Case Study 2 Tyler lives with his Mum and younger brother, both Tyler and his younger brother do not have contact with their dad, Tyler last saw his Dad when he was 10 years of age.
Case Study 2
Tyler lives with his Mum and younger brother, both Tyler and his younger brother do not have contact with their dad, Tyler last saw his Dad when he was 10 years of age.
Tyler lives in a well-maintained rented house in the inner city, there is limited outside space and the local area has a high level of crime.
Tyler up until the age of 15 years did well at school, he had good attendance and achieved good grades. His school reports were always positive however in recent months Tyler has started to miss days off school and has started to roam his local area with friends, on occasion Tyler has been involved in unsociable behaviour. In addition to this Tyler has started to push the boundaries at home by staying out longer in the evenings and now having tried Vaping and becoming sexually active.
Tylers mum has done her best to encourage Tyler to attend school regularly however she finds it difficult to enforce due to working long hours which is necessary to enable her to pay the bills.
LO1: Identify potential stages of human growth and development: Achieved
You have provided basic demonstration of the human life journey through the life span. Your assessment was muddled in parts, and your explanations are descriptive therefore do not show your breadth and depth of knowledge and understanding of the concepts. You did refer to early intervention and the life course, these could have been more detailed and supported with evidence to underpin your work.
LO2: Examine evidence that supports health promotion, protection, and improvement during the lifespan: Achieved.
You have referred to the purpose of early intervention and the role of wider determinants and you discussed preconception and adolescence life stages but this needed further explanation and detail. Your academic writing did impact the points you were making as it was not always clear. Please see annotations within the main body of your assignment.
Brief Summary of Assessment Requirements
This case-study task required the student to assess Tyler’s developmental history and current functioning, identify risks and protective factors, and demonstrate application of lifespan and public-health concepts to inform early intervention and health-promotion strategies. Key pointers to cover were:
- Identify stages of human growth and development relevant to Tyler (childhood → adolescence).
- Describe Tyler’s history, current behaviour patterns and environmental context (family, housing, neighbourhood crime, school attendance).
- Analyse risk and protective factors (family structure, parental work demands, peer influences, substance use, sexual activity).
- Apply theory (life-course models, early-intervention frameworks, determinants of health) to explain behaviour and to recommend responses.
- Demonstrate evidence that supports health promotion, protection and improvement across the lifespan (with cited literature/evidence).
- Reflect on practice: identify learning needs, justify chosen interventions and include clear, logical structure and professional academic writing.
How the Academic Mentor guided the student step-by-step
- Mentor reviewed the marking criteria and learning outcomes (LO1, LO2) with the student and mapped which parts of Tyler’s story had to be addressed.
- Together they extracted the salient facts (age, family composition, schooling history, recent behavioural changes) and placed them on a simple timeline to show the change in functioning.
- Mentor asked the student to explicitly name developmental stages (early adolescence) and link them to theories (life course, attachment, developmental risk) so assessment would move from description to analysis.
- The student was guided to categorise factors as intrinsic (e.g., behavioural choices, experimentation) or extrinsic (e.g., high-crime area, parental work hours), and to prioritise which factors most likely explain Tyler’s change in behaviour.
- Mentor pointed the student toward concise, relevant evidence on early intervention and adolescent risk behaviour and coached on integrating that evidence to support proposed responses rather than merely describing them.
- Mentor helped the student outline realistic, evidence-based actions (engagement strategies, school liaison, family support referrals) that fit Tyler’s context and constraints.
- Several short iterative drafts focused on turning descriptive paragraphs into analytical ones, tightening language, and ensuring clear structure aligned with the assessment requirements.
- Final review highlighted where more depth or citation was needed and encouraged reflective comments on professional learning needs.
Feedback loop & reflection
Drafting & academic polish
Intervention planning (brief and practical)
Evidence selection & application
Risk/protective factor analysis
Identify developmental stages & link theory
Fact mapping and timeline
Clarify the brief & scope
Outcome achieved & learning objectives covered
Outcome
- The submitted piece met the core requirements: it identified developmental stages, described Tyler’s context, referenced early intervention and life-course thinking, and recommended practical support ideas. The assessor awarded LO1: Achieved and LO2: Achieved.
What was done well
- Clear identification of life-span stages and mention of early intervention and wider determinants.
- Practical recognition of barriers at home (single parent working long hours) and environmental risks (high-crime area, peer influences).
Areas to strengthen (per assessor feedback)
- Move beyond descriptive accounts to deeper analytical application of theory show breadth and depth by linking specific theories to Tyler’s case with supporting citations.
- Improve academic writing clarity and structure so arguments read as critical analysis rather than description.
- Provide stronger evidence (empirical studies or policy guidance) to justify chosen health-promotion or early-intervention strategies.
Learning objectives covered
- LO1 (Identify stages of human growth & development): Achieved — student mapped Tyler’s life course but needs deeper theoretical linkage.
- LO2 (Examine evidence for health promotion/protection): Achieved — student referenced relevant themes (early intervention, determinants) but should strengthen evidence and explanation.