# Creating together, growing together: a qualitative study of adolescent experiences in an inclusive, co-creative performing arts project

**Authors:** Eva Mari Andreasen, Thomas Westergren

PMC · DOI: 10.1080/17482631.2025.2582287 · International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being · 2025-11-11

## TL;DR

Adolescents in a co-creative performing arts project with peers with disabilities experienced emotional growth, belonging, and new perspectives on society.

## Contribution

This study reveals how inclusive, co-creative performing arts foster psychosocial development in adolescents through sustained collaboration.

## Key findings

- Participants felt pride and growth through the challenges of co-creation.
- Collaboration led to unlearning stereotypes and seeing society anew.
- Emotional connections and a sense of community were central to the experience.

## Abstract

Adolescence is a formative period marked by exploration, identity formation, and a growing need for belonging. Co-creative performing arts practices may support learning and relationship-building across diverse groups of young people. This study explored how adolescents without disabilities, enrolled in mainstream educational programmes, experienced and reflected on their participation in a long-term, inclusive, co-creative performing arts project (SPOR).

A qualitative inductive design with three focus groups was used, grounded in phenomenological, hermeneutic, and existential traditions. A meaning-oriented approach rooted in reflective lifeworld research ensured methodological coherence, and reflexive thematic analysis facilitated a systematic yet adaptable exploration of participants’ lived experience.

The analysis yielded two themes: Finding pride in the challenge of co-creation and Tracing essentials for living. The latter comprised three interrelated subthemes: Seeing oneself and society with new eyes, Unlearning stereotypes through sustained encounters, and Grieving the heartfelt community.

Participants described emotional growth, mutual recognition, and a sense of belonging and mattering arising from collaborative artistic engagement with peers with disabilities. The findings suggest that inclusive co-creative performing arts can promote adolescents’ psychosocial development and well-being, while highlighting the need for supportive structures that sustain and extend such experiences into everyday life.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** disabilities (MESH:D009069)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

58 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12613303/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12613303