TY - JOUR
T1 - Finding consensus on well-being in education
AU - Curren, Randall
AU - Boniwell, Ilona
AU - Ryan, Richard M.
AU - Oades, Lindsay
AU - Brighouse, Harry
AU - Unterhalter, Elaine
AU - Kristjánsson, Kristján
AU - de Ruyter, Doret
AU - Macleod, Colin
AU - Morris, Ian
AU - White, Mathew
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/7
Y1 - 2024/7
N2 - Research on well-being and concern over the well-being of students and teachers has grown dramatically in recent years. Researchers and reformers in positive psychology and education, self-determination theory, social and emotional learning, liberal-democratic political and educational philosophy, and neo-Aristotelian theories of flourishing and character education have played formative and intersecting roles in what is now an international movement to promote the lifelong flourishing of students as an alternative to a human capital and economic growth focus for education. This article defends this flourishing-focused reorientation of education policy and practice, using a value-led and evidence-informed methodology. It sorts through the conceptual disputes and clarifies the ethical considerations that should guide efforts to advance the well-being of students and teachers, assesses key claims and arguments, and brings together compatible aspects of the leading philosophical and psychological perspectives on flourishing as an aim of education. It identifies ethically and evidentially justifiable points of consensus on well-being and flourishing in education, presents a consensus model of relationships between educational environments, learning, and flourishing, and concludes with some recommendations for educational policy and practice.
AB - Research on well-being and concern over the well-being of students and teachers has grown dramatically in recent years. Researchers and reformers in positive psychology and education, self-determination theory, social and emotional learning, liberal-democratic political and educational philosophy, and neo-Aristotelian theories of flourishing and character education have played formative and intersecting roles in what is now an international movement to promote the lifelong flourishing of students as an alternative to a human capital and economic growth focus for education. This article defends this flourishing-focused reorientation of education policy and practice, using a value-led and evidence-informed methodology. It sorts through the conceptual disputes and clarifies the ethical considerations that should guide efforts to advance the well-being of students and teachers, assesses key claims and arguments, and brings together compatible aspects of the leading philosophical and psychological perspectives on flourishing as an aim of education. It identifies ethically and evidentially justifiable points of consensus on well-being and flourishing in education, presents a consensus model of relationships between educational environments, learning, and flourishing, and concludes with some recommendations for educational policy and practice.
KW - Aims of education
KW - basic psychological needs
KW - ethics of education
KW - flourishing
KW - human capital theory
KW - positive education
KW - well-being
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85195282460&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/14778785241259852
DO - 10.1177/14778785241259852
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85195282460
SN - 1477-8785
VL - 22
SP - 117
EP - 157
JO - Theory and Research in Education
JF - Theory and Research in Education
IS - 2
ER -