In Australia and internationally, the well-being of children and young people is a core focus of social policy, with a growing imperative to locate well-being within the sphere of education. However, the term ‘well-being’ remains ambiguous and the implementation of educational approaches to promote and improve it appears fragmented and ad hoc. In Australia, little is known about how well-being is understood and supported in schools, particularly from the perspective of students themselves. This article reports on key findings from an ambitious mixed-methods study funded by the Australian Research Council that investigated conceptualisations and practices around well-being in schools. Underpinned by theoretical interests linked to Childhood Studies and recognition theory, the research investigated policy, student and staff perspectives on well-being. The findings point to the key role of relationships, providing considerable scope for analysing the salience of Honneth’s modes of recognition for well-being in schools.
Journal article
Reframing ‘well-being’ in schools: the potential of recognition
Cambridge Journal of Education, Vol.47(4), pp.439-455
2016
Metrics
Abstract
Details
- Title
- Reframing ‘well-being’ in schools: the potential of recognition
- Creators
- Anne Graham - Southern Cross UniversityMary Ann Powell - Southern Cross UniversityNigel Thomas - University of Central LancashireDonnah Anderson - Charles Sturt University
- Publication Details
- Cambridge Journal of Education, Vol.47(4), pp.439-455
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Grant note
- Funder: Australian Research Council, Grant ID: ARC/LP110200656, Grant links:
- Identifiers
- 1191; 991012821133902368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Education; Centre for Children and Young People; School of Education
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article