Abstract

ABSTRACTChildren experiencing homelessness and family violence sometimes have reduced opportunities to access appropriate educational, social and recreational supports. However, music often remains as a personal resource in children’s everyday lives. This article explores the use of songwriting as a participatory arts-based research method to give voice to young people’s understandings of how they use music in the context of homelessness and family violence. Fifteen children 8–14 years participated in music-based focus groups that involved writing a song about what music meant to them. The collaborative songwriting research method was designed to engage children in creative and child-centered ways throughout all stages of the data generation and analysis process. This incorporated brainstorming to generate data and then the songwriting process was used as a way of analyzing the data. Two songs will be provided as an arts-based representation of children’s experiences and understanding of music as a resource. Throughout the process of writing the songs, the children described how music provided an escape from what was happening in their lives and offered hope for a better future. Implications for working with children in this context will be discussed along with critical considerations for using collaborative songwriting as a research method.

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