Students’ well-being and their success in and outside school depend on their ability to use their competences for democratic culture.


Since well-being has many facets, improving students’ well-being in schools requires a whole-school approach, involving both teachers and parents.

Schools should provide lessons focused on the responsible use of the Internet, the need to adopt a healthy lifestyle and how to prevent or cope with health problems, in collaboration with those involved, including health and social services, local authorities and civil society organisations.
 


Facts & figures

About 60% of school students report getting very tense when they study.[1]

Just over 60% of girls and 40% boys say they feel very anxious about doing tests at school, even when they are well prepared.[2]

Over 70% of parents say they would choose to send their children to a school with below-average exam results if students were happy there.[3]


What is well-being?

Well-being is the experience of health and happiness. It includes mental and physical health, physical and emotional safety, and a feeling of belonging, sense of purpose, achievement and success.

Well-being is a broad concept and covers a range of psychological and physical abilities. Five major types of well-being are said to be:

  • Emotional well-being – the ability to be resilient, manage one’s emotions and generate emotions that lead to good feelings
  • Physical well-being – the ability to improve the functioning of one’s body through healthy eating and good exercise habits
  • Social well-being – the ability to communicate, develop meaningful relationships with others and create one’s own emotional support network
  • Workplace well-being – the ability to pursue one’s own interests, beliefs and values in order to gain meaning and happiness in life and professional enrichment
  • Societal well-being – the ability to participate in an active community or culture.

Overall well-being depends on all these types of functioning to an extent.[4]

“Having meaning and purpose is integral to people’s sense of well-being. Well-being involves far more than happiness, and accomplishments go far beyond test success.”[5]


Why is well-being important at school?

Well-being is important at school because schools have an essential role to play in supporting students to make healthy lifestyle choices and understand the effects of their choices on their health and well-being. Childhood and adolescence is a critical period in the development of long-term attitudes towards personal well-being and lifestyle choices. The social and emotional skills, knowledge and behaviours that young people learn in the classroom help them build resilience and set the pattern for how they will manage their physical and mental health throughout their lives.

Schools are able to provide students with reliable information and deepen their understanding of the choices they face. They are also able to provide students with the intellectual skills required to reflect critically on these choices and on the influences that society brings to bear on them, including through peer pressure, advertising, social media and family and cultural values.

There is a direct link between well-being and academic achievement and vice versa, i.e. well-being is a crucial prerequisite for achievement and achievement is essential for well-being. Physical activity is associated with improved learning and the ability to concentrate. Strong, supportive relationships provide students with the emotional resources to step out of their intellectual ‘comfort zone’ and explore new ideas and ways of thinking, which is fundamental to educational achievement.

Well-being is also important for developing important democratic competences. Positive emotions are associated with the development of flexibility and adaptability, openness to other cultures and beliefs, self-efficacy and tolerance of ambiguity, all of which lie at the heart of the Council of Europe Reference Framework of Competences for Democratic Culture.


What are the challenges?

One of the challenges of trying to promote young people’s well-being in school is the multi-faceted nature of well-being. There are a number of different types of well-being, all of which need to be promoted to some extent to create an overall sense of well-being in a person. So, it is not possible to improve students’ well-being at school through single interventions or activities. Rather it requires the development of a ‘culture’ of well-being throughout the whole school and the active involvement of the whole staff, teaching and non-teaching, which can be difficult to achieve.

The promotion of well-being may sometimes appear to conflict with other school priorities, such as academic standards. Unreasonably high expectations, a regime of constant testing or an over-emphasis on the importance of academic performance may actually undermine student well-being.

In many cases schools do not have the freedom to make the changes to school life which might most benefit student well-being. They may have little control, for example, over formal examinations and tests, the content of curricula, the length of the school day or the physical school environment.

Nor have schools control over the many out-of-school influences on student well-being. What happens in the home and the family, local communities or social media can have as much, if not more, influence on student well-being as anything in school.

Finally, developing a sense of well-being in students is made all the more difficult when school staff themselves do not have a positive sense of well-being. Well-being at work is strongly related to stress. Stress at work is related to workload, quality of professional relationships, level of autonomy, clarity about one’s role, availability of support and the opportunity to be involved in changes which affect one’s professional life. High levels of stress can lead to demotivation, lack of job satisfaction and poor physical and mental health, which has a knock-on effect on students’ own well-being.


How can schools get active?

Addressing student well-being at school begins with helping students feel they are each known and valued as an individual in her or his own right, and that school life has a meaning and purpose for them. This can be achieved in a variety of small ways, the cumulative effect of which can have a very powerful influence on students’ sense of well-being. These include:

  • providing opportunities for all members of the school community to participate in meaningful decision-making in school, e.g. through consultations, opinion surveys, referenda, electing class representatives, student parliaments, focus groups, in-class feedback on learning activities, and an element of student choice in relation to topics taught and teaching methods used;
  • developing a welcoming environment where everyone at school can feel supported and safe through access to meaningful activities, e.g. clubs, societies, interest groups and associations dealing with issues of concern to young people, including health;
  • taking steps to reduce the anxiety students feel about examinations and testing through the introduction of less stressful forms of assessment, e.g. formative assessment, peer assessment and involving students in the identification of their own assessment needs;
  • using teaching methods that contribute to a positive classroom climate and well-being, e.g. cooperative learning, student-centred methods, self-organised time, outdoor activities;
  • finding curriculum opportunities to talk about well-being issues with students, e.g. healthy eating, exercise, substance abuse, positive relationships;
  • integrating democratic citizenship and education for intercultural understanding into different school subjects and extra-curricular activities, e.g. openness to other cultures in Religious Education, knowledge and critical understanding of human rights in Social Science, empathy in Literature;
  • introducing student-led forms of conflict management and approaches to bullying and harassment, e.g. peer mediation, restorative justice;
  • improving the physical environment of the school to make it more student-friendly, e.g. new furniture and fittings, carpeted areas, appropriate colour schemes, safe toilet areas, recreational areas;
  • encouraging healthier eating by providing healthy options in the school canteen, e.g. avoiding high amounts of sugar, saturated fats and salt;
  • working with parents to enhance students’ achievement and sense of purpose in school, e.g. on healthy food, safe internet use and home-school communications.


Individual initiatives like these can be brought together at the whole-school level through a policy development process which ‘mainstreams’ well-being as a school issue. This means giving attention to the potential effects of new policies on individual well-being - of students, teachers and others. Addressing student well-being at school always goes hand in hand with action to protect the health and well-being of teachers and other staff at school.

 

[1] OECD (2017). PISA 2015 Results (Volume III), p.40. Students’ Well-Being. Paris, France: OECD Publishing.

[2] Ibid.

[3] Cowburn & Blow, ‘Wise up - Prioritising wellbeing in schools’

[4] Psychology Today, January 2019.

[5] Hargreaves & Shirley (2018), ‘Well-being and Success. Opposites that need to attract’.

  Resources on Improving well-being at school

Multimedia

Official texts

Policy documents

Studies

Tools

Related schools projects

Back Eça de Queirós School Cluster

Address: Rua Cidade de Benguela

Country: Portugal

 School website


Project: EçaNews – from students to students

 

Working language during the project:

  • Portuguese
     

Themes of the Council of Europe project “FREE to SPEAK, SAFE to LEARN - Democratic Schools for All” covered:

  • Making children’s and students’ voices heard
  • Addressing controversial issues
  • Dealing with propaganda, misinformation and fake news
  • Improving well-being at school
     

Competences from the Reference Framework of Competences for Democratic Culture (CDC) addressed and where / how they were integrated:

  • Knowledge and critical understanding of the world (including politics, law, human rights, culture, cultures, religions, history, media, economies, the environment and sustainability)
    Students have to interpret, analyse, synthesise and think critically at all stages of the project. The need to understand at a meta-cognitive level prior to publishing the news is the key to elevating their critical thinking skills.
  • Responsibility
    This digital journal will be managed entirely by students. As they have to make substantive decisions, the responsibility skill is going to be present on each step of the way.
  • Co-operation skills
    The students will be able to build stronger relationships between their peers to achieve the group goals. Collaboration and cooperation are skills that have to be.
     

Target group age range:

  • 5 - 11
  • 11 - 15
  • 15 - 19
     

Level of education:

  • Primary education
  • Lower secondary education
  • Upper secondary education

Short description of the project:

The EçaNews is a digital journal created by students for the students. They are the top decision makers, the journalists and readers all at the same time, that means, all the students can contribute to this common project.

This is one of the projects resulting from a wider 21st Century Design Learning Programme that the Eça Queirós School Cluster is implementing for the following 3 years. This wider programme, called “[email protected]” has the goal to transform the cluster into an Anytime, Anywhere Learning environment, and is looking to change the education of 2.000 students and 200 educators into an innovative and democratic school cluster.

The changing and media context that we live in provided some difficulties which the cluster is trying to change into opportunities. Using an online collaborative platform for the past 6 months, where board members, teachers, staff and students come together with ease, the EçaNews is a tool for taking stock of these opportunities.

A group of teachers will start the project by picking the students to participate. From there they will only serve as guidance. Students will therefore have full responsibility for their decisions and actions, resulting in a real-life situation that they have to tackle, gathering individual expertise to turn themselves into a coherent group of individuals for achieving the same goal.

The main goals of the EçaNews are to provide the students with the critical thinking skills on all matters related to the school, the various personal and group opinions, to engage in global topics such as educational information to climate change, religion, personal differences, democratic issues, and so on. They have to find evidence for their statements, e.g. news, become aware of different points of views, and also improve their communications skills.

This project will also contribute to their sense of belonging, indeed, the EçaNews is a student-only project. Having all the student as contributors, from all levels of education will enhance the level of difficulty of the project and ensure the students each have different visions, thus showing them new ways to see the world. Since they must take substantive decisions with regard to the journal they will have to work in groups, where they have to find consensus in all decisions, enhancing their collaborative skills. Since there are no grades, nor high or low-stakes assessments related to this project, no one will be obliged to contribute, it is expected that some kind of self-regulatory skills will appear naturally within the students.

Finally, the EçaNews project is a 3-year programme that will engage all the 2.000 student of the 3 schools belonging to the cluster; they will be committed to an exclusive-student project, with the ups and downs of a real-life situation. The teacher will only be there to help them find themselves as democratic citizens.
 

Aims/objectives

  • Students have to achieve at least basic and intermediate CDC key descriptors in knowledge and critical understanding of the world, responsibility and cooperation skills
  • Students have to be proficient in media literacy skills, knowing how to gather and understand different opinions, differentiate right from wrong perspectives, be aware about a source’s credibility and copyright issues, and contribute to a better digital citizenship of the school cluster
  • Students have to work individually, in small groups and with larger groups, making their opinions heard as well as listening carefully to others, trying not to judge but to understand
     

Expected results/outcomes

  • Students have the ability to mobilize values, attitudes, skills and knowledge in order to become active citizens in a democratic society.

Changes

  • By the end of the first year the students know what is needed from a behavioural point of view to be a citizen in a democratic society.
  • By the end of the second year the students can actually influence others in order to be citizens of the world.
  • By the end of the project in 2023, the students already understand with clarity that everyone, mainly their fellow students, have their own status in the world, respect themselves and others, making responsible decisions based on that knowledge.
     

Challenges you faced

  • Having the necessary resources as rooms equipped with computers and wideband internet, and access to scientific articles and studies
  • Publicising the project to the entire education community
  • Teachers’ lack of information and training regarding the digital transformation and the CDC framework
     

Time-frame of the project:

3 year project from October 2020 until July 2023
 

Council of Europe materials on citizenship and human rights education used while preparing or implementing your practice:

  • Reference Framework of Competences for Democratic Culture