
  • Therefore, identity directly influences resilience by creating unshakeable foundations of self-worth.
  • This pattern shows that culture acts as a primary prevention for mental health issues.

Traditional Healing and Community Support

  • Traditional practices complement Western mental health services by providing culturally authentic healing methods.
  • Smoking ceremonies and Elder mentorship enable trauma processing that resonates with Indigenous worldviews.
  • Young people accessing both traditional and contemporary support demonstrate better recovery rates.
  • Consequently, dual approaches are important as they create healthcare that addresses both spiritual and psychological needs.

Implications and Synthesis

  • These interconnected relationships create a protective framework that is unique to Indigenous cultures.
  • This analysis indicates mental health programs are most effective when they incorporate cultural elements.
  • The significance is that strengthening cultural connections results in measurable mental health improvements.
  • Supporting traditional practices therefore represents essential public health strategy for Indigenous youth wellbeing.
Show Worked Solution

*Recommended words/phrases to convey relationships and implications are bolded.

Overview Statement

  • Cultural identity and traditional practices strengthen mental health through three key pathways: creating belonging, providing healing methods, and fostering community connections.
  • These factors create holistic wellbeing systems for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (ATSI) young people.

Cultural Identity and Belonging 

  • Strong cultural identity promotes strong mental health in an individual by providing purpose and cultural connection.
  • When young people participate in ceremonies and learn traditional languages, this prevents the isolation that leads to mental health challenges
  • Research reveals Aboriginal youth engaged in cultural activities exhibit much higher self-esteem than disconnected peers.
  • This indicates that cultural grounding functions as protective armour against psychological distress.
  • Therefore, identity directly influences resilience by creating unshakeable foundations of self-worth.
  • This pattern shows that culture acts as a primary prevention for mental health issues.

Traditional Healing and Community Support

  • Traditional practices complement Western mental health services by providing culturally authentic healing methods.
  • Smoking ceremonies and Elder mentorship enable trauma processing that resonates with Indigenous worldviews.
  • Young people accessing both traditional and contemporary support demonstrate better recovery rates.
  • Consequently, dual approaches are important as they create healthcare that addresses both spiritual and psychological needs.

Implications and Synthesis

  • These interconnected relationships create a protective framework that is unique to Indigenous cultures.
  • This analysis indicates mental health programs are most effective when they incorporate cultural elements.
  • The significance is that strengthening cultural connections results in measurable mental health improvements.
  • Supporting traditional practices therefore represents essential public health strategy for Indigenous youth wellbeing.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 5, Band 6, smc-5511-40-Skills application/impact

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 443

To what extent does developing multiple individual strengthening skills, help young people address complex health challenges such as balancing academic pressure with maintaining physical and mental wellbeing?   (6 marks)

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*Recommended language to consider for “To What Extent” questions is bolded in the answer below.

Judgment Statement

  • Multiple strengthening skills significantly help young people manage complex health challenges.
  • Evidence shows integrated skills create comprehensive solutions for academic and wellbeing balance.

Integrated Skill Effectiveness

  • Evidence supporting this includes problem-solving skills enabling systematic approaches to competing demands.
  • One major reason why this works is that young people with time management and stress-reduction techniques show moderately higher wellbeing during exam periods.
  • Coping strategies combined with clear purpose help maintain exercise routines despite increased life stressors.
  • This demonstrates that multiple skills working together significantly outperform single approaches.
  • An alternative perspective is that single focused skills might be easier to master, but evidence shows integrated approaches prove more effective.

Limitations in Extreme Situations

  • However, it is important to consider that extreme academic pressure can overwhelm even strong skill sets.
  • Some students with excellent skills still experience burnout during HSC preparation.
  • Despite this, multiple skills remain the stronger factor because they provide options when one approach fails.
  • Students with diverse skills recover faster from setbacks, largely due to their ability to switch strategies.

Reaffirmation

  • Evidence confirms multiple strengthening skills significantly enhance young people’s capacity for balance.
  • The main factors supporting this include integrated problem-solving and healthy coping.
  • This implies schools should only minimally focus on single skills and instead prioritise teaching diverse skill sets.
  • Developing multiple skills creates resilient young people who thrive academically while maintaining wellbeing.
Show Worked Solution

*Recommended language to consider for “To What Extent” questions is bolded in the answer below.

Judgment Statement

  • Multiple strengthening skills significantly help young people manage complex health challenges.
  • Evidence shows integrated skills create comprehensive solutions for academic and wellbeing balance.

Integrated Skill Effectiveness

  • Evidence supporting this includes problem-solving skills enabling systematic approaches to competing demands.
  • One major reason why this works is that young people with time management and stress-reduction techniques show moderately higher wellbeing during exam periods.
  • Coping strategies combined with clear purpose help maintain exercise routines despite increased life stressors.
  • This demonstrates that multiple skills working together significantly outperform single approaches.
  • An alternative perspective is that single focused skills might be easier to master, but evidence shows integrated approaches prove more effective.

Limitations in Extreme Situations

  • However, it is important to consider that extreme academic pressure can overwhelm even strong skill sets.
  • Some students with excellent skills still experience burnout during HSC preparation.
  • Despite this, multiple skills remain the stronger factor because they provide options when one approach fails.
  • Students with diverse skills recover faster from setbacks, largely due to their ability to switch strategies.

Reaffirmation

  • Evidence confirms multiple strengthening skills significantly enhance young people’s capacity for balance.
  • The main factors supporting this include integrated problem-solving and healthy coping.
  • This implies schools should only minimally focus on single skills and instead prioritise teaching diverse skill sets.
  • Developing multiple skills creates resilient young people who thrive academically while maintaining wellbeing.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, Band 5, smc-5511-40-Skills application/impact

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 442

Outline how combining health literacy with social connectedness can enhance young people's ability to make informed health decisions.   (3 marks)

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  • Health literacy provides knowledge about health risks and protective factors, while social connectedness offers trusted networks for discussing and validating health information.
  • Connected relationships enable young people to share reliable health resources and learn from others’ experiences, expanding their health knowledge base.
  • Social support networks provide encouragement and accountability for maintaining healthy behaviours, making it easier to apply health literacy knowledge in practical situations.
Show Worked Solution
  • Health literacy provides knowledge about health risks and protective factors, while social connectedness offers trusted networks for discussing and validating health information.
  • Connected relationships enable young people to share reliable health resources and learn from others’ experiences, expanding their health knowledge base.
  • Social support networks provide encouragement and accountability for maintaining healthy behaviours, making it easier to apply health literacy knowledge in practical situations.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, smc-5511-40-Skills application/impact

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 441

Analyse how strong community connectedness can influence young people to make ethical choices that benefit both individual and collective wellbeing.   (8 marks)

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*Language that helps to highlight relationships and draw out implications is bolded throughout the answer below.

Overview Statement

  • Community connectedness shapes ethical decision-making through social accountability, positive role models, and sense of belonging
  • These components influence young people’s choices creating mutual benefits for individuals and communities

Social Accountability

  • Strong community bonds connect to ethical behaviour through awareness of how actions affect others
  • When young people feel accountable, this leads to careful consideration before acting.
  • This reveals that caring relationships prevent selfish choices.
  • Therefore, social accountability can help transform decisions into collective considerations.

Role Models and Belonging

  • Positive role models directly influence ethical development through observation and imitation.
  • For example, sports coaches demonstrating fair play enable young athletes to adopt similar standards.
  • Simultaneously, a sense of belonging can motivate ethical choices to protect community reputation.
  • Young people who feel they belong contribute through volunteering and service.
  • This pattern shows belonging creates emotional investment in collective wellbeing.
  • Consequently, young people make choices that show they value their community.

Implications and Synthesis

  • Community and role model relationships form an ethical ecosystem supporting youth development.
  • This analysis demonstrates how individual wellbeing can thrive when supported by strong collective ethical standards.
  • Therefore, investing in community programs is critical as it cultivates ethical development that benefits both young people and their communities
  • The significance is that strong connectedness enables young people to become ethical citizens who balance personal needs with community benefit.
Show Worked Solution

*Good words/phrases to convey relationships and implications are bolded.

Overview Statement

  • Community connectedness shapes ethical decision-making through social accountability, positive role models, and sense of belonging
  • These components influence young people’s choices creating mutual benefits for individuals and communities

Social Accountability

  • Strong community bonds connect to ethical behaviour through awareness of how actions affect others
  • When young people feel accountable, this leads to careful consideration before acting.
  • This reveals that caring relationships prevent selfish choices.
  • Therefore, social accountability can help transform decisions into collective considerations.

Role Models and Belonging

  • Positive role models directly influence ethical development through observation and imitation.
  • For example, sports coaches demonstrating fair play enable young athletes to adopt similar standards.
  • Simultaneously, a sense of belonging can motivate ethical choices to protect community reputation.
  • Young people who feel they belong contribute through volunteering and service.
  • This pattern shows belonging creates emotional investment in collective wellbeing.
  • Consequently, young people make choices that show they value their community.

Implications and Synthesis

  • Community and role model relationships form an ethical ecosystem supporting youth development.
  • This analysis demonstrates how individual wellbeing can thrive when supported by strong collective ethical standards.
  • Therefore, investing in community programs is critical as it cultivates ethical development that benefits both young people and their communities
  • The significance is that strong connectedness enables young people to become ethical citizens who balance personal needs with community benefit.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, Band 5, smc-5511-30-Social connection/ethics

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 440

Explain how ethical behaviour contributes to building positive relationships and community connectedness among young people.   (5 marks)

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ANSWER STYLE #1: General Points to use within student-chosen answer structure

*Language highlighting the cause-effect relationship is bolded in the answer below.

  • Ethical behaviour, like honesty and keeping promises, builds trust because it proves young people are reliable and respectful. This leads to stronger friendships and peer support networks.
  • When young people consider others’ wellbeing in their decisions, this causes everyone to feel valued and included, thereby creating communities where diverse individuals connect meaningfully.
  • Acting ethically towards others results in reciprocal respect, as people naturally respond positively to fair treatment, promoting mutual understanding and cooperation.
  • This occurs because ethical behaviour reduces conflicts and misunderstandings between young people. This allows them to focus on building positive relationships rather than managing disputes.
  • Consistent ethical actions demonstrate personal integrity to the community. This causes others to seek out these individuals for friendship and collaboration, thus strengthening overall community connectedness.

 

ANSWER STYLE #2: Highly structured (PEEL)

  • [P] Ethical behaviour like honesty and fairness builds trust between young people.
  • [E] This occurs because consistent ethical actions prove someone is reliable and respectful.
  • [Ev] When teens keep promises and treat others fairly, friendships strengthen and peer groups become more supportive.
  • [L] Therefore, ethical behaviour directly leads to deeper, more meaningful relationships.
     
  • [P] Considering others’ wellbeing through ethical choices creates inclusive communities.
  • [E] This works by making all young people feel valued regardless of differences.
  • [Ev] Schools where students stand up against bullying report higher levels of belonging and connection.
  • [L] This demonstrates why ethical actions result in stronger community bonds.
     
  • [P] Young people modelling ethical behaviour inspire others to act similarly.
  • [E] This happens when positive actions create ripple effects throughout peer groups.
  • [Ev] One student’s ethical stance against cheating often influences entire classes to value academic integrity.
  • [L] As a result, ethical behaviour spreads, which enables widespread community connectedness.
Show Worked Solution

*Language highlighting the cause-effect relationship is bolded in the answer below.

  • Ethical behaviour, like honesty and keeping promises, builds trust because it proves young people are reliable and respectful. This leads to stronger friendships and peer support networks.
  • When young people consider others’ wellbeing in their decisions, this causes everyone to feel valued and included, thereby creating communities where diverse individuals connect meaningfully.
  • Acting ethically towards others results in reciprocal respect, as people naturally respond positively to fair treatment, promoting mutual understanding and cooperation.
  • This occurs because ethical behaviour reduces conflicts and misunderstandings between young people. This allows them to focus on building positive relationships rather than managing disputes.
  • Consistent ethical actions demonstrate personal integrity to the community. This causes others to seek out these individuals for friendship and collaboration, thus strengthening overall community connectedness.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 3, Band 4, smc-5511-30-Social connection/ethics

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 439

Explain the importance of help-seeking behaviours in maintaining young people's mental health and wellbeing.   (5 marks)

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*Language highlighting the cause-effect relationship is bolded in the answer below.

  • Help-seeking behaviours enable early intervention for mental health concerns because professional support identifies problems before they worsen.
  • This occurs when young people access counsellors or psychologists at the first signs of anxiety or depression. As a result, minor stress doesn’t develop into severe mental illness requiring hospitalisation
  • This demonstrates why early help-seeking prevents long-term psychological damage. The reason for this is that professionals provide specialised coping strategies young people cannot develop alone.
  • This works by teaching evidence-based techniques like cognitive behavioural therapy and mindfulness.
  • These elements work together to build resilience against future mental health challenges. Consequently, young people gain lifelong skills for managing emotions and stress.
  • Seeking help creates connection with support networks, which reduces isolation and stigma.
  • This happens when young people realise others share similar struggles through group therapy or peer support, resulting in increased confidence to discuss mental health openly.
  • In this way, help-seeking transforms shame into empowerment and community connection.
Show Worked Solution

*Language highlighting the cause-effect relationship is bolded in the answer below.

  • Help-seeking behaviours enable early intervention for mental health concerns because professional support identifies problems before they worsen.
  • This occurs when young people access counsellors or psychologists at the first signs of anxiety or depression. As a result, minor stress doesn’t develop into severe mental illness requiring hospitalisation
  • This demonstrates why early help-seeking prevents long-term psychological damage. The reason for this is that professionals provide specialised coping strategies young people cannot develop alone.
  • This works by teaching evidence-based techniques like cognitive behavioural therapy and mindfulness.
  • These elements work together to build resilience against future mental health challenges. Consequently, young people gain lifelong skills for managing emotions and stress.
  • Seeking help creates connection with support networks, which reduces isolation and stigma.
  • This happens when young people realise others share similar struggles through group therapy or peer support, resulting in increased confidence to discuss mental health openly.
  • In this way, help-seeking transforms shame into empowerment and community connection.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 3, Band 4, smc-5511-20-Health management

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 438

Outline how health literacy enables young people to develop effective coping strategies for managing stress.   (3 marks)

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  • Health literacy provides young people with knowledge about the physical and mental effects of stress on their bodies and minds.
  • Understanding stress responses helps young people recognise early warning signs and implement appropriate coping strategies before problems escalate.
  • Health literate individuals can evaluate different stress management techniques and choose evidence-based approaches that suit their personal needs and circumstances.
Show Worked Solution
  • Health literacy provides young people with knowledge about the physical and mental effects of stress on their bodies and minds.
  • Understanding stress responses helps young people recognise early warning signs and implement appropriate coping strategies before problems escalate.
  • Health literate individuals can evaluate different stress management techniques and choose evidence-based approaches that suit their personal needs and circumstances.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 3, smc-5511-20-Health management

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 437

Describe how a combination of resilience and sense of purpose can protect young people from developing substance abuse problems.   (4 marks)

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  • Resilience enables young people to cope with stress, disappointment, and peer pressure without turning to substances as escape mechanisms.
  • A strong sense of purpose provides motivation to maintain healthy behaviours because young people recognise how substance use could interfere with their goals and aspirations.
  • Resilient individuals develop healthy coping strategies that address underlying emotional needs without relying on harmful substances.
  • Sense of purpose creates long-term thinking patterns that help young people consider consequences of substance use on their future achievements and relationships.
Show Worked Solution
  • Resilience enables young people to cope with stress, disappointment, and peer pressure without turning to substances as escape mechanisms.
  • A strong sense of purpose provides motivation to maintain healthy behaviours because young people recognise how substance use could interfere with their goals and aspirations.
  • Resilient individuals develop healthy coping strategies that address underlying emotional needs without relying on harmful substances.
  • Sense of purpose creates long-term thinking patterns that help young people consider consequences of substance use on their future achievements and relationships.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, smc-5511-10-Personal empowerment

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 436

Outline how developing self-efficacy can help young people make healthier choices when faced with peer pressure to engage in risky behaviours.   (3 marks)

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  • Self-efficacy builds confidence in personal decision-making abilities, enabling young people to trust their judgment over peer influence.
  • Strong self-efficacy helps young people believe they can successfully navigate social situations while maintaining their personal values and health goals.
  • Self-efficacious individuals are more likely to use problem-solving skills to find alternative solutions that satisfy social needs without compromising their wellbeing.
Show Worked Solution
  • Self-efficacy builds confidence in personal decision-making abilities, enabling young people to trust their judgment over peer influence.
  • Strong self-efficacy helps young people believe they can successfully navigate social situations while maintaining their personal values and health goals.
  • Self-efficacious individuals are more likely to use problem-solving skills to find alternative solutions that satisfy social needs without compromising their wellbeing.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 3, smc-5511-10-Personal empowerment

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 435 MC

A young person wants to address mental health stigma in their school community after experiencing anxiety themselves. Which approach best combines multiple strengthening skills?

  1. Create an anonymous online forum where students can share mental health struggles without adult supervision
  2. Organise peer support groups with teacher guidance while advocating for improved school mental health resources
  3. Focus exclusively on their own recovery without involving others in mental health discussions
  4. Distribute mental health information pamphlets without engaging in direct communication with peers
Show Answers Only

\(B\)

Show Worked Solution
  • B is correct: A sense of purpose is demonstrated through advocacy, connectedness through peer support, and ethical behaviour through responsible adult involvement.

Other Options:

  • A is incorrect: Shows sense of purpose but lacks ethical consideration of safety and appropriate supervision for vulnerable discussions.
  • C is incorrect: Demonstrates self-care but misses opportunities for connectedness and broader sense of purpose.
  • D is incorrect: Shows some sense of purpose but lacks meaningful connectedness and engagement with the community.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 5, smc-5511-40-Skills application/impact

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 434 MC

A Year 11 student is experiencing high stress levels due to academic pressure and family expectations. Which combination of skills would be most effective in managing this situation?

  1. Using avoidance techniques to ignore stressful situations while maintaining high academic performance
  2. Developing time management skills, seeking support from trusted adults, and practicing stress-reduction techniques
  3. Increasing study hours significantly while avoiding social activities that might cause distraction
  4. Accepting that stress is inevitable and focusing solely on meeting others' expectations
Show Answers Only

\(B\)

Show Worked Solution
  • B is correct: This option combines problem-solving (time management), help-seeking behaviour (trusted adults), and healthy coping strategies (stress-reduction techniques).

Other Options:

  • A is incorrect: Avoidance is not a resilient coping strategy and doesn’t demonstrate health literacy about stress management.
  • C is incorrect: Shows poor understanding of healthy coping strategies and lacks balance needed for resilience.
  • D is incorrect: Demonstrates lack of self-efficacy and poor coping strategies without recognition of available support systems.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, smc-5511-40-Skills application/impact

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 433 MC

During a school anti-bullying campaign, a student witnesses cyberbullying on social media but knows reporting it might damage their friendship with the perpetrator. Which action best demonstrates ethical behaviour while maintaining healthy connectedness?

  1. Screenshot the evidence and report the incident to school authorities while privately discussing the behaviour with their friend
  2. Like or share the bullying posts to maintain friendship with the perpetrator
  3. Ignore the situation to avoid conflict within their social group
  4. Publicly defend the perpetrator's actions on social media to show loyalty
Show Answers Only

\(A\)

Show Worked Solution
  • A is correct: Ethical behaviour is demonstrated by taking action against harmful behaviour while maintaining connectedness through honest communication with their friend.

Other Options:

  • B is incorrect: Shows poor ethical behaviour by participating in harmful activities and demonstrates unhealthy connectedness based on fear.
  • C is incorrect: Demonstrates lack of ethical responsibility and fails to support healthy community connectedness.
  • D is incorrect: Shows poor ethical behaviour by endorsing harmful actions and demonstrates toxic rather than healthy connectedness.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, smc-5511-30-Social connection/ethics

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 432 MC

A young person notices their friend displaying signs of depression including social withdrawal and declining academic performance. Which response best demonstrates effective health literacy and appropriate help-seeking behaviour?

  1. Research depression symptoms online and attempt to provide counselling advice to their friend
  2. Ignore the situation believing their friend will eventually overcome the difficulties independently
  3. Encourage their friend to speak with a school counsellor while offering ongoing emotional support
  4. Immediately contact the friend's parents without discussing the concerns with their friend first
Show Answers Only

\(C\)

Show Worked Solution
  • C is correct: Health literacy is demonstrated by recognising professional help is needed and shows appropriate help-seeking behaviour while maintaining supportive friendship.

Other Options:

  • A is incorrect: Shows some health literacy but inappropriate help-seeking by attempting to provide professional services without qualifications.
  • B is incorrect: Demonstrates lack of health literacy about depression severity and poor help-seeking behaviour.
  • D is incorrect: Poor help-seeking behaviour that violates trust and doesn’t involve the affected person in decision-making.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, smc-5511-20-Health management

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 431 MC

Which of the following best demonstrates how a young person with strong self-efficacy and resilience would respond to peer pressure to engage in binge drinking at a party?

  1. Avoid attending social events where alcohol might be present to eliminate temptation
  2. Confidently decline alcohol offers while suggesting alternative activities to maintain social connections
  3. Accept one drink to fit in but limit consumption to avoid negative consequences
  4. Leave the party immediately without explanation when alcohol is offered
Show Answers Only

\(B\)

Show Worked Solution
  • B is correct: Self-efficacy is demonstrated through confident decision-making and resilience by maintaining personal values despite peer pressure while showing problem-solving skills by suggesting alternatives.

Other Options:

  • A is incorrect: Avoidance doesn’t build resilience or demonstrate self-efficacy in challenging situations.
  • C is incorrect: Compromising personal values under pressure shows lack of self-efficacy and doesn’t demonstrate resilient behaviour.
  • D is incorrect: While avoiding harm, this response doesn’t demonstrate problem-solving skills or help maintain social connectedness.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, smc-5511-10-Personal empowerment

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 429

Body image concerns and disordered eating patterns significantly impact the physical and mental health of young Australians.

Analyse the protective factors that can prevent these issues and the skills and actions that young people can develop to promote positive body image and healthy eating behaviours.   (8 marks)

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Show Answers Only

ANSWER STYLE #1: General Points to use within student-chosen answer structure

*Recommended words/phrases to convey relationships and implications are bolded.

Overview Statement

  • Protective factors including support networks, health literacy, and critical thinking skills can shape and reinforce personal actions to help prevent body image issues.
  • These factors influence young people’s relationships with food and body image through multiple pathways.

Support Networks and Health Literacy

  • Strong family support in combination with accurate nutritional knowledge helps foster a strong protection against disordered eating.
  • This reveals that emotional support combined with factual information prevents harmful diet trends
  • In this way, relationships and knowledge work together to build realistic body perspectives.
  • This means that protection requires both emotional and educational components.

Critical Thinking and Personal Actions

  • Media literacy skills directly influence young people’s ability to set health-focused goals.
  • This works by teaching young people to spot fake images, which empowers them to reject unhealthy weight-loss goals.
  • Young people who critically analyse advertising tactics develop wellbeing goals that prioritise energy and fitness. This is a clear illustration of critical thinking transforming into positive health behaviours.
  • As a consequence, understanding media manipulation promotes sustainable lifestyle choices over quick fixes.

Implications and Synthesis

  • These protective factors form an integrated defence system against body image issues.
  • This analysis indicates that skills development must combine with supportive environments to be most effective.
  • Consequently, when schools and families are dealing with issues of body image and eating disorders, they must combine both education and emotional support.
  • The significance is that isolated interventions fail while comprehensive strategies can create lasting protection.

 

ANSWER STYLE #2: Highly structured (PEEL)

*PEEL – Solution is structured using an adjusted PEEL method; [P] Identify components and their relationship, [E] explain the interaction/influence between them, [Ev] provide evidence showing the relationship in action, [L] linking sentence back to question.

  • [P] Personal support networks and critical thinking skills combine to protect against body image issues.
  • [E] The relationship between family support and media literacy creates multiple defence layers against harmful messages.
  • [Ev] Young people with strong family connections who also possess media analysis skills are at much less risk of developing eating disorders.
  • [L] This interaction demonstrates how protective factors work together to prevent body image concerns.
     
  • [P] Health knowledge and assertiveness skills work together to help young people make informed food choices.
  • [E] Access to dietitian advice directly influences young people’s ability to resist harmful diet trends on social media.
  • Ev] Teens who consult qualified professionals develop confidence to challenge peer pressure about restrictive eating.
  • [L] These elements working together enable young people to maintain healthy eating behaviours despite external pressures.
     
  • [P] Individual resilience skills and community advocacy create a reinforcing cycle of positive body image.
  • [E] When confident individuals take action, they can change the attitudes of those around them.
  • [Ev] Students who promote body diversity at school feel better about themselves while helping classmates accept different body types.
  • [L] This relationship reveals how personal skills translate into broader protective environments.
     
  • [P] Goal-setting focused on wellbeing rather than weight operates on multiple levels of protection.
  • [E] Health-focused objectives promote action and influence psychological attitudes.
  • [Ev] For example, young people pursuing fitness goals experience improved mental health regardless of body shape changes.
  • [L] Together, these protective factors and skills and actions determine long-term resilience against disordered eating patterns.
Show Worked Solution

*Recommended words/phrases to convey relationships and implications are bolded.

Overview Statement

  • Protective factors including support networks, health literacy, and critical thinking skills can shape and reinforce personal actions to help prevent body image issues.
  • These factors influence young people’s relationships with food and body image through multiple pathways.

Support Networks and Health Literacy

  • Strong family support in combination with accurate nutritional knowledge helps foster a strong protection against disordered eating.
  • This reveals that emotional support combined with factual information prevents harmful diet trends
  • In this way, relationships and knowledge work together to build realistic body perspectives.
  • This means that protection requires both emotional and educational components.

Critical Thinking and Personal Actions

  • Media literacy skills directly influence young people’s ability to set health-focused goals.
  • This works by teaching young people to spot fake images, which empowers them to reject unhealthy weight-loss goals.
  • Young people who critically analyse advertising tactics develop wellbeing goals that prioritise energy and fitness. This is a clear illustration of critical thinking transforming into positive health behaviours.
  • As a consequence, understanding media manipulation promotes sustainable lifestyle choices over quick fixes.

Implications and Synthesis

  • These protective factors form an integrated defence system against body image issues.
  • This analysis indicates that skills development must combine with supportive environments to be most effective.
  • Consequently, when schools and families are dealing with issues of body image and eating disorders, they must combine both education and emotional support.
  • The significance is that isolated interventions fail while comprehensive strategies can create lasting protection.

Filed Under: Research and Health Related Issues, Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, Band 5, smc-5511-10-Personal empowerment, smc-5511-20-Health management, smc-5511-40-Skills application/impact, smc-5800-10-Youth health issue, smc-5800-15-Protective/risk factors, smc-5800-25-Strategy dev and advocacy

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 430

Australian research indicates that gambling participation increases dramatically when young people reach the legal gambling age of 18, with many forms of gambling showing substantial increases as young people gain legal access.

Analyse how individual strengthening skills can protect young people from developing gambling problems and enhance their overall wellbeing as they transition into legal gambling accessibility.   (8 marks)

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*Language to use that helps to highlight relationships and draw out implications is bolded.

Overview Statement

  • Individual strengthening skills including self-efficacy, health literacy, problem solving and resilience, interact with each other to protect young people from gambling problems.
  • These skills form protective relationships that influence decision-making as young people become old enough to legally gamble.

Self-efficacy and Health Literacy Relationship

  • Self-efficacy crosses over with health literacy by enabling young people to understand gambling risks.
  • When young people understand how gambling odds work against them and recognise addiction warning signs, they make informed choices to avoid gambling.
  • Evidence shows young adults with high self-efficacy combined with gambling awareness reduce participation by almost 50%.
  • This means that knowledge alone isn’t sufficient – confidence to act on that knowledge determines protective outcomes.
  • Therefore, these skills work together to resist peer pressure.

Problem-solving and Resilience Interaction

  • Problem-solving abilities depend on resilience when facing circumstances that trigger gambling urges.
  • Resilient young people use problem-solving to identify healthy alternatives like sport participation.
  • This relationship enables them to address real world pressures without any accompanying financial risk.
  • Consequently, this combination prevents gambling becoming a coping mechanism for adult pressures.

Implications and Synthesis

  • These skills function as an integrated protection system rather than isolated factors.
  • Evidence indicates that pre-adult skill development can result in lifelong gambling resistance and the critical importance of pre-emptive education programs.
  • By strengthening multiple skills simultaneously, individuals can create a strong protection against gambling.
  • Young people equipped with this skill system are much more likely to transition safely into legal gambling age.
Show Worked Solution

*Language to use that helps to highlight relationships and draw out implications is bolded.

Overview Statement

  • Individual strengthening skills including self-efficacy, health literacy, problem solving and resilience, interact with each other to protect young people from gambling problems.
  • These skills form protective relationships that influence decision-making as young people become old enough to legally gamble.

Self-efficacy and Health Literacy Relationship

  • Self-efficacy crosses over with health literacy by enabling young people to understand gambling risks.
  • When young people understand how gambling odds work against them and recognise addiction warning signs, they make informed choices to avoid gambling.
  • Evidence shows young adults with high self-efficacy combined with gambling awareness reduce participation by almost 50%.
  • This means that knowledge alone isn’t sufficient – confidence to act on that knowledge determines protective outcomes.
  • Therefore, these skills work together to resist peer pressure.

Problem-solving and Resilience Interaction

  • Problem-solving abilities depend on resilience when facing circumstances that trigger gambling urges.
  • Resilient young people use problem-solving to identify healthy alternatives like sport participation.
  • This relationship enables them to address real world pressures without any accompanying financial risk.
  • Consequently, this combination prevents gambling becoming a coping mechanism for adult pressures.

Implications and Synthesis

  • These skills function as an integrated protection system rather than isolated factors.
  • Evidence indicates that pre-adult skill development can result in lifelong gambling resistance and the critical importance of pre-emptive education programs.
  • By strengthening multiple skills simultaneously, individuals can create a strong protection against gambling.
  • Young people equipped with this skill system are much more likely to transition safely into legal gambling age.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, Band 5, smc-5511-10-Personal empowerment, smc-5511-20-Health management

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 427

Describe the personal skills that enable young people to protect themselves from health risks. Use specific examples.   (3 marks)

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Decision-making skills:

  • Young people can evaluate risks and make informed choices, such as deciding not to drink alcohol at parties or choosing nutritious foods over fast food options.

Communication skills:

  • Effective verbal and non-verbal communication enables young people to express boundaries in relationships, seek help from trusted adults when experiencing mental health concerns, or negotiate with peers.

Self-efficacy:

  • Having confidence in personal abilities allows young people to set and achieve health goals, such as maintaining regular exercise routines or resisting peer pressure to engage in risky behaviours.
Show Worked Solution

Decision-making skills:

  • Young people can evaluate risks and make informed choices, such as deciding not to drink alcohol at parties or choosing nutritious foods over fast food options.

Communication skills:

  • Effective verbal and non-verbal communication enables young people to express boundaries in relationships, seek help from trusted adults when experiencing mental health concerns, or negotiate with peers.

Self-efficacy:

  • Having confidence in personal abilities allows young people to set and achieve health goals, such as maintaining regular exercise routines or resisting peer pressure to engage in risky behaviours.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, smc-5511-10-Personal empowerment

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 415

Describe how a young person can demonstrate resilience when facing cyberbullying.   (3 marks)

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  • Maintain perspective that cyberbullying reflects the bully’s problems, not their own self-worth.
  • Actively seek support from trusted adults, friends or counselling services to cope effectively.
  • Document evidence of cyberbullying (screenshots, messages) and use blocking/reporting features to take control of their online experience
Show Worked Solution
  • Maintain perspective that cyberbullying reflects the bully’s problems, not their own self-worth.
  • Actively seek support from trusted adults, friends or counselling services to cope effectively.
  • Document evidence of cyberbullying (screenshots, messages) and use blocking/reporting features to take control of their online experience

Filed Under: Research and Health Related Issues, Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 3, smc-5511-20-Health management, smc-5800-15-Protective/risk factors

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 414 MC

Which of the following demonstrates a young person using problem-solving skills to address a mental health concern?

  1. Joining a support group to connect with peers facing similar challenges
  2. Researching different therapy options when their current counsellor has a long waiting list
  3. Asking a trusted adult for advice about managing stress
  4. Practicing mindfulness techniques learned in a wellness program
Show Answers Only

\(B\)

Show Worked Solution
  • B is correct: This demonstrates problem-solving by identifying alternative solutions when faced with barriers to accessing help.

Other Options:

  • A and C incorrect: These show help-seeking behaviour and connectedness rather than active problem-solving.
  • D is incorrect: This shows application of coping strategies rather than problem-solving to overcome obstacles.

Filed Under: Research and Health Related Issues, Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, smc-5511-10-Personal empowerment, smc-5800-10-Youth health issue, smc-5800-30-Personal reflection

HMS, HIC EQ-Bank 410

Evaluate the importance of health literacy skills in empowering young people to make positive health decisions about food choices.   (8 marks)

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*Recommended words/phrases for “Evaluation” keyword questions are highlighted in bold throughout the answer below.

Evaluation Statement

  • Health literacy skills are highly effective in empowering young people to make positive food choices.
  • This evaluation examines practical application abilities and long-term behaviour change impact.

Practical Application Abilities

  • Health literacy effectively equips young people with practical decision-making skills.
  • Evidence shows health-literate teens successfully read food labels and identify hidden sugars.
  • Research indicates they make significantly better supermarket choices than those without these skills.
  • This indicates a real world practical benefit as young people apply their knowledge to daily food selection.
  • The ability to decode marketing claims proves particularly valuable in today’s misleading food environment.

Long-term Behaviour Change

  • Health literacy is partially successful in achieving sustained healthy eating patterns.
  • While strong in building knowledge, only 5% of young Australians aged 15-24 meet recommended fruit and vegetable intake.
  • This shows limitations between possessing literacy and consistent application.
  • Social pressures and convenience often override health knowledge in food decisions.
  • Although effective for understanding nutrition, it proves less suitable for overcoming environmental barriers like cost and accessibility.
  • The gap between knowledge and action reveals moderate long-term success.

Final Evaluation

  • Weighing these factors shows health literacy is highly valuable but insufficient alone.
  • The strengths outweigh weaknesses because foundational skills enable lifelong learning.
  • The overall evaluation demonstrates health literacy forms a critical foundation requiring environmental support.
  • Implications suggest combining literacy education with practical cooking skills and improved food access.
Show Worked Solution

*Recommended words/phrases for “Evaluation” keyword questions are highlighted in bold throughout the answer below.

Evaluation Statement

  • Health literacy skills are highly effective in empowering young people to make positive food choices.
  • This evaluation examines practical application abilities and long-term behaviour change impact.

Practical Application Abilities

  • Health literacy effectively equips young people with practical decision-making skills.
  • Evidence shows health-literate teens successfully read food labels and identify hidden sugars.
  • Research indicates they make significantly better supermarket choices than those without these skills.
  • This indicates a real world practical benefit as young people apply their knowledge to daily food selection.
  • The ability to decode marketing claims proves particularly valuable in today’s misleading food environment.

Long-term Behaviour Change

  • Health literacy is partially successful in achieving sustained healthy eating patterns.
  • While strong in building knowledge, only 5% of young Australians aged 15-24 meet recommended fruit and vegetable intake.
  • This shows limitations between possessing literacy and consistent application.
  • Social pressures and convenience often override health knowledge in food decisions.
  • Although effective for understanding nutrition, it proves less suitable for overcoming environmental barriers like cost and accessibility.
  • The gap between knowledge and action reveals moderate long-term success.

Final Evaluation

  • Weighing these factors shows health literacy is highly valuable but insufficient alone.
  • The strengths outweigh weaknesses because foundational skills enable lifelong learning.
  • The overall evaluation demonstrates health literacy forms a critical foundation requiring environmental support.
  • Implications suggest combining literacy education with practical cooking skills and improved food access.

Filed Under: Research and Health Related Issues, Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, Band 5, smc-5511-20-Health management, smc-5800-10-Youth health issue

HMS, HIC 2023 HSC 28b

To what extent can the development of support networks and access to health services enable young people to attain better health?   (12 marks)

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Show Answers Only

*Recommended language to consider for “To What Extent” questions is bolded in the answer below.

Judgment Statement

  • Support networks and health services enable young people to attain significantly better health.
  • Evidence shows mental health services, accessible platforms and culturally appropriate care substantially improve outcomes.

Mental Health and Accessibility

  • One major reason why these services work is they’re specifically designed for young people’s unique needs and preferences.
  • Evidence supporting this includes nearly three-quarters of headspace clients reporting satisfaction and experiencing measurable reductions in psychological distress.
  • Research consistently shows that school-based health services show considerably higher consultation rates compared to community alternatives.
  • This demonstrates how removing transportation and scheduling barriers significantly improves access.
  • Digital platforms like ReachOut reached 280,000 young Australians in 2022. Crucially, over 80% of these users wouldn’t have sought traditional help.
  • The main factors supporting this success include multiple access points which work flexibly with young people’s needs.

Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHO’s)

  • ACCHO’s achieve 45% higher Indigenous youth engagement than mainstream services by recognising Country connection and community as central to wellbeing.
  • This culturally appropriate approach largely addresses specific health inequities.
  • However, it is important to consider that rural youth still face significant service gaps.
  • An alternative perspective is that geographic isolation minimally impacts access when digital options work well, but poor internet connectivity undermines this potential.
  • Compounding this, workforce shortages mean long waiting lists even in well-serviced areas.
  • Despite this, available services remain the stronger factor because they have shown they are highly effective when accessible.

Reaffirmation

  • Support networks and health services significantly enable better youth health outcomes.
  • The main factors supporting this include varied delivery mechanisms providing multiple pathways for young people to access healthcare.
  • Implications suggest that continued investment in youth-specific, accessible, and culturally appropriate services remains critical.
Show Worked Solution

*Recommended language to consider for “To What Extent” questions is bolded in the answer below.

Judgment Statement

  • Support networks and health services enable young people to attain significantly better health.
  • Evidence shows mental health services, accessible platforms and culturally appropriate care substantially improve outcomes.

Mental Health and Accessibility

  • One major reason why these services work is they’re specifically designed for young people’s unique needs and preferences.
  • Evidence supporting this includes nearly three-quarters of headspace clients reporting satisfaction and experiencing measurable reductions in psychological distress.
  • Research consistently shows that school-based health services show considerably higher consultation rates compared to community alternatives.
  • This demonstrates how removing transportation and scheduling barriers significantly improves access.
  • Digital platforms like ReachOut reached 280,000 young Australians in 2022. Crucially, over 80% of these users wouldn’t have sought traditional help.
  • The main factors supporting this success include multiple access points which work flexibly with young people’s needs.

Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHO’s)

  • ACCHO’s achieve 45% higher Indigenous youth engagement than mainstream services by recognising Country connection and community as central to wellbeing.
  • This culturally appropriate approach largely addresses specific health inequities.
  • However, it is important to consider that rural youth still face significant service gaps.
  • An alternative perspective is that geographic isolation minimally impacts access when digital options work well, but poor internet connectivity undermines this potential.
  • Compounding this, workforce shortages mean long waiting lists even in well-serviced areas.
  • Despite this, available services remain the stronger factor because they have shown they are highly effective when accessible.

Reaffirmation

  • Support networks and health services significantly enable better youth health outcomes.
  • The main factors supporting this include varied delivery mechanisms providing multiple pathways for young people to access healthcare.
  • Implications suggest that continued investment in youth-specific, accessible, and culturally appropriate services remains critical.

♦♦ Mean mark 46%.

Filed Under: Strengthening, protecting and enhancing health Tagged With: Band 4, Band 5, Band 6, smc-5511-30-Social connection/ethics

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